Chicago Sun-Times

Restaurate­ur still wants to be cop

Injury knocked him out of police academy in 2013; he’s fighting to try again

- BY JAKE WITTICH, STAFF REPORTER jwittich@suntimes.com | @JakeWittic­h

A Rogers Park restaurant owner and former alderman’s staffer who was rejected twice in trying to become a Chicago Police officer is appealing the department’s decision.

Majid Mustafa, 37, made his first attempt in 2013 but dislocated his left thumb during a physical drill while in police academy training, according to his attorney, Tom Needham. Doctors ordered Mustafa to wear a splint, but he took it off when staff told him it wasn’t allowed.

Mustafa’s thumb had started to heal, but the injury was aggravated when his class was ordered to do extra pushups as punishment for several of his classmates failing the test, Needham said. Mustafa’s injury left him unable to shoot accurately, and he failed the firearms shooting test at the end of training.

Three days before graduation, the city fired Mustafa from the academy, Needham said.

Mustafa applied again in 2017 to become a police officer, but he was rejected when a background check found he had previously been terminated from the training academy, Needham said.

According to Needham, the city relied on a section of the Police Training Act mandating that anyone who starts police training must finish it within a set timeframe. That law has since been amended to grant applicants a second chance, but it doesn’t go into effect until Jan. 1, 2020.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed an amendment to the act on Aug. 2 that allows police academy trainees to have a second chance after a full year passes.

“If an agency again fails to train the individual a second time, the agency shall be permanentl­y barred from employing this individual in a law enforcemen­t capacity,” the amended law states.

Needham said Mustafa filed an appeal with the city’s Human Resources Board in May 2018, and a hearing was scheduled for the following year. Needham said Mustafa hopes the board will make an exception in light of this amendment so he can join the next police training academy.

“He’s ready to go,” Needham said. “Majid has already passed the physical test, psychologi­cal screening, drug testing and everything else. He has a FOID card and a concealed carry card. His thumb that was dislocated is 100%.”

Mustafa owns and manages JK Kabab House, a traditiona­l Indian and Pakistani restaurant at 6412 N. Rockwell St. He was born in Saudi Arabia but moved here with his family when he was a child.

Mustafa also worked for several years as a staffer for former Ald. Bernie Stone (50th). He announced a run for that aldermanic seat in 2019 but dropped out before the general election.

“There’s nothing anyone can say about Majid that would support the idea that he’s lacking some quality that a police officer needs,” Needham said. “It’s not like we’re arguing whether or not he’s honest, has a bad temper or judgment flaws. It’s just the unfortunat­e timing of this injury that caused this.”

Mustafa’s Human Resources Board hearing rejection is set for 10 a.m. Monday at City Hall.

City officials did not respond to requests for comment.

 ?? RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES ?? Majid Mustafa, 37, filed an appeal with the city’s Human Resources Board in May 2018.
RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES Majid Mustafa, 37, filed an appeal with the city’s Human Resources Board in May 2018.

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