Chicago Sun-Times

MORE EYES IN THE SKIES

More helicopter­s eyed as a tool for CPD, Cook County sheriff to fight carjacking­s

- BY FRANK MAIN, STAFF REPORTER fmain@suntimes.com | @FrankMainN­ews

Chicago police officials, facing a surge in carjacking­s in recent years, are hoping to acquire new helicopter­s, possibly with the help of donations, to help track stolen vehicles and conduct other types of aerial missions.

A police source said the city has earmarked about $12 million to buy two new helicopter­s, but no contracts have been signed.

“We anticipate, or hope, to replace our helicopter­s,” Eric Carter, the first deputy police superinten­dent, said in an interview.

Carter said “several philanthro­pists have stepped up and inquired what the needs were as well as the cost. It would be a phased transition if we are successful in acquiring the helicopter­s through philanthro­pists and donations — or government funds.”

He wouldn’t elaborate.

Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart also is considerin­g getting a helicopter.

“The sheriff ’s office has been working closely with the county to secure funding to purchase a helicopter,” a sheriff ’s spokesman said. “We believe it to be an effective tool for increasing the odds of catching and prosecutin­g carjacking offenders while keeping county residents safer.”

The Chicago Police Department has two Bell helicopter­s, one built in 1994 and the other in 2006. The police department shares them with Dart’s office under a mutual-aid agreement.

The Chicago police, sheriff ’s office, Illinois State Police and FBI are among the agencies in the police department’s carjacking task force. They use the police helicopter­s with support from helicopter­s owned by the Department of Homeland Security and the state police.

Though Carter spoke of replacing the Chicago Police Department’s helicopter­s, a former city official said the police department would be better off creating a fleet of at least four helicopter­s, including the two old ones.

The possible timetable for getting new police helicopter­s is unclear. One source said it could happen as early as the end of this year. Another said it would take at least a year and a half.

The need for more helicopter­s has been considered by all three police superinten­dents who’ve served under Mayor Lori Lightfoot, the sources said.

The city also is looking to hire another police helicopter pilot. The job requiremen­ts, posted in March, include being a Chicago police officer for at least 18 months, having a pilot’s license and undergoing a year of training as a police helicopter pilot.

According to the city inspector general’s website, the police helicopter unit now has eight staff members.

The city’s police helicopter­s are serviced at Gary/Chicago Internatio­nal Airport in northwest Indiana. In May 2020, the city signed a $4.7 million, fiveyear maintenanc­e contract with Gary Jet Center Inc. The police department pays for the maintenanc­e with money that officers seize in drug cases.

The number of carjacking­s rose sharply in 2020 and the crime continues

to be a major problem in the Chicago area. As a result, the department’s helicopter­s have been frequently called into action to follow stolen vehicles until cops on the ground can make an arrest.

The officers who fly them are able to keep their eyes on a fleeing car when cops on the street aren’t available to follow or when they’ve been ordered to end a chase because it’s too dangerous.

“We have a remarkable success rate at stopping the vehicle, recovering the vehicle and then securing some sort of charge,” Brendan Deenihan, chief of detectives, said of the helicopter­s.

“It gives us time to think of safer ways to apprehend and take a person into custody,” Carter said.

In a helicopter chase May 18, a pilot spent about 15 minutes tracking a stolen car until the occupants jumped out and ran. One of them, a 13-year-old, was shot by an officer on the ground.

The stolen Honda Accord had been used in a carjacking in Oak Park, officials said. Automatic license-plate reading equipment in Chicago alerted police to the car, and one of the helicopter­s began following it, officials said.

The Honda zigzagged through the West Side while the pilot radioed the location of the car to a police dispatcher who kept asking the pilot whether any police vehicles on the ground were available to follow the Honda, The answer was no.

The car stopped near a gas station at Cicero and Chicago avenues, and the pilot said, “You got two on foot running southbound on Cicero now,” according to a recording of the police radio chatter.

The 13-year-old boy “turned toward the officers” and was shot, police Supt. David Brown said. The teenager didn’t fire any shots and didn’t have a gun, according to the city’s Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity. Brown said investigat­ors believe the boy was involved in the Oak Park carjacking.

The boy’s family has sued the city over the shooting, which left him seriously wounded in the back.

“Unfortunat­ely, that one got a lot more attention on the end result,” Deenihan said of the May 18 pursuit. “But that’s how the system works. I think you can make a reasonable assumption here that [the suspects] knew the helicopter was above them — left, right, north, south, east, west. Eventually, they’re, like, ‘We got to get out of this car because this helicopter is not going away.’ ”

Ald. Matt O’Shea (19th) has called on Lightfoot and Brown to get more police helicopter­s to combat carjacking­s in his Southwest Side neighborho­od and the rest of the city. O’Shea said he’s spoken to representa­tives of Illinois Democratic Senators Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth and to U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Ill., about the possibilit­y of securing federal money for one or more of them.

“Why we haven’t invested in purchasing multiple helicopter­s is puzzling,” O’Shea said. “It’s a proven tool to combat the crimes that are decimating our city.”

O’Shea said he’s been told the department’s helicopter­s are in “poor condition” and frequently out of service for maintenanc­e.

In addition to tracking stolen vehicles, Chicago Police Department’s two helicopter­s are used in search-andrescue missions, evaluating the size of large crowds, watching over events like the Chicago Marathon and conducting “aerial reconnaiss­ance of target locations.”

The Chicago Fire Department also has two Bell helicopter­s, which are used in rescues.

Other cities have bigger police helicopter fleets. The Los Angeles Police Department has 17 helicopter­s. The New York Police Department has seven. The Houston Police Department has 13 helicopter­s, including one that’s out of commission because of a “hard landing,” a spokeswoma­n said.

L.A. and New York have a police airplane, too.

Carter said it would be “ideal” for Chicago to have a much larger police helicopter fleet.

“It’s just a force-multiplier all the way around the Chicago metropolit­an region,” he said.

 ?? TYLER PASCIAK LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? A Chicago police helicopter flies over the scene where five teens were shot, one fatally, in May in the Back of the Yards neighborho­od.
TYLER PASCIAK LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES A Chicago police helicopter flies over the scene where five teens were shot, one fatally, in May in the Back of the Yards neighborho­od.
 ?? ??
 ?? CHICAGO POLICE DEPARTMENT ?? The patch that Chicago police helicopter pilots wear on their flight suits.
CHICAGO POLICE DEPARTMENT The patch that Chicago police helicopter pilots wear on their flight suits.

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