Chicago Sun-Times

MEMO TO RAHM: YOUR MEMO NEEDS WORK

Police Board prez Lori Lightfoot says reform plan sent to feds ‘ fundamenta­lly flawed’

- FRAN SPIELMAN REPORTS,

The memorandum of agreement drafted by Mayor Rahm Emanuel as a way to avoid federal court oversight of the Chicago Police Department is “fundamenta­lly flawed and will not advance the cause of reform,” Police Board President Lori Lightfoot said Thursday.

After studying the 70- page agreement sent to the U. S. Justice Department, Lightfoot declared it long on “history and aspiration” and woefully short on specifics.

There is no specific list of reforms that must be achieved; no deadlines that must be met; no commitment of personnel and funding and no commitment to change a police contract that, Lightfoot has said, “turns the code of silence into official policy.”

Without those specifics, an independen­t monitor would be “left to wonder what it is he or she should be auditing.” Nor would there be any way to determine whether the Chicago Police Department was in substantia­l compliance.

Lightfoot noted that U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions is not enthusiast­ic about consent decrees. In April, the Department of Justice ordered a review of contemplat­ed consent decrees with local law enforcemen­t agencies.

“If we indulge in the fantasy that this Department of Justice with this attorney general would actually take the department into court on an uncured default, there’s no specifics on which they could enforce specific performanc­e,” Lightfoot said.

Additional­ly, “there’s no specific commitment … on an annual basis to provide the department with the tens of millions of dollars it’s going to need to actually accomplish reform. … At the height of its reform efforts, the Los Angeles Police Department had approximat­ely 200 people working on reform. The Chicago Police Department has a small handful.”

Equally troubling, the draft memorandum is silent on community oversight and declares that if the independen­t monitor finds substantia­l compliance “at any point on any topic, it can never go back and revisit that reform,” Lightfoot said.

“The bottom line is that this document is fundamenta­lly flawed. It will not help advance the cause of reform in Chicago. And frankly, I think it sets the Police Department up for failure.”

Earlier this week, Inspector General Joe Ferguson demanded that Emanuel honor his promise to seek federal court oversight over the Chicago Police Department.

Lightfoot is not yet willing to join Ferguson and others on that bandwagon.

“If the mayor can demonstrat­e to people that there is a credible alternativ­e to court supervisio­n, I would like to see it and other people would be open to it. But it’s got to be credible and the memorandum of agreement as drafted does not provide that type of oversight,” she said.

Lightfoot urged the mayor to “engage with the Illinois attorney general to come up with an agreement … that contains specific measures, specific time frames, real accountabi­lity measures and the resources necessary to get the job done,” Lightfoot said. “It should be the result of a process that brings in all of the relevant stakeholde­rs so that the final product has legitimacy. Negotiatin­g and drafting documents in secret — I thought we were over that in Chicago.”

Walter Katz, Emanuel’s chief deputy for public safety, said he has the “utmost respect for Lori’s insight,” which is why he “personally engaged” Lightfoot and other reform experts in an “ongoing dialogue.”

“THIS DOCUMENT IS FUNDAMENTA­LLY FLAWED. IT WILL NOT HELP ADVANCE THE CAUSE OF REFORM IN CHICAGO. AND FRANKLY, I THINK IT SETS THE POLICE DEPARTMENT UP FOR FAILURE.” LORI LIGHTFOOT

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