Chicago Sun-Times

COPA chief says recurring themes dominate complaints against CPD during unrest

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

Excessive use of batons and verbal abuse. Failure to activate or possess body cameras. Fatigued police officers working so many hours, they didn’t have time to recharge their bodycams.

Sydney Roberts, chief administra­tor of the city’s Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity, said “several themes were quite prevalent” during investigat­ions into complaints that poured into her office after the civil unrest triggered by the death of George Floyd.

“Excessive use of batons. The failure to possess and/or activate body-worn cameras. One of the other things that we saw very early on is that officers were not given sufficient rest periods between deployment­s. So not only were the officers potentiall­y fatigued. Their body-worn cameras did not have sufficient time to charge,” Roberts told aldermen Tuesday during the final day of City Council budget hearings.

“We also saw several other things. Inadequate records of officers’ locations. Failure to display identifica­tion. As well as excessive verbal abuse.”

The themes were so consistent across “multiple investigat­ions” that Roberts said she fired off a memo to the Chicago Police Department urging top brass to “take immediate action to address” the deficienci­es.

“One of the things that we’re most pleased about is the department has recently revised some of their policy regarding their response to mass arrests. And several of our concerns have already been addressed,” she said.

Ald. Harry Osterman (48th) asked Roberts to share those recommenda­tions with aldermen — even as a federal monitor, the city’s inspector general and COPA continue to investigat­e the barrage of citizen complaints following the demonstrat­ions.

“A lot of those recommenda­tions we want to make sure become implemente­d now and in the future so that, if this occurs again, we’re able to deal with that,” Osterman said.

In August, Roberts told the SunTimes that, of the unpreceden­ted 400 complaints filed against Chicago police officers during that tumultuous, two-week period, roughly 170 had enough supporting evidence to warrant full-blown investigat­ions by COPA.

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

Several of those cases have been closed, but the “lion’s share of the protest complaints” are still being investigat­ed, Roberts said.

Ald. Anthony Sposato (38th) countered, “I don’t know if I agree with you that they were protests, but we’re all entitled to our opinion.”

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.

In 2019 and through the first three quarters of 2020, COPA has “sustained” 42% of the complaints against police officers accused of violating department policy. That’s 10% higher than its predecesso­r agency.

And the number of officers determined to have lied or engaged in the code of silence or both “has increased by 40%” since 2016.

“COPA is not the civilian oversight body of Chicago’s past,” Roberts said.

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Sydney Roberts

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