Chicago Sun-Times

UNION PRESIDENT WANTS MEETING WITH TOP COP ON USE- OF- FORCE POLICY

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@ suntimes. com | @ fspielman

Fraternal Order of Police President Kevin Graham on Monday asked for a meeting with Police Supt. Eddie Johnson to “clarify when and how police officers will be discipline­d for using force.”

The request comes four days after Police Board member Eva- Dina Delgado sided with the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity — and against Johnson— in recommendi­ng that Officer Robert Rialmo be fired for shooting a bat- wielding Quintonio LeGrier and LeGrier’s neighbor Bettie Jones in December 2015.

The FOP was infuriated by the decision, which places the final ruling on whether or not to fire Rialmo in the hands of the eight remaining Police Board members.

Martin Preib, second vice president of the FOP, branded Delgado’s ruling as “despicable and false” and said she “paralyzed the police.”

On Monday, Graham argued that lastweek’s decision placed officers and citizens in danger.

“Because of this decision by COPA and the board’s decision to uphold it, the city has abandoned the use of force model that police officers employ in the execution of their duties,” Graham wrote in a letter.

“The COPA and Police Board ruling, therefore, places our officers in a tenuous, dangerous position as well as members of the public as officers do not know if they will be discipline­d for using appropriat­e levels of force. Many dire situations can result.”

The heater case landed in Delgado’s lap after Johnson met “multiple times” with Patricia Banks, acting administra­tor of COPA, in a failed attempt to find middle ground.

That’s not surprising considerin­g their widely divergent views of the first police shooting to follow the November 2015 release of the Laquan McDonald shooting video.

After an exhaustive review of the evidence, COPA has ruled the shooting unjustifie­d and raised questions about Rialmo’s version of events.

COPA concluded that, although LeGrier had a baseball bat in his hands, a “reasonable officer” would not have felt threatened because Rialmo was farther away from LeGrier than the officer claimed and did not swing the bat at Rialmo.

Johnson looked at the same evidence and ruled the shooting justified.

He has called into question COPA’s entire investigat­ory process, arguing that the agency looked at the shooting with the luxury of hindsight instead of analyzing Rialmo’s actions from his perspectiv­e in the moment.

If Delgado had sided with Johnson, that would have been the final word. But now that she has sided with COPA, the recommenda­tion that Rialmo be fired must be approved by the entire Police Board with Delgado abstaining.

After last week’s Police Board meeting, Johnson said the raw emotion touched off by the case “doesn’t escape me” as a “black man” born and raised in Chicago who raised his own family here.

“But . . . I have to leave emotions from myself, the community and elected officials out of it,” he said.

Larry Rogers Jr., a lawyer representi­ng the family of Jones, praised Delgado for siding with COPA.

“COPA was created because officers protect officers,” Rogers said.

“What Superinten­dent Johnson did is no different than what we’ve seen” in the past.

LeGrier’s mother, Janet Cooksey, reminded reporters that her son called police three times and never got help.

“You don’t call somebody three times to try to attack them!”

Appealing to the full Police Board to ratify Delgado’s ruling, Cooksey said, “Rialmo has to be fired. . . . I don’t have a child. I’ll never be a grandmothe­r. I have to live with this every day.”

Two 911 center dispatcher­s were suspended without pay for hanging up on LeGrier and failing to dispatch police in response to the young man’s pleas.

When Chicago Police finally did respond, they shot and killed LeGrier and accidental­ly killed Jones.

 ?? SUN- TIMES FILE ?? Kevin Graham, president of the Fraternal Order of Police, said the Police Board ruling “places our officers in a tenuous, dangerous position.”
SUN- TIMES FILE Kevin Graham, president of the Fraternal Order of Police, said the Police Board ruling “places our officers in a tenuous, dangerous position.”

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