Chicago Sun-Times

FOXX SWORN IN

Promises transparen­cy will be ‘ dramatic change’

- BY RUMMANA HUSSAIN Staff Reporter Email: rhussain@suntimes.com Twitter: @rummanahus­sain

Promising “transparen­cy” and building trust with many in the community who are “angry and grieving,” Kim Foxx was sworn in Thursday as Cook County’s first African- American female state’s attorney.

Chief Cook County Judge Timothy Evans swore in Foxx before a crowd at the Harold Washington Library that included Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e, Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson, former Gov. Pat Quinn, Cook County Public Defender Amy Campanelli and several Chicago aldermen.

After the brief ceremony, Foxx, who defeated her predecesso­r Anita Alvarez amid criticism over the prosecutor’s office’s handling of the Laquan McDonald police shooting, offered few specifics on how she plans to run the office differentl­y.

“These are problems that have been decades in the making, and certainly there will be a concerted effort to shift policy,” Foxx said. “But changing culture takes time. I’m op- timistic that we will be able to have programmin­g, we’ll have initiative­s that people will see the immediate effect. The transparen­cy itself alone will be a dramatic change with how the office operates now.”

When asked about concerns on whether she would be more of a public defender than a tough- oncrime prosecutor, Foxx said, “I think it’s interestin­g that when we talk about maintainin­g civil rights and civil liberties that somehow it only is the job of a public defender. The state’s attorney’s job is to fight for justice, and in doing that, you have to make sure you are upholding the Constituti­on.”

Earlier, after she took the oath following an introducti­on by her older brother Stephen Anderson, Foxx joked, “They said that today would be a historic day, my brother saying nice things about me to a crowd.”

Foxx got roaring applause when she mentioned that she was the first black woman to hold the office. She briefly talked about growing up in Cabrini- Green, a neighborho­od that isn’t so different from the ones where the murders are taking place and snuffing out the hopes and dreams of many living there.

She vowed to work as a servant and not brush off murder statistics as just numbers. “We all hurt,” Foxx said. Noting that trust in law enforcemen­t is “dangerousl­y low,” Foxx said, “We cannot deal with the violence in our community as simply a law- enforcemen­t effort. The community needs us, and we need them, and the obligation is on us to meet them where they are and tell them we hear them, we acknowledg­e them.

“. . . We own what has happened to them, and the way we do that is to speak truths that are uncomforta­ble to talk about. We do not take small steps . . . we confront the historic injustices that have existed in the criminal justice system for decades.”

During her speech, Foxx also promised to hold people accountabl­e for their actions, no matter who they are.

She later told reporters that she plans to review recent cases of police- involved shootings and a “wholesale review” of existing protocol dealing with those incidents.

“We’ve had a structure in place for decades that had not ensured accountabi­lity,” Foxx said.

 ??  ?? Chief Cook County Judge Timothy Evans swears in Kim Foxx as Cook County state’s attorney. | SANTIAGO COVARRUBIA­S/ SUN- TIMES
Chief Cook County Judge Timothy Evans swears in Kim Foxx as Cook County state’s attorney. | SANTIAGO COVARRUBIA­S/ SUN- TIMES

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