Chicago Sun-Times

COPA INVESTIGAT­ING 170 CPD ABUSE ALLEGATION­S

Cases come from the nearly 1,000 complaints filed since death of George Floyd

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

Of nearly 1,000 complaints filed against Chicago police officers since the death of George Floyd, roughly 170 had enough supporting evidence to warrant full-blown investigat­ions by the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity, COPA’s chief administra­tor said Thursday.

The pending cases include: an activist seen on video being punched in the face by a Chicago police officer during a confrontat­ion at the now-removed Christophe­r Columbus statue in Grant Park; a woman who claims she was dragged out of her car by her hair by a police officer who knelt on her neck, and Police Board President Ghian Foreman’s claim that he was struck in the legs five times by a police baton after encounteri­ng a demonstrat­ion in Kenwood.

COPA’s Chief Administra­tor Sydney Roberts refused to comment on any of those pending cases. Nor would she say whether those cases show a racial pattern.

“We haven’t looked at that. We haven’t assessed that. … Right now, our efforts are primarily focused on doing the investigat­ions and making sure that we can bring resolution … as quickly as possible. But it is a valid question,” she said.

“We have approximat­ely 170 protest-related investigat­ions between the George Floyd period right through today. We have formed a special team of some of our best investigat­ors that are working on these cases. We are assessing them to determine whether an officer should be relieved of his police powers. We’re assessing to see if there is a need for criminal referral to the Cook County state’s attorney’s office or to the federal government.”

Sunday, a police shooting in Englewood provoked a tense confrontat­ion between citizens and police. That, in turn, touched off a second round of looting. Roberts said she swung into “emergency mode” and braced for another wave of complaints that could be reviewed in “real time.”

“Fortunatel­y, we didn’t receive the complaints in this incident as we did in the prior situation. But we were prepared and we mobilized,” Roberts said.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Police Supt. David Brown have both acknowledg­ed the Englewood shooting would have been more easily justified had there been bodycam video of the incident.

Instead, there was no video. That allowed erroneous rumors to spread on social media that Chicago police had shot an unarmed 15-year-old. The man who was shot was 20-year-old Latrell Allen. He has been charged with two counts of attempted murder for shooting at the pursuing officers before they shot him.

They have argued that police ran out of body cameras in their haste to deploy “as many resources to the districts as possible,” including officers who normally work in plaincloth­es.

Whatever the reason for the shortage of bodycams, it must be rectified, Roberts said.

“The city is better served when police have and they activate body worn cameras. … These are opportunit­ies to build trust, transparen­cy and accountabi­lity. … The public has a level of assurance that there is an objective means to verify the acts of what happened,” Roberts said.

Nearly three years into her tenure, Roberts argued that COPA has made huge strides in rebuilding public trust shattered by the police shooting of Laquan McDonald.

“Not only are residents making the complaints. They’re sticking around and supporting the investigat­ion. … We are having community members reach out to us and tell us of people who have seen misconduct who want to participat­e,” she said.

“When we’re about to release a video of an officer-involved shooting, we contact the family and say, ‘We want you to have ability to see this video first so you can prepare yourself for what is now gonna be put out into the universe.’ When we release our investigat­ive reports, we … take them through every part of that report even when our findings are not what they wanted to hear or what they thought they would hear. There is a level of trust that we have built with those communitie­s.”

Lightfoot has called for the firing of police officers — including a cop photograph­ed giving someone the finger — even before investigat­ions begin.

Roberts said the mayor, a former Chicago Police Board president, has been “involved in police accountabi­lity and oversight for decades” and is justifiabl­y “passionate” about those issues.

But, she said: “We do our investigat­ions without influence, guidance, direction from the mayor’s office. We reach our findings without regard to the mayor’s office. We don’t preview our findings or outcomes with the mayor’s office. Opinions or not, it does not impact COPA’s investigat­ions.”

Watts investigat­ion slowed by lawsuit

As for the two-and-a-half-year delay in wrapping up cases of 15 officers assigned to the crew of corrupt cop Ronald Watts, Roberts said she “appreciate­s the frustratio­n in the time it’s taking to get done.” But, she argued that a “correspond­ing civil suit” has slowed things down.

“There continues to be more evidence. More people being interviewe­d, which necessitat­es the ability to review those. [But], we’re getting close,” she said.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES ?? Chicago police officers clash with protesters June 1 in South Shore. It’s unknown if any abuse allegation­s surfaced from these confrontat­ions.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES Chicago police officers clash with protesters June 1 in South Shore. It’s unknown if any abuse allegation­s surfaced from these confrontat­ions.
 ?? GOOD KIDS MAD CITY @GKMC18 ?? An incident caught on video of a Chicago police officer punching an activist last month near the now-removed Christophe­r Columbus statue in Grant Park is one of the alleged incidents of police abuse that COPA is investigat­ing.
GOOD KIDS MAD CITY @GKMC18 An incident caught on video of a Chicago police officer punching an activist last month near the now-removed Christophe­r Columbus statue in Grant Park is one of the alleged incidents of police abuse that COPA is investigat­ing.

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