Chicago Sun-Times

COPA reverses ruling, but cops can’t be fired in police shooting

- BY ANDY GRIMM, STAFF REPORTER agrimm@suntimes.com | @agrimm34

A Chicago police officer who fired dozens of times at a fleeing teenager in 2011 should lose his job over the fatal shooting, but will only serve a monthlong suspension, according to a report from the department’s oversight agency that reverses a ruling made by the department two years after the shooting.

Officer Macario Chavez and two fellow officers were cleared of wrongdoing in the shooting death of 19-year-old Calvin Cross after an investigat­ion by the now-defunct Independen­t Police Review Authority in 2013. Chavez fired a total of 31 shots — 28 from an assault rifle— as he and two partners on a South Side tactical unit chased Cross through a residentia­l neighborho­od in West Pullman.

The investigat­ion was reopened in 2016 after a revamp of IPRA amid the fallout of the fatal shooting of Laquan McDonald. In June,

IPRA’s successor agency, the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity, ruled Chavez violated department policy by firing multiple shots with a high-powered rifle at Cross as the teen sprinted through a residentia­l neighborho­od, and that the final volleys of shots Chavez fired as Cross lay prone on the ground — and perhaps dead— were unjustifie­d.

The report notes that because the investigat­ion was completed more than five years from the date Cross was killed, the harshest discipline the department can mete out under state law is a 30-day suspension. But COPA also made the unorthodox suggestion that even once Chavez returns from suspension, the department never let him carry a badge or gun.

“COPA would have recommende­d Officer Chavez be separated from the Chicago Police Department based on his actions during the incident. However, COPA is unable to make such a recommenda­tion because of Illinois state law,” the report states.

“Even so, COPA recommends not only that Ofc. Chavez be suspended from the Chicago Police Department for that 30-day maximum, but to the extent possible and allowable by law, Officer Chavez be stripped of his police powers, including his badge and firearm, and placed on desk duty.

“Ofc. Chavez’s actions, and importantl­y his own admissions, detail an officer who is no longer capable of being trusted with police powers.”

CPD spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said Tuesday that Chavez had served his 30-day suspension already and had returned to duty.

The COPA ruling was a vindicatio­n and another source of disappoint­ment for Cross’ family, said Tony Thedford, an attorney who represente­d the family in a wrongful death lawsuit against the city. The case settled for $2 million in 2016.

“This is another blow to the family, just as it was when they lost Calvin, when IPRA cleared the officers, and then again, when the officers got a commendati­on from the department,” Thedford said. “When (COPA) reopened the case, the family had hope that they didn’t have before. All his mother wanted was for those officers to be fired, all three of them.”

The shooting drew attention from COPA investigat­ors, and the Department of Justice after the McDonald shooting, in part, because Chavez and one of his partners, Officer Muhammed Ali, said Cross had fired at them several times as he ran from them. The only gun found near the scene was a .38-caliber revolver that was fully loaded, and so old and clogged with grime that it could not have fired.

The report makes no ruling on discipline for Ali, who also fired multiple times at Cross as the teen lay on the ground, noting that Ali has been on medical leave from the department and sought a restrainin­g order against COPA to bar them from investigat­ing him until he returns to duty.

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