Chicago Sun-Times

Politician­s, stop scapegoati­ng cops and let them do their jobs

- BY ANTHONY CAROTHERS Anthony Carothers is a retired police commander who served 28 years in the Chicago Police Department and four years with the Cook County Sheriff’s Department.

Chicago is suffering from a historic wave of violent crime, yet some elected officials continue to pour gas on the fire with their misguided rhetoric and policies.

Last year, Chicago witnessed a quarter-century high in homicides, a 60% increase from just two years prior. The Memorial Day weekend saw the most shootings in five years in the city. But rather than providing resources and assistance to those responsibl­e for mitigating this crisis — the police — some elected officials have chosen to scapegoat and castigate their law enforcemen­t officers.

Many within the Democratic Party continue to expound “defund the police” rhetoric, which has left police officers alienated and fatigued, resulting in en masse retirement­s.

In Chicago alone, 1,343 sworn officers have left the department since May 2020.

To his credit, President Joe Biden has stood against these peripheral influences by consistent­ly disavowing the “defund” premise. Yet, actions speak louder than words, and an executive order signed by Biden last week would stretch police department­s thin and overburden them in the line of duty. While some elements within this sweeping order will be a welcome change, much of it supports a strategy that Biden himself has denounced.

Efforts to reduce the prison population through “catch and release”-style programs will add more violence to the streets our law enforcemen­t already struggle to protect. Steps to demilitari­ze policing by restrictin­g the transfer of military equipment, while necessary to a certain extent, would allow officers to be overpowere­d by criminals currently in our communitie­s. Meanwhile, an unpreceden­ted accountabi­lity database on misconduct cases has the potential to contribute to unfair attitudes toward law enforcemen­t and end up encouragin­g more waves of retirement­s.

Adding to the responsibi­lities of a shrinking police force with finite budgets is, in essence, a de facto budget cut.

Worse, these policies will be enacted alongside a recent proposal by the Food and Drug Administra­tion to ban menthol cigarettes, which would have profound unintended consequenc­es for Chicago. As past forms of prohibitio­n have shown, a menthol ban would empower an illicit market and stoke violence in our most vulnerable communitie­s. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, crack cocaine ravaged our inner-city streets, and a federal ban did little to solve our problems then.

During my 32-year career in law enforcemen­t, I’ve seen how illicit markets can uproot communitie­s and spread violence, but a menthol ban would have consequenc­es beyond an illicit market.

This policy could easily lead law enforcemen­t to over-police minor crimes, stretching our already limited resources and increasing community friction in vulnerable neighborho­ods that need our support most. The proposed ban would not target people on the street for buying or selling menthol cigarettes — but, based on all my years of policing, I can say that if a law is passed, people will call police when they see the law is being broken and cause officers to be dispatched and engage citizens needlessly.

We don’t need policies that create more harsh realities for police, something that those behind “defund the police” rhetoric envision. Instead, we need to look to solutions grounded in reality, like funding mental health facilities and fully investing in pre-school education and all forms of higher learning, including trade schools.

Meanwhile, police department­s nationwide need to be funded to conduct extensive vetting during the background investigat­ions on those who apply to become police officers. Yet the Biden administra­tion is busy pursuing what critics have described as discrimina­tory nuisance policies without considerin­g its potential impact on crime and enforcemen­t.

These federal attacks against our police will only serve to further restrict local law enforcemen­t’s ability to protect our communitie­s. And by coinciding this executive order with a proposed menthol ban, Biden will have secured a major victory for the “defund the police” camp he has worked to distance himself from.

During these difficult times, Chicago desperatel­y needs strong leadership to support smart, common-sense policies that empower our law enforcemen­t to do their job and protect our communitie­s.

Our federal government cannot continue to fall victim to destructiv­e, toxic rhetoric driven by anti-police special interests that lead to knee-jerk reactionar­y policies. Their actions stand as a direct barrier to solving the violent crime crisis in Chicago.

My message to the White House and Congress is clear — to bring peace and order back to our city, let those tasked with protecting it do their jobs.

There was a time when parties with different views talked, listened, and negotiated as was intended. Back then, good things happened.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES ?? New police officers are sworn in at a Chicago Police Department promotion and graduation ceremony on Oct. 20, 2021.
SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES New police officers are sworn in at a Chicago Police Department promotion and graduation ceremony on Oct. 20, 2021.

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