Chicago Sun-Times

RAHM’S CALL TO ACTION

Years after his son was mugged, mayor to target cellphone thefts

- BYFRANSPIE­LMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

Mayor Rahm Emanuel will move Wednesday to reduce cellphone thefts, like the one that targeted his own son, by reducing the value of stolen phones on the “secondary black market.”

“Cellphone robberies are a serious threat to public safety and parents’ peace of mind,” Emanuel, whose son was robbed of his cellphone nearly three years ago, was quoted as saying in a press release.

“We can make a difference when we aggressive­ly go after anyone who thinks they can steal a phone to flip a profit. And we can prevent these crimes before they happen.”

Finance Committee Chairman Edward Burke ( 14th) said he’s joining forces with the mayor in hopes of making cellphone theft “less attractive by cracking down on the sellers of stolen devices and mandating cross- checks with a database that tracks stolen cellphones.”

In 2014, the City Council mandated cellphone unlocking services to keep records on their customers and devices.

The new crackdown would impose new regulation­s and strengthen others to make it easier to track stolen cellphones.

Itwould also tighten the regulatory noose against those who stand to profit from the sale of stolen cellphones— either in stores or on online. Last year, 14,493 phones were reported lost or stolen in Chicago.

The crackdown includes: stepped- up notificati­on requiremen­ts; mandatory cross- checks withadatab­aseof stolen cellphones; and holding dealers accountabl­e by suspending their licenses and confiscati­ng stolen cellphones at secondhand dealership­s.

The Chicago Police Department also will join forceswith the Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection on investigat­ions that “target and eliminate problemati­c cellphone dealers,” officials said.

The mugging that fueled the mayor’s anger occurred shortly before midnight on Dec. 19, 2014, just days before Emanuel and his family left on another one of their exotic Christmas vacations — this time to Chile.

It was a particular­ly poignant trip, since it was Zach Emanuel’s last before going off to college at UCLA.

The mayor has said Zach was talking on a cellphone with a college counselor when he was jumped from behind by two unarmed men.

In a follow- up interview with the Chicago Sun- Times, Emanuel was open about the anguish he felt after learning about the attack.

“Your most basic instinct as a parent is to protect your child, and there they are only 50 feet away from your house. . . . You want to protect your children. You also have to give them independen­ce. There’s that inherent conflict,” the mayor said then.

Days before the only arrest in the case, the mayor said, “I’m hoping they find him soon because I’m not sure Miranda rights is something I believe in right now. I say that as a joke.”

The rage the mayor felt about the young men whomugged his son was matched only by the anger he felt when mayoral challenger Bob Fioretti tried to make a campaign issue ofwhat Fioretti claimed at the time was Emanuel’s failure to press charges in the case.

“People’s families are off- limits,” themayor said then.

Fioretti’s comment was a particular­ly low blow because it fed a rumor mill that had been swirling about the case and questionin­g the official account.

At least some of those rumors were fed by 11 police officers subsequent­ly slapped with one- day suspension­s for “inappropri­ately” accessing police reports about the attack, which were also obtained by and released to the news media during themayoral campaign.

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