Chicago Sun-Times

COPA released Rialmo findings too soon: new public safety IG

- BY SAM CHARLES, STAFF REPORTER scharles@suntimes.com | @samjcharle­s

Last December, the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity announced it found that Officer Robert Rialmo was not justified when he shot and killed Quintonio LeGrier and Bettie Jones in December 2015.

Now, in his first published report since being confirmed by the City Council last month, Deputy Inspector General for Public Safety Joe Lipari said COPA jumped the gun when it publicized its findings and recommenda­tion.

“COPA’s late-December 2017 release of the Rialmo Report risked creating the appearance of an accountabi­lity system susceptibl­e to external pressure,” Lipari found.

Lipari noted that while COPA’s decision to release its findings and recommenda­tion were “taken in the spirit of robust transparen­cy,” he recommende­d COPA “revisit its release practices to comply with the time allowed” under the city’s municipal code.

In March 2018, Johnson issued a “non-concurrenc­e” letter to COPA’s former Interim Chief Administra­tor Patricia Banks, saying that “Officer Rialmo’s actions were justified and within department policy” when he opened fire in the 4700 block of West Erie in the early hours of Dec. 26, 2015.

That letter was only made available to the public after copies were obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times and Chicago Tribune.

COPA agreed with his recommenda­tion and would institute a procedure of “withholdin­g release during the non-concurrenc­e period is essential to preserving the integrity of the accountabi­lity process.”

In a letter to Lipari, COPA Chief Administra­tor Sydney Roberts wrote, “COPA is ever-mindful of the need to balance transparen­cy against ensuring that Chicago’s accountabi­lity system is both procedural­ly fair and not unduly influenced by external pressures. COPA disagrees that our actions have ever veered from those guiding principles, however, how best to balance transparen­cy against procedural fairness is a delicate issue.”

Under the municipal code of the city, the CPD superinten­dent has 90 days to issue a ruling on a recommenda­tion from COPA. The superinten­dent’s ruling is then sent to the the Chicago Police Board, the administra­tive body that metes out discipline to officers.

In Rialmo’s case, since Johnson disagreed with COPA, a single member of the board decided the case would be heard by the rest of the board members. They have yet to issue a ruling.

In June, a Cook County jury effectivel­y cleared Rialmo of wrongdoing when they said he was justified in the shooting.

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Robert Rialmo

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