Chicago Sun-Times

NO ARRESTS IN VAST MAJORITY OF COMPLAINTS OF SEX CRIME IN CHICAGO: REPORT

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

A new report issued by the Chicago Alliance Against Sexual Exploitati­on found that the vast majority of sexual harm complaints brought to the Chicago Police Department between 2010 and 2019 did not result in an arrest.

The report, titled “Too Little, Too Late,” states that arrests were made in just 10% to 20% of all sexual assault and abuse complaints filed with the department in that time frame.

In preparing the report, CAASE examined 10 years’ worth of crime data already made public on the city’s data portal.

Publicly available data show that, over that decade, there were just under 10,000 complaints of sexual abuse and assault — aggravated and non- aggravated — filed with the CPD. According to the data portal, about 1,300 of those cases ended in arrest.

And while arrest totals have remained largely stagnant over that period, the number of complaints rose dramatical­ly between 2014 and 2019, the report states.

“The number of reports has likely increased in response to the # MeToo movement, and our culture and legal systems’ expanding understand­ing of rape beyond those that are committed by a stranger, forcibly, at night, etc.,” the report states. “The stagnant arrest rate, however, could be the result of a lack of interest from police and their leaders in making arrests in these cases, low staffing levels to investigat­e and arrest people who cause harm, or other reasons.”

A spokesman for the CPD noted that the department was recently awarded a nearly $ 1 million grant from the United States Department of Justice that will be used to develop policies and training in domestic violence and sexual misconduct.

“The report by the Chicago Alliance Against Sexual Exploitati­on ( CAASE) highlights several important findings, and we share the opinion put forth in the report that sex crimes are not something that police can solve alone,” CPD spokesman Howard Ludwig said in a statement. “We need the help of the communitie­s we serve to raise awareness around sexual assault and provide additional support to Chicago’s survivors.”

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