Chicago Sun-Times

WATCHDOG: EX-TOP COP HAD EQUIVALENT OF 10 ALCOHOLIC DRINKS BEFORE DRIVING

Watchdog’s report details police cover-up of incident that led to Eddie Johnson’s downfall

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN AND SAM CHARLES,

Fired Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson consumed the “equivalent of 10 alcoholic beverages” on the night he was found asleep in his running police SUV, then received favored treatment from seven of his underlings, the inspector general said Friday.

A year after the incident that caused Johnson’s downfall, Inspector General Joe Ferguson’s longawaite­d report details an elaborate police cover-up by seven of the fired superinten­dent’s underlings.

The alleged wrongdoing started with the two probationa­ry officers who responded to the scene at 34th Place andAberdee­n Street and failed to “gather the evidence necessary to determine whether the superinten­dent was fit to drive his vehicle.”

They failed to administer the field sobriety test that would have been required for any other motorist and instead took the superinten­dent’s word for it that he was fit to drive home after Johnson had rolled down his driver’s window by only two inches.

Police Supt. David Brown suspended both officers for one day.

Two additional responding officers were accused of allowing Johnson to drive his vehicle home “knowing he was unfit to drive.” One of those officers told Ferguson’s investigat­ors that, “The superinten­dent looked normal.”

“They decided to follow the superinten­dent’s vehicle to his home, apparently out of concern that he would not get home safely,” Ferguson wrote.

“By allowing the superinten­dent to drive home, despite concern for his condition, the officers failed to promote CPD’s goal of protecting the public and brought discredit on CPD, specifical­ly, because their actions created the impression of giving the superinten­dent preferenti­al treatment.”

Those two officers were each suspended for seven days.

A sergeant who also responded to the scene was held responsibl­e for having “allowed the superinten­dent to drive home, knowing hewas unfit to drive.” The report notes Johnson, “upon leaving 34th and Aberdeen, traveled in the wrong direction away from his residence.”

In an interview with Ferguson’s investigat­ors, the sergeant claimed he was “concerned about the superinten­dent’s condition, given his medical history.” Brown suspended the sergeant for 14 days.

Ferguson’s report argued the most egregious violations were committed by a lieutenant and by Deering District Cmdr. Don Jerome, a 26-year veteran of the department.

The lieutenant was accused of holding up his cellphone to a computer screen and making a recording of bodycam video of the drinking-and-driving incident. The lieutenant then texted the cellphone video to Jerome.

In an interview with Ferguson’s investigat­ors, the lieutenant denied having made the recording and sending it to Jerome. According to Ferguson, that was a violation of CPD Rule 14 — commonly known as “you-lie-and-you-die rule” — that should have prompted CPD to fire the lieutenant.

Instead, Brown opted to suspend the lieutenant for 21 days.

Jerome was slapped with a 28day suspension for having “failed to report the lieutenant’s policy violation in creating an unauthoriz­ed recording of the body-worn camera footage.”

Mayor Lori Lightfoot fired Johnson December 1 after accusing the police superinten­dent she inherited of “lying to me and lying to the public” about the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the Oct. 17 incident.

He was forced to retire a month earlier than planned by a mayor who had celebrated his retirement and praised his overall performanc­e just weeks before.

Instead of having a “few drinks with friends,” as Johnson initially told the mayor, he spent hours drinking with his female driver Cynthia Donald at Ceres Café, a downtown bar notorious for its heavy pours.

Johnson then dropped off Donald at police headquarte­rs around 10:30 p.m.; she got into her police vehicle and drove herself home.

Donald was suspended for seven days. Earlier this week, she filed a lawsuit against Johnson and the city, claiming the fired superinten­dent subjected her to more than three years of sexual assault and harassment. She accused Johnson of repeatedly raping her in his office at police headquarte­rs. Johnson emphatical­ly denied the allegation­s.

Ferguson’s report includes the most detailed account yet of just how much alcohol Johnson consumed that fateful night.

“While the CPD members on the scene could not have known at the time that the superinten­dent had consumed the equivalent of approximat­ely 10 alcoholic beverages, the evidence shows that the superinten­dent had done so, and not a single member detected any signs of impairment or pursued a number of routine investigat­ive steps likely to reveal evidence of alcohol impairment,” the report states.

 ?? CPD ?? This image taken from police bodycam video shows officers speaking with then-Supt. Eddie Johnson after they found him asleep behind the wheel of his police SUV.
CPD This image taken from police bodycam video shows officers speaking with then-Supt. Eddie Johnson after they found him asleep behind the wheel of his police SUV.
 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN-TIMES ?? Police Supt. Eddie Johnson in 2019.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN-TIMES Police Supt. Eddie Johnson in 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States