Chicago Sun-Times

OVERSIGHT AGENCY FAILED TO RELEASE VIDEO, AUDIO, DOCUMENTS WITHIN 60 DAYS OF POLICE USE-OF-FORCE INCIDENTS: REPORT

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

For the second time in a week, Chicago’s inspector general is taking aim at the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity — this time for failing to release video, audio, and police documents within 60 days of an incident involving use of force by police.

The 60-day release policy was recommende­d in 2016 by the Task Force on Police Accountabi­lity co-chaired by then Police Board President Lori Lightfoot in the furor that followed the court-ordered release of the Laquan McDonald shooting video.

The recommenda­tion was promptly embraced by then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who was under fire at the time for keeping video of the October 2014 McDonald shooting under wraps for more than a year and waiting until one week after the April 7, 2015, mayoral runoff to authorize a $5 million settlement to the McDonald family — even before a lawsuit had been filed.

On Tuesday, Deborah Witzburg, Chicago’s newly appointed deputy inspector general for public safety, released a report accusing COPA of falling short on a reform crucial to restoring the trust between citizens and police in the African American community shattered by the McDonald shooting and more recently undermined by the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapoli­s police officers.

After reviewing 122 cases over a threeyear period, Witzburg found 33 instances where the 60-day policy was violated.

Several problems contribute­d to the 27% non-compliance rate:

COPA “miscalcula­ted” a release deadline or was late to identify an incident as one mandating the release of video, audio and written police reports within 60 days.

The agency did not receive video and audio files from the city’s Office of Emergency Management and Communicat­ions “in time to post them within the 60-day window.” Of 352 use of force incident requests examined over a two-year period, OEMC “failed to complete 201, or 57%,” within 60 days. The average completion time was 67.3 days.

Personnel assigned to the Chicago Police Department’s Crime Prevention Informatio­n Center are supposed to notify COPA of use-of-force incidents, but have a “lack of understand­ing of notificati­on guidelines” that render them “uncertain” about when to notify the agency charged with investigat­ing allegation­s of police abuse. They need “clearer policy, guidance and training.”

COPA exercises “inadequate­ly guided discretion­s in release materials other than those mandated” by the policy. Their “pursuit

of transparen­cy” is commendabl­e, but “subjectivi­ty and inconsiste­ncy” in the agency’s “treatment of these extra-policy matters may raise public concern about the rigor of its implementa­tion,” the report states.

To ensure full compliance with the 60-day release policy, Witzburg recommende­d that COPA and CPD “co-develop” use of force “notificati­on guidelines that are clear and binding” and train Crime Prevention Informatio­n Center staff to “execute” them.

She further recommende­d that COPA collaborat­e with OEMC and the mayor’s office on processes that “support timely delivery of materials requested” from OEMC and that the mayor’s office, the Law Department and COPA review the criteria for release, discern whether additional criteria or guidance should be concluded and update the policy accordingl­y.

COPA spokesman Ephraim Eaddy responded to the report by reiteratin­g the agency’s “unwavering” commitment to the “timely public release of transparen­cy materials.” He noted that the agency has released those materials in “more than 300 CPD use of force incidents since 2016.’’

“COPA remains resolute in its commitment to timely provide material to the public and does not deliberate­ly delay release of material in the absence of legal prohibitio­n,” Eaddy said in a statement.

“The inspector general’s report cited two incidents in which COPA’s release of material was delayed by one day as the result of administra­tive oversight. Even prior to the OIG review, COPA modified practices to address the issue. In all other incidents reviewed by the OIG, COPA reviewed and released relevant material in its possession within 60 days of the incident qualifying for release . ... COPA appreciate­s OIG’s review and recommenda­tions and has or will modify processes to incorporat­e them.”

Witzburg noted Chicago was a “proactive national leader” in adopting the 60-day video release policy. But, she argued, this is no time to retreat from that leadership position.

“In the midst of the continuing, complex national conversati­on about police accountabi­lity, the city’s full vindicatio­n of the original intentions of the policy has never been more important or urgent,” Witzburg was quoted as saying in a press release.

COPA, CPD, and the OEMC, which runs Chicago’s 911 center, “must work together more effectivel­y to meet the city’s transparen­cy imperative­s around use of force by the police,” Witzburg said.

“Solutions here depend upon the cooperativ­e efforts of several city agencies, each of whom have acknowledg­ed opportunit­ies to improve the process. A failure to do so risks the city failing to meet its mandate to render public accountabi­lity for the use of force by Chicago police,” she said.

 ?? CPD/DISTRIBUTE­D BY AP ?? Police dashcam footage that captured the fatal shooting of Laquan McDonald on Oct. 20, 2014.
CPD/DISTRIBUTE­D BY AP Police dashcam footage that captured the fatal shooting of Laquan McDonald on Oct. 20, 2014.

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