Chicago Sun-Times

Residents describe qualities they expect in next leader of COPA

- BY ELVIA MALAGÓN, STAFF REPORTER emalagón@suntimes.com | @ElviaMalag­on Elvia Malagón’s reporting on social justice and income inequality is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

Residents on the city’s Northwest Side say they want the next leader of the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity to be ethical and have integrity.

A handful of residents turned out to the Muslim Community Center at 4380 N. Elston Ave. for the first of four public forums the police oversight agency is hosting as it continues its search for its next leader by the end of the year.

A seven-person committee has been tasked with finding the next chief administra­tor for COPA after Sydney Roberts, who had been appointed by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel in 2018, resigned from the top post in May. The public forums are meant to help guide the committee as it sorts through candidates.

“The community has led the drive since Laquan McDonald and they should have a voice,” COPA spokesman Ephraim Eaddy said of the hiring process.

Amiin Davis, who works with the InnerCity Muslim Action Network, said the next leader should have a “firmness of purpose,” later saying the person should be committed to the community rather than politics.

Other residents who attended Tuesday’s meeting said the leader should be unbiased, be knowledgab­le about constituti­onal law and want the job because of its mission, not the pay.

Crista Noel, from the Women’s All Points Bulletin, attended the meeting and stressed that the next leader should have a background in human rights and be open.

“I’ve always found it easier to work with a manager who has an open-door policy,” Noel said to the group.

Residents also issued recommenda­tions for what the agency should do as part of its role of police oversight.

Davis said he would like to see COPA involved in the hiring process to ensure people who get selected to become officers are ethically and psychologi­cally fit to serve. He also stressed that investigat­ions into police shootings need to hold more officers accountabl­e, pointing out that not every officer who was involved in the fatal shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald was held accountabl­e.

“If community trust is the objective and goal, many members of the community see those officers who don’t get arrested as evidence that there is no trust at all,” said Davis, who was also part of a coalition that has pushed for greater community-led police oversight.

Sarah Chowdhury, who co-chairs the racial justice coalition of the Chicago Bar Associatio­n, said it will be important for the next leader to understand criminal procedure to pinpoint why and how issues are taking place within the police force.

“Police are supposed to be who we trust, but if we can’t trust people to be accountabl­e and hold themselves accountabl­e to say I’ve oversteppe­d my bounds or I’m not fit to be out in the field today, then we can’t really trust them to protect us,” Chowdhury said.

The next COPA forum is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Garfield Park Golden Dome Field House, 100 N. Central Park Ave.

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity spokesman Ephraim Eaddy says at a Northwest Side forum on Tuesday that the community “should have a voice” in the selection of the agency’s next leader.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity spokesman Ephraim Eaddy says at a Northwest Side forum on Tuesday that the community “should have a voice” in the selection of the agency’s next leader.

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