Chicago Sun-Times

CONCEAL OF DISAPPROVA­L

CPD investigat­ing at least one officer who appears to have covered up star during protests, a practice prohibited by at least two department directives

- BY JONATHAN BALLEW Chicago Reporter This story originally appeared in The Chicago Reporter. Jonathan Ballew is a Chicago-based freelance journalist.

After one of the most volatile mass protests in the city’s recent memory sparked by the Minneapoli­s police killing of George Floyd, Chicago police are investigat­ing at least one officer for covering up his badge number and name tag.

Images and video circulatin­g on social media show police officers who appear to have either taped over the name tags on their uniforms and badge star numbers or removed them entirely. In a statement to the The Chicago Reporter Wednesday evening, the Chicago Police Department condemned the practice.

“All Chicago police officers are required to wear their unit assignment designator, nameplate and prescribed star so that they are clearly visible. An internal investigat­ion has been opened into the officer who was photograph­ed without his unit assignment designator and nameplate and with his star number covered. CPD holds its officers to the highest profession­al standards, and violations of the department’s policy will be addressed,” the department said in a statement.

Concealing those elements of a uniform or failing to correctly identify themselves is specifical­ly prohibited by at least two Chicago police directives.

But the Reporter has obtained images and video that suggest multiple CPD officers may have been engaging in the inappropri­ate practice of hiding their names or star numbers, which are the unique identifyin­g numbers on an officer’s badge.

Kyle Wilkins, 29, took one photo near DePaul’s campus Sunday about 8 p.m. and posted it to Twitter. The image shows an officer with what appears to be duct tape covering his star number.

“I think he put it on there to cover up his number,” Wilkins said.

Wilkins said once he and some other protesters began complainin­g, the officer removed the tape from the badge.

“It’s scary,” he said, “Because many officers weren’t even wearing their body cams, and making it harder to identify them is very concerning.”

Ald. Andre Vasquez said

Wednesday his office fielded calls about the “shameful” practice all day and he brought it up at City Hall during a meeting of the Committee on Public Safety.

“It says a lot about folks who think they need to tape up their badge,” he said. “What kind of activity does an officer plan on doing that they cover up their badge?”

Vasquez said his office asked the Lightfoot administra­tion about the practice on Tuesday.

“People want to equate us asking questions as if these aren’t serious matters,” he said. “There is a history of inappropri­ate policing in Chicago. There is a reason why the tension here was different.”

On Monday, video surfaced on social media that showed a Chicago

police officer beating a man in Uptown during a demonstrat­ion. Ephraim Eaddy, a spokesman for the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity, told the Chicago SunTimes the independen­t monitor received 82 complaints over the weekend.

On Tuesday, Mayor Lori Lightfoot acknowledg­ed in her State of the City speech that “the process of reform has been too slow and too narrowly focused,” and pledged to institute immediate steps toward reform within the next 90 days including community-centered and de-escalation training, and mental health support for officers.

In a statement to the Reporter, Chicago’s chapter of the Fraternal Order of Police said they “do not make the CPD policy nor make the department orders so we can’t speak for CPD.”

The Reporter asked CPD about the images and video that show multiple officers engaging in the practice, and whether there would be a more comprehens­ive investigat­ion beyond just one officer.

“All allegation­s that we are made aware of will be addressed,” they said in a statement.

But CPD did not respond to questions about how many allegation­s they were aware of.

Lightfoot’s office said she strongly condemned the practice.

“Wearing nameplates in uniform is the most universal form of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity when it comes to policing. All Chicago police officers are required to wear and make visible their unit assignment designator, nameplate and prescribed star. Should any officer be found in violation of these policies, we will ensure that they will be held fully accountabl­e,” her office said in a statement.

The Chicago Police Department has been under a federal consent decree since January 2019. An investigat­ion by the Reporter found that between 2011 and 2017, the city paid $313 million to settle claims of police misconduct. The tally for 2018 alone was $113 million, according to the most recent analysis.

“WHAT KIND OF ACTIVITY DOES AN OFFICER PLAN ON DOING THAT THEY COVER UP THEIR BADGE?”

ALD. ANDRE VASQUEZ

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