Chicago Sun-Times

TOP COP TO BOYCOTT TRUMP TALK

President, who has long been critical of city, to speak at police conference in Chicago

- BY LYNN SWEET, WASHINGTON BUREAU CHIEF lsweet@suntimes.com | @lynnsweet

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump — for years a critic of how Chicago handles crime — on Monday, in his first visit to the city as president, plans to deliver a speech to the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police, an event Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson vowed to boycott.

Trump slammed the city in a speech to the police chiefs group at its annual conference last year in Orlando. While Johnson attended that chiefs’ meeting in Orlando, he skipped Trump’s speech, his spokesman, Anthony Guglielmi, told the Chicago Sun-Times.

Johnson as the “host chief” of the conference running from Saturday through Tuesday at McCormick Place will attend other conference functions and sessions, Guglielmi said.

A White House official told the Sun-Times “the IACP was the first law enforcemen­t associatio­n to endorse the President’s First Step Act, which prepares inmates to successful­ly rejoin society and enacts commonsens­e sentencing reforms to make our justice system fairer for all Americans.

“President Trump is expected to discuss his strong record on law enforcemen­t, the historic First Step Act legislatio­n, and economic actions taken to reduce crime and recidivism, including Opportunit­y Zones.”

The Sun-Times reported this month that Trump was likely to speak to the police chiefs organizati­on.

Johnson said through his spokesman that he is “very much looking forward to hosting America’s police chiefs and participat­ing in collaborat­ive discussion­s around domestic police policy. However, I will not be attending the president’s remarks because the values of the people of Chicago are more important to me than anything that could be said in the speech.”

Trump also hits Chicago for a fundraisin­g lunch co-hosted by Cubs co-owner Todd Ricketts, chairman of the combined fundraisin­g efforts for the Trump 2020 campaign and the Republican National Committee. The lunch is likely to be at the Trump Internatio­nal

Hotel & Tower, 401 N. Wabash Ave. The top tab for that event is $100,000, according to an invitation obtained by the Sun-Times.

Trump has been focusing on Chicago crime since his 2016 presidenti­al campaign, accusing city leaders of thwarting police and at one point pledging to “send in the Feds.”

Pushing back, Chicago officials have declared Chicago a sanctuary city in the wake of Trump’s immigratio­n crackdowns and have fought other policy directives from the Trump White House, including an attempt to deny law enforcemen­t grants.

Last year in Orlando, Trump, saying police need more “stop and frisk” power, also said “the crime spree is a terrible blight on that city. And we’ll do everything possible to get it done. I know the law enforcemen­t people in Chicago, and I know how good they are,” he said. “They could solve the problem if they were simply allowed to do their job and do their job properly, and that’s what they want to do.”

One of Trump’s more sensationa­l claims, which has never been proved, is that he talked to a “top police officer in Chicago” who told him he could stop crime in the city “within one week.”

Trump, in an Aug. 23, 2016, interview with then-Fox News host Bill O’Reilly said, “All I know is this. I went to a top police officer in Chicago

who is not the police chief. And he, I could see, by the way, he was dealing with his people. He was a rough, tough guy. They respected him greatly. I said, ‘how do you think you do it?’ He said, ‘Mr. Trump. Within one week, we could stop much of this.”

The Chicago police said in statement at the time that no one in the senior command at CPD had ever met with Donald Trump or a member of his campaign.

Once president, on Feb. 1, 2017, Trump was told by a minister at a White House meeting billed as an “African-American History Month listening session” that he was talking to members of “top gangs” in Chicago to reduce violence.

Trump liked the idea, and said, if city officials don’t take steps, “we’re going to solve the problem for them,” suggesting direct interventi­on with street gang leaders might be a good idea.

‘‘I WILL NOT BE ATTENDING THE PRESIDENT’S REMARKS BECAUSE THE VALUES OF THE PEOPLE OF CHICAGO ARE MORE IMPORTANT TO ME THAN ANYTHING THAT COULD BE SAID IN THE SPEECH.” POLICE SUPT. EDDIE JOHNSON

 ??  ?? President Donald Trump
President Donald Trump
 ??  ?? Police Supt. Eddie Johnson
Police Supt. Eddie Johnson

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