Chicago Sun-Times

DECREE DEMANDS

Black Lives Matter, other activists call for changes to police consent decree

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

An activist coalition led by Black Lives Matter on Tuesday pressed its case for major changes to the consent decree outlining the terms of federal court oversight over the Chicago Police Department.

“If the city refuses to include these demands in the decree, this most recent effort to address police violence and racism could fail like every effort that has come before it,” Jonathon Projansky, of Black Lives Matter Chicago, told a City Hall news conference outside the mayor’s office.

Ted Mann of Network 49 said the demands go far beyond police shootings that make headlines. It’s about stopping police violence that is “so frequent, it’s not newsworthy,” he said.

“I’m talking about the black eyes, the broken bones, the bruises from being slammed into vehicles, thrown onto the pavement, the Tasers, the pepper spray,” Mann said.

“So much of this violence is committed because police have incentives to escalate encounters with our community. And much of this violence is committed when officers claim to be arresting people for minor nonviolent issues such as marijuana possession, drinking in the public way and disorderly conduct. Arrests are their own kind of violence, and they destroy lives.”

Some of the recommenda­tions released Tuesday — like removing police officers from Chicago Public Schools and an elected civilian police oversight board — were articulate­d in May, long before a draft copy of the proposed consent decree was released. Other ideas are brand new. They include: ◆ Prohibitin­g Chicago police officers from unholsteri­ng their firearms unless lethal force becomes necessary.

◆ Requiring police officers to file a report every time they point a gun or Taser at someone — or even observe a colleague using force.

◆ Mandating that police officers pass annual psychologi­cal evaluation­s and receive “supervisor­y authority” before making minor arrests and requiring officers to “engage in best efforts to create diversion partnershi­ps, including restorativ­e justice and community mediation.”

◆ Making de-escalation the “rule and not the exception” by providing incentives to officers who “refuse to use force and solve problems without making arrests and strengthen­ing language that authorizes officers to de-escalate “when safe and feasible.” In addition, officers must not be penalized for taking time to resolve an incident without using force. They must also be prohibited from taunting, humiliatin­g, threatenin­g and using racial or gender slurs that escalate incidents.

◆ Prohibitin­g police officers who continue to be assigned to schools from carrying firearms or handcuffs or using force “except in exigent circumstan­ces.” Officers would also have a “duty not to intervene in incidents on school grounds absent a real or immediate threat.” They would be barred from interviewi­ng or interrogat­ing youth on school grounds.

◆ Developing a comprehens­ive plan to eliminate racial profiling and discrimina­tory policing, including an “express prohibitio­n” against profiling. Jurisdicti­on of the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity should also be expanded beyond misconduct to include “sexual assault.”

◆ Altering use-of-force training to include the “importance of considerin­g whether a subject may be non-compliant due to disability, a medical condition or behavioral health crisis.”

◆ Creating a so-called “Rekia’s fund” — in honor of Rekia Boyd — to provide “immediate payment to families whose loved ones were killed by police.”

Maria Hernandez, an organizer with Black Lives Matter Chicago, argued that Mayor Rahm Emanuel “hid the video of Laquan McDonald being shot 16 times” and cannot be trusted to implement meaningful and lasting change.

“Every level of the system is appointed by the same mayor, who has allowed the inhumane disregard of our lives to continue,” Hernandez said.

Emanuel took the recommenda­tions in stride.

“We know Black Lives Matter and the ACLU have an opinion. We know the FOP has an opinion. And we encourage every resident of Chicago to provide their feedback as a part of the public comment opportunit­y. Along with the Attorney General’s office, we will review everyone’s ideas as part of that process,” mayoral press secretary Matt McGrath wrote in an email.

The Fraternal Order of Police has warned that the recent weekend bloodbath that left 71 people shot — 12 fatally — could be “a hint of what it is to come if the war on police continues” with a consent decree imposing “drastic new police oversight.”

Friday is the court-imposed deadline for public comment on the consent decree hammered out by Emanuel and Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan. On Sept. 1, the agreement must be submitted to a federal judge.

Madigan, along with the ACLU of Illinois and other legal-aid groups, filed lawsuits last year to force the city to seek federal oversight of the police — even though President Donald Trump’s U.S. Justice Department has retreated from that arena.

 ?? FRAN SPIELMAN/SUN-TIMES ?? Jonathon Projansky of Black Lives Matter Chicago speaks at a City Hall news conference outside Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s office on Tuesday.
FRAN SPIELMAN/SUN-TIMES Jonathon Projansky of Black Lives Matter Chicago speaks at a City Hall news conference outside Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s office on Tuesday.

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