Chicago Sun-Times

SENTENCE IS STEP BACKWARD, MLK BREAKFAST SPEAKERS SAY

- BY TROY CLOSSON, STAFF REPORTER tclosson@suntimes.com | @troy_closson

Reflecting Monday on the life and legacy of Martin Luther King Jr., the Rev. Jesse Jackson cited the prison sentence of Chicago Police Officer Jason Van Dyke and ongoing government shutdown as the kind of injustices the civil rights leader would have fought against.

At a breakfast for PUSH Excel’s Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. scholarshi­p program, Jackson and other community leaders discussed how to move forward after the sentencing of Van Dyke for the 2014 murder of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald.

Jackson said the 84-year sentence given last week to Mickieal Ward, convicted of killing 15-year-old Hadiya Pendleton, stands in stark contrast to Van Dyke’s 81-month sentence, handed down Friday.

“Justice has been covered up,” Jackson said.

Several mayoral candidates, including Toni Preckwinkl­e and Lori Lightfoot, shared similar sentiments. Lightfoot called for the FBI to reopen the grand jury investigat­ion into the case, citing the federal government’s separate civil rights case into Rodney King’s beating by police.

In continuing King’s legacy of exposing injustices, Preckwinkl­e added, it’s essential to not end the conversati­on with Van Dyke.

“[He] was the first police officer in 50 years to be convicted of murder, but he’s not the first officer in 50 years to have murdered one of our residents,” Preckwinkl­e said, “and that’s something we shouldn’t forget as we move forward.”

At the breakfast — attended by hundreds of educators, high school students and state leaders such as Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton — five honorees also were recognized for making “significan­t strides toward education equity.” They included Coca-Cola’s chief diversity and inclusion officer Lori George Billingsle­y, Hazel Crest School District Supt. Sheila Harrison-Williams and multicultu­ral dance group Hiplet Ballerinas.

Jackson also criticized the continued government shutdown, the longest ever; Monday was its 31st day. Jackson and other officials called for an immediate solution for the families affected.

“Forced work without pay is slavery,” Jackson said. “These workers . . . have been used as pawns in a scheme of an unnecessar­y wall.”

Asked how he believes King would view Chicago’s progress — or lack thereof — today, Jackson said poverty and income inequality for communitie­s of color stand out as ongoing problems.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker also spoke at the breakfast, promising to “waste no time reversing the damage” of the past few years, mentioning gun violence and racial inequality as areas to address. Quoting King, Pritzker said the state hasn’t seen the “fierce urgency of now” or the “vigorous and positive action” the nonviolent activist called for.

“With Illinois having been stagnant on expanding people’s rights and standing up for economic security and economic rights, not just civil rights,” Pritzker said, “. . . the road ahead is an opportunit­y for us to make real change.”

 ?? JAMES FOSTER PHOTOS/FOR THE SUN-TIMES ?? The Rev. Jesse Jackson, flanked by mayoral candidates Willie Wilson (left) and Lori Lightfoot (right, front) and others, speaks at the breakfast for PUSH Excel’s Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. scholarshi­p program Monday.
JAMES FOSTER PHOTOS/FOR THE SUN-TIMES The Rev. Jesse Jackson, flanked by mayoral candidates Willie Wilson (left) and Lori Lightfoot (right, front) and others, speaks at the breakfast for PUSH Excel’s Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. scholarshi­p program Monday.
 ??  ?? Lori George Billingsle­y, Coca-Cola’s chief diversity and inclusion officer, was honored at the King scholarshi­p breakfast.
Lori George Billingsle­y, Coca-Cola’s chief diversity and inclusion officer, was honored at the King scholarshi­p breakfast.
 ??  ?? The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

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