Chicago Sun-Times

‘THIS WAS A FAIL’

Lightfoot calls out new top cop on ‘out of control’ weekend violence: ‘We have to do better’

- FRAN SPIELMAN AND MITCH DUDEK REPORT,

Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Tuesday condemned the “out of control” violence that turned Memorial Day weekend into a “bloodbath” and held David Brown, her new CPD superinten­dent, personally responsibl­e.

“We have to do better. We cannot have weekends in the summer turn into a bloodbath. And this weekend’s violence was out of control,” Lightfoot said.

“While I know that there was a lot of energy and coordinati­on among a variety of groups, what I said to the superinten­dent this morning is, ‘This was a fail. Whatever the strategy is, it didn’t work.’”

Hours before the mayor’s news conference, Brown blamed cabin fever created by the statewide stay-athome order for the bloodbath over a long holiday weekend that marks the traditiona­l start of summer.

“The stay-at-home order did little to prevent violence, particular­ly in parts of the West and South sides,” Brown said Tuesday. “These incidents primarily involved disputes between rival gang factions as well as clashes involving the sale of illegal drugs.”

Police issued about 300 dispersal orders to crowds each day of the holiday weekend, Brown said. The crowding brings increased risk of virus transmissi­on, as well as injury or death, should gunfire erupt in a congested area, he said.

“The effects of the coronaviru­s also go beyond hospitaliz­ations. People are feeling restless after being cooped up for weeks,” Brown said.

As for Lightfoot’s scathing review, CPD spokesman Tom Ahern replied: “As Superinten­dent Brown stressed, the violence we saw this weekend was unacceptab­le. From what we learned this weekend, we will continue to adjust how CPD deploys its resources.”

In a morning news conference, Brown acknowledg­ed a cutback in officers working overtime shifts to patrol the streets over the Memorial Day weekend. Normally, that number is well over 1,000. Instead, “We had several hundred that were dedicated [to weekend street patrol] and coordinate­d a little bit better,” he said.

In her afternoon news conference, Lightfoot blamed disgruntle­d cops upset about cuts in police overtime for spreading a false rumor that there were 1,000 fewer police officers on the street. But she also contradict­ed Brown, saying “In fact, there were more officers on the street this weekend” than in prior years.

Brown did cite one crime-fighting victory, though: A total of 216 guns were recovered over the weekend, 68 more than last year, with 86 people arrested for gun offenses, he said.

“This was a challengin­g weekend, but we are not shaken. We are not going to give up on our city. Our officers are brave, courageous, dedicated men and women who are risking their lives both with exposure to COVID and confrontin­g violent offenders,” Brown said.

He noted more officers will be on the streets over summer weekends, including in prominent spots like on the CTA and along the lakefront.

Lightfoot’s brutal characteri­zation of Brown’s Memorial Day weekend strategy marks the first time she has called out her hand-picked superinten­dent since the retired Dallas police chief was hired.

Brown was Lightfoot’s choice from the moment she fired former Supt. Eddie Johnson. How Brown handles Chicago’s intransige­nt problems of gang and gun violence — and repairs trust between citizens and police in the African American community shattered by the police shooting of Laquan McDonald — will go a long way toward determinin­g whether she gets re-elected.

After ripping Brown’s performanc­e over the holiday weekend, the mayor tried to cut the new superinten­dent some slack.

She reiterated that the law enforcemen­t “infrastruc­ture” of courts, jails, and prosecutor­s has essentiall­y been missing during the pandemic, leaving the Chicago Police Department “on its own” to fight crime.

“Federal agents … have been on the sidelines for weeks. That’s a problem. We have the courts that really aren’t taking a lot of criminal cases. That’s a problem. We have the jails that are effectivel­y closed to new persons. So we have officers risking life and limb and arresting people who are absolute drivers of violence and they’re cycling in and out of the ... court system in 24-to-48 hours,” the mayor said.

“There is no circumstan­ce like the one we are facing right now when it comes to public safety. … The only way we start to … drive down the numbers ... is if all the other parts of the eco-system come back on line.

Lightfoot also called “fundamenta­lly untrue” a Twitter claim by Chance the Rapper that Chicago police have been more aggressive in enforcing the stay-at-home order in African American neighborho­ods than they have in predominan­tly white neighborho­ods.

Lightfoot said she starts her day looking at two pivotal numbers — overnight violence and police dispersal orders.

“I can tell you, based upon the statistics we’ve been keeping now for weeks, those dispersal orders are happening all over the city. Yes, in white areas, in Latinx areas, in monied areas of the city,” she said.

“Why the media doesn’t report that with equal interest — well, I think there’s probably some answers to that. But the reality is that the Chicago Police Department is active and engaged all over the city and doing it with an eye toward equity. And I would have it no other way as mayor of this city.”

“WHILE I KNOW THAT THERE WAS A LOT OF ENERGY AND COORDINATI­ON AMONG A VARIETY OF GROUPS, WHAT I SAID TO THE SUPERINTEN­DENT THIS MORNING IS, ‘THIS WAS A FAIL. WHATEVER THE STRATEGY IS, IT DIDN’T WORK.’ ”

MAYOR LORI LIGHTFOOT

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? CPD Supt. David Brown
Mayor Lori Lightfoot
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO CPD Supt. David Brown Mayor Lori Lightfoot
 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? David Brown speaks in April after Mayor Lori Lightfoot nominated him to be Chicago Police superinten­dent.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES David Brown speaks in April after Mayor Lori Lightfoot nominated him to be Chicago Police superinten­dent.

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