Chicago Sun-Times

CPD TO CHANGE THE WAY IT INVESTIGAT­ES MURDERS

- BY SAM CHARLES, STAFF REPORTER scharles@suntimes.com | @samjcharle­s

The Chicago Police Department announced Wednesday it plans to make widespread changes to the way it handles murder investigat­ions in light of a critical report from a police research organizati­on.

The Police Executive Research Forum concluded the CPD’s Bureau of Detectives is understaff­ed, overtasked and often working without a uniform procedural edict.

“Many of the issues highlighte­d in this 116page report have long been known to the department,” Supt. Eddie Johnson said. “Other findings show [that] a fresh set of eyes can bring things into light that have been overlooked previously.”

Among its recommenda­tions, the group called on the CPD to:

◆ Create a designated homicide unit

◆ Increase the number of detective areas from three to five

◆ Develop a consistent approach to investigat­ing homicides.

The department said the creation of the homicide unit and the expansion of three areas to five were both on track to be completed next year. More detective in-service training and new detective bureau staffing models are also coming in 2020.

Since 2013, the detective bureau has been divided into three areas that span the city: Areas North, Central and South. Earlier this month, Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced the reopening of two detective areas on the West Side. The department’s 22 patrol districts are organized in those same three areas.

The report also called for increased cooperatio­n between detectives and prosecutor­s, as well as more thorough communicat­ion between detectives investigat­ing murders and those tasked with investigat­ing nonfatal shootings.

“We must continue to break down these silos to work together as a team, regardless of what bureau we work in, to predict, prevent and clear crimes,” Melissa Staples, chief of the Bureau of Detectives, said Wednesday. “The bottom line is this: Every homicide investigat­ion is, and should be, important to all of us.”

The report, conducted at the behest of the CPD, found manpower and organizati­on within the detective bureau were both lacking.

“The Bureau of Detectives is understaff­ed, and there are not enough sergeants to oversee individual teams of homicide detectives,” the report stated. “The CPD does not have a tracking mechanism to identify the number of cases assigned to each detective and who the lead investigat­or is on each case.”

The report noted that in Area South — which includes the Englewood, Calumet and Gresham districts, among the most violent in the city — there are no “designated homicide detectives on the midnight shift.”

“Despite being responsibl­e for three districts with some of the highest number of homicides per district, Area South has the fewest number of detectives assigned specifical­ly to investigat­e homicides,” the report found.

In the same vein, the report found varying workloads among detectives assigned to investigat­e violent crime. While the Department of Justice recommends a detective take the lead on no more than six new murder cases every year, some detectives in the CPD said they were assigned as the lead in as many as 11.

“Based on interviews, homicide cases are assigned in an inequitabl­e manner, leading some detectives to carry heavier caseloads than others,” the report stated.

So far in 2019, the department’s murder clearance rate stands at just under 47%, according to figures distribute­d by the department Wednesday. That’s up from 40% in 2018, 33% in 2017 and 29% in 2016.

The clearance rate is calculated by comparing how many murders occur in a given year with how many murder cases are solved by detectives in that year, regardless of when the murder happened. For example, if 500 people were murdered in Chicago in 2020, and detectives solved 200 of them that same year, while also solving 100 murders from other years, the clearance rate would be 60%.

As of last week, the Chicago police had recorded 422 murders in the city in 2019. The report said the department has about 128 detectives throughout the city assigned to investigat­e homicides. Overall, the department — with a little more than 13,300 sworn members — has 1,127 officers assigned as detectives.

Johnson noted about 600 detectives have been added to the bureau in the past two years.

While the terms are sometimes used interchang­eably, “homicide” and “murder” have different meanings. “Homicide” is the manner of death and it’s decided by the Cook County medical examiner’s office, though it is not always deemed a criminal act. For example, if a robbery victim shot and killed their attacker, that death would be ruled a homicide by the medical examiner but not classified as a murder by the CPD.

“THE BUREAU OF DETECTIVES IS UNDERSTAFF­ED, AND THERE ARE NOT ENOUGH SERGEANTS TO OVERSEE INDIVIDUAL TEAMS OF HOMICIDE DETECTIVES.” police research organizati­on report

 ?? SAM CHARLES/SUN-TIMES ?? Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson and Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Wednesday announced plans to change the way murders are investigat­ed.
SAM CHARLES/SUN-TIMES Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson and Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Wednesday announced plans to change the way murders are investigat­ed.

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