Chicago Sun-Times

NOT LETTING OVERSIGHT GET OUT OF MIND

Group, aldermen urge Rahm to deliver on key area of cop reform before leaving office

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

The Grassroots Alliance for Police Accountabi­lity and its City Council allies on Thursday turned up the heat on Mayor Rahm Emanuel to deliver “independen­t and impartial” civilian police oversight before he leaves office.

Six months ago, Emanuel signaled a go-slow approach by arguing that the civilian oversight he promised two years ago, but failed to deliver, must be “complement­ary — not contradict­ory” to the city’s “public safety goals.”

Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson underscore­d the point by arguing that civilians “don’t have the profession­al acumen to develop strategy” for the police department, and allowing them to do so while empowering them to fire the superinten­dent is “just crazy to me” and “like telling a surgeon how to do his business.”

Now that Emanuel has chosen political retirement over the uphill battle for a third term, the Grassroots Alliance and its City Council allies are concerned the lame-duck mayor will try to punt the political hot potato to his successor.

They’re not going to let it happen — even if it means going around the outgoing mayor.

“We’ve been having conversati­ons with the administra­tion. … But our focus should be on our colleagues in the City Council. This is a strong council, weak mayor form of government. What we need are the votes. We need 26 and … 34 in case there’s a veto,” said Ald. Roderick Sawyer (6th), the Black Caucus chairman who co-sponsored the ordinance backed by the Grassroots Alliance, also known as GAPA.

Sawyer acknowledg­ed the ordinance is a “dramatic departure” for the city and the Chicago Police Department.

It includes the power to subpoena documents, fire the police superinten­dent (reversible only by a two-thirds City Council vote), establish police policy, choose the Police Board and hire and fire the Police Board president.

But, he said: “Dramatic change is what’s needed to restore the public trust that has been shattered — not only by police shootings but by the countless infraction­s and misdeeds of poorly trained or recruited police officers and the department’s culture as a whole. Chicagoans deserve better. We just paid out millions of dollars for victims of police abuse in the shadow of the Van Dyke trial” for the fatal shooting of Laquan McDonald by Chicago Police Officer Jason Van Dyke.

During a news conference after Thursday’s City Council meeting, Emanuel argued that there are “three different ordinances” outlining civilian police oversight and, “We have to find the votes.”

But the mayor argued that, in the meantime, there is no shortage of police oversight.

“When you count the federal judge, the monitor, the Police Board, COPA and the inspector general, that’s five entities . ... That’s more than any other city,” the mayor said, referring to the draft consent decree now pending before a federal judge.

But Emanuel quickly added, “I agree with the need for civilian oversight and influence. That’s what City Council is working through ... trying to find a majority.”

Ald. Harry Osterman (48th) hinted strongly that Emanuel’s retirement would be a liberating thing for aldermen when it comes to civilian police review. Already, the ordinance has 22 co-sponsors.

“You’re gonna see more aldermen come on board. People in the past that have been somewhat resistant or reluctant to support this are rethinking their opposition,” Osterman said.

Although the mayor’s primary focus has been on finalizing negotiatio­ns with Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan, a consent decree outlining the terms of federal court oversight over the Chicago Police Department “doesn’t cover everything,” said Autry Phillips, a member of the GAPA Coalition.

“While the decree may only last a few years, GAPA’s proposal will create a process for continuing reform that goes beyond the scope of the decree and will continue long after,” Phillips said.

 ?? FRAN SPIELMAN/SUN-TIMES ?? Ald. Roderick Sawyer speaks Thursday at City Hall in an effort to keep the pressure up on Mayor Rahm Emanuel to wrap up the police reform process before he leaves office.
FRAN SPIELMAN/SUN-TIMES Ald. Roderick Sawyer speaks Thursday at City Hall in an effort to keep the pressure up on Mayor Rahm Emanuel to wrap up the police reform process before he leaves office.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States