Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

United incident sheds light on police

Confusion surrounds officers who dragged man off plane

- By Don Babwin

CHICAGO — A tense, three-hour hearing Thursday about what happened to a passenger dragged from his seat on a United flight exposed confusion even among Chicago city officials about the duties of the little-known police force at the center of the embarrassi­ng episode — and warnings it likely will be overhauled.

In the middle of a tense exchange, Chicago Aviation Commission­er Ginger Evans tried to correct one alderman when he referred to the officers as police. Alderman Edward Burke retorted that the state of Illinois recognizes them as exactly that.

Ms. Evans said the officers were ordered in January to take the word “Police” off their jackets in favor of “Security,” but that nobody followed through. Millions of people saw the word “Police” on the officers’ jackets in the video of Kentucky physician David Dao being dragged off the jet.

There was even confusion among officers about their duties. Jeff Redding, the deputy commission­er of security for the aviation department, said officers are instructed not to board planes unless there’s an imminent threat.

The confusion about the security force starts with the fact that airport security in Chicago is handled differentl­y than it is in other big cities such as Los Angeles, New York and Minneapoli­s. Those cities have sworn, armed airport police officers.

The United flight incident shined a spotlight on Chicago’s aviation police. The city has about 200 armed city police officers stationed at the airports along with about 300 aviation officers.

The aviation officers work for the city but not the Police Department, and they earn between $50,000 and $88,000 a year. They are trained at the Police Department academy, but not for as long a period as cadets that become city officers. They don’t carry guns, though before Sunday night some aldermen were pushing for them to carry guns.

That proposal now has virtually no chance of passing, according to Alderman Mike Zalewski, the chair of the council’s aviation committee, and the future of the force itself is in question.

Alderman Chris Taliaferro, who was pushing the ordinance, was even more succinct, saying what happened Sunday “really has put [the airport police force] at risk.”

Mr. Dao will require reconstruc­tive surgery after losing two front teeth and suffering a broken nose and a concussion, his attorney said. Blaming an overly aggressive response by the city’s Aviation Department officers and accusing United of failing to protect its customer, attorney Thomas Demetrio said the incident will likely result in a lawsuit.

The Chicago episode was just one of several recent incidents involving police use of force that have been captured on video.

In Sacramento, Calif., a white police officer confronted a black jaywalker Monday. Video recordings show the officer throwing the man to the ground and pinning him, before striking him in the face at least a dozen times.

Elsewhere, white Gwinnett County, Ga., police Officer Robert McDonald has been fired after he was captured on video kicking a handcuffed black man in the head Wednesday, authoritie­s said.

And in Fort Collins, Colo., a police officer was filmed grabbing the arms of a 22year-old woman and slamming her to the sidewalk, where she lands headfirst with an audible smack.

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