Chicago Sun-Times

MORE THAN 1,500 COPS TO HIT STREETS FOR HOLIDAY WEEKEND

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

More than 1,500 Chicago police officers will work overtime or on adjusted schedules this weekend — 100 of them patrolling parks and the lakefront — hoping to prevent yet another July 4th holiday in Chicago from turning into a bloodbath.

The Chicago Fire Department will deploy two additional rescue boats. One will be dedicated to the Chicago River and the city’s wildly popular downtown Riverwalk.

“The weather is now warm. But the lake is still cold. And the lake current is strong. People should be especially careful about diving into the water. Don’t be fooled by the warm weather. The lake is tough. And if you’re not a strong swimmer, you put yourself at risk,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said.

Last year, 1,500 additional police officers hit the streets during the long holiday weekend. Even so, seven people were wounded from 1 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. on July 4 alone. Ten people were killed and 58 shot over an extended holiday weekend that ran from July 3 through July 9, Chicago police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said.

The year before, the Independen­ce Day weekend was a bloodbath, with 14 people killed and 87 wounded across Chicago.

In 2016, 66 people were shot, four fatally, over a Fourth of July weekend that was one day shorter than the year before. It was Chicago’s lowest death toll for a July Fourth weekend in nearly a decade.

Lightfoot and Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson outlined this year’s security plans — including 40 additional officers assigned to the mass transit unit — during an afternoon news conference at Milton Lee Olive Park near Navy Pier.

It’s the CPD’s second big test under Lightfoot.

After “flooding the zone” over Memorial Day weekend by putting 1,200 more officers on the streets and partnering with dozens of religious leaders — and touting

more than 100 events and youth programs — Lightfoot came away with results tragically similar to previous years.

Seven were killed, same as last year. And 34 were wounded, two more than last year.

After the following weekend was even worse — with 10 dead and 52 wounded — Lightfoot started what she’s calling “Accountabi­lity Monday.”

That’s when she summons top brass to hash out the violence from the previous weekend.

On Wednesday, Johnson pointed to the “all hands-on-deck” decision by faith leaders in the Austin district to hold a “positive loitering” event to take back their streets and to the decision by local liquor store owners to close early on the Fourth of July.

“I cannot tell you how huge that is,” he said.

Johnson also acknowledg­ed that CPD learned a thing or two from Memorial Day weekend that guided its planning for this weekend.

“One of the things that we just have to get better at is watching pop-up parties. They pop up all over the city. Those things can go from 15 people to 200 in 10 minutes,” he said.

“All around the city, there’s target areas that are always potentiall­y flash points. So, we’ll be monitoring those areas real tightly . . . . One of the things we’re gonna do a bit differentl­y — we have a lot more undercover officers out here this time than we did” over Memorial Day weekend.

On Wednesday, Lightfoot was asked to weigh in on the superinten­dent’s job performanc­e. Was he doing well enough to keep his $260,044-a-year job?

“He’s doing good. I have a great deal of respect for the superinten­dent . . . . You’re putting him on front street right here,” the mayor said with a smile.

“The thing I appreciate most about the superinten­dent is, he is very straightfo­rward and candid about the strengths, about the progress. But he’s also very candid about the other opportunit­ies.”

Lightfoot reiterated that one of those “opportunit­ies” for improvemen­t is the city’s dismal, but mildly improved, homicide clearance rate.

“We’re not where we need to be. That’s not any secret,” she said.

 ?? FRAN SPIELMAN/SUN-TIMES ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot and CPD Supt. Eddie Johnson discuss policing plans for the Fourth of July weekend near Navy Pier on Wednesday.
FRAN SPIELMAN/SUN-TIMES Mayor Lori Lightfoot and CPD Supt. Eddie Johnson discuss policing plans for the Fourth of July weekend near Navy Pier on Wednesday.

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