Rally decries Chicago police
Marchers along main shopping district urge a Black Friday boycott to highlight concerns.
CHICAGO — For the second year in a row, protesters rallied along Chicago’s Magnificent Mile urging a Black Friday boycott to raise awareness of police misconduct toward minorities and other inequalities in the city’s poorest neighborhoods.
Protesters gathered about 10 a.m. near the old Water Tower monument on North Michigan Avenue. Activists spoke to the gathering about police shootings and the need for action. Some in the crowd chanted, “No justice. No peace,” and, in a reference to the mayor, said, “Hey, hey. Ho, ho. Rahm Emanuel has got to go.”
Shortly after 11 a.m. the crowd, numbering in the hundreds, marched along the sidewalk of the city’s most famous retail district. The crowd was smaller than the one that took to the streets on Black Friday last year. Still, it reflected ongoing tensions between Chicagoans and a government they call unresponsive and indifferent.
Some protesters gathered in front of the Ralph Lauren store and yelled, “Shut it down!” The group passed several high-end retail shops that dot the Magnificent Mile, breaking off into smaller groups.
One group linked arms in a circle outside the Victoria’s Secret store, but shoppers were able to enter and exit without a problem. Some onlookers snapped pictures of the protesters and carried on with their shopping. Uniformed Chicago police officers convened in front of a few stores on the Mag Mile, as its known here, just in case.
Traffic moved normally, leaving shoppers and tourists to amble freely along the street while helicopters whirred overhead.
The lack of action allowed some officers to shake hands with passersby and point a group of lost tourists toward Grand Lux Cafe.
Kirby Shaw, a 23-year-old cook from Los Angeles, handed out posters early Friday outside the old Water Tower calling for a civilian police oversight council. Shaw, in town visiting his sister, said he was walking down the Mag Mile and decided to get involved after coming upon the gathering protesters. He said police misconduct, and Donald Trump’s presidential election victory, were motivators.
“I figured if I’m going to be writing about it on social media I should actually get involved,” Shaw said. “A lot of the same things that are going on here also are happening in L.A., but you don’t hear about it as much.”
Friday’s protest paled in comparison with last year, when an estimated crowd of 1,000 people temporarily blocked traffic and access to about a dozen ritzy Michigan Avenue retailers to protest the fatal shooting in 2014 of black teenager Laquan McDonald by a white Chicago police officer, Jason Van Dyke.
The public uproar over his death ensued after the court-ordered release last year of police dashboardcamera video, in which McDonald is seen being shot 16 times as he appears, with knife in hand, to be walking away from police.
Chicago is awaiting the conclusion of a federal civil rights investigation of Police Department practices and the trial of Van Dyke, who is charged with murder. After the release of the dashboard video of the shooting, the city agreed to pay McDonald’s family $5 million.
Last year protesters blocked store entrances and some retailers reported a huge drop-off in sales. “We were down a lot,” Sarah Midoun, a sales associate at Aldo shoe store, said at the time. “We were budgeted to make $37,000, but we only did $19,000 — customers told us they were concerned.”
Four people were arrested during that demonstration, also held the day after Thanksgiving.
This year’s protest was planned by a network of groups that includes Black Lives Matters and the Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression. Organizers said they wanted to draw attention to a range of issues, including police mistreatment of minorities and economic inequalities that they say perpetuate gun violence and poverty in the city’s West and South sides.
Activists also are denouncing Mayor Emanuel’s new police oversight agency, the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, which they argue falls short of their call for fully independent, civilian-led oversight in cases of suspected police misconduct.
Barbara Lyons, 79, of the group Jewish Voice for Peace, said a mix of community organizations is taking part in the protest, all with a similar message of inclusion.
“For some, it’s about the police; some, it’s about immigration. It’s just all the people who are not [Trump supporters], and they’re afraid,” said the longtime activist.
“It just upsets me what kind of world my grandchildren will grow up in,” she said.