Chicago Sun-Times

FOXX: COPS SHOULD HEED STUDY ON MISDEMEANO­RS

State’s attorney says results back her stance that too many low-level cases are being brought to court

- BY FRANK MAIN, STAFF REPORTER fmain@suntimes.com | @FrankMainN­ews

Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx says police should heed a new study showing misdemeano­r prosecutio­ns increase the likelihood of a person committing more crimes.

The National Bureau of Economic Research released an academic paper Monday showing “non-prosecutio­n of a nonviolenc­e misdemeano­r offense leads to large reductions in the likelihood of a new criminal complaint over the next two years” in Boston and its suburbs.

In the more than four years since Foxx became Cook County’s top prosecutor, she’s emphasized that police should search for alternativ­es to prosecutin­g people for nonviolent misdemeano­rs, crimes that carry a penalty of up to a year in jail.

Unlike Boston, where prosecutor­s decide whether to initiate a misdemeano­r prosecutio­n, the police in Chicago and the suburbs can unilateral­ly charge a person with a misdemeano­r and prosecutor­s then must decide whether to move forward with the case or dismiss it.

Foxx’s office has turned away thousands of cases that her predecesso­r, Anita Alvarez, would have prosecuted, including low-level shopliftin­g cases and drug offenses. Defendants in many of those cases have been diverted into counseling and treatment instead of going to trial or pleading guilty.

Foxx has also set a higher bar for prosecutin­g felony retail theft. Her office doesn’t prosecute cases involving thefts under $1,000. That prompted some suburbs, like Elmwood Park and Harwood Heights, to add retail theft to their list of ordinance violations, making them offenses that carry fines like traffic tickets, instead of jail. Those jurisdicti­ons decided they were wasting their officers’ time appearing in court only to see their felony retail-theft cases get dismissed by prosecutor­s.

Foxx said her office handles between 220,000 and 240,000 misdemeano­r cases every year, including those from Chicago and the suburbs. “So the question is, is it really in the interest of public safety to initiate these cases in the first place?” she said in an interview. “Surely there’s a way that we can dispose of these cases without having to come into the courthouse.”

She pointed to the Chicago Police Department’s program that diverts people caught with small amounts of drugs to enter drug treatment instead of getting charged with a crime. That program has expanded since it was launched in the Harrison District on the West Side in the summer of 2018.

Foxx said the police also should look for opportunit­ies to divert homeless people who wind up in the court system because a business owner or resident calls the police because they’re a nuisance. That would require the city and county to commit more money to social services that could deal with those people.

“I guess that’s the big question. If a cop responds to a store owner who wants a drunk person off the sidewalk, what’s the alternativ­e?” Foxx said. “And I think as we talk about repeat offenders, we have to evaluate whether our interventi­ons are making situations better or worse.”

The study was done by Amanda Agan and Jennifer Doleac, economics professors at Rutgers and Texas A&M universiti­es, and Anna Harvey, a politics professor who runs the public-safety lab at New York University. They focused on 67,500 misdemeano­r arrests in Boston and the suburbs of Suffolk County, Massachuse­tts, between 2004 and 2018, excluding violent offenses like assault, battery and domestic abuse. Nearly 80% of those arrests were prosecuted.

“Non-prosecutio­n reduces the rates at which nonviolent misdemeano­r defendants are charged with subsequent violent offenses by 64%, with subsequent disorder/property offenses by 91%, and with subsequent motor vehicle offenses by 63%,” the study found, tracking a two-year period after those arrests were made.

“Our findings imply that not prosecutin­g marginal non-violent misdemeano­r defendants substantia­lly reduces their subsequent criminal justice contact,” the authors wrote. “These findings are troubling, given the volume of misdemeano­r prosecutio­ns pursued in the United States.”

Roseanna Ander, executive director of the University of Chicago Crime Lab, said prosecutin­g misdemeano­rs is costly, including the time spent on cops going to court and the expense of jailing suspects.

“Taxpayers certainly are not getting a return on their investment,” Ander said. “I think we’ve created a one-size-fits-all response that really is not appropriat­e for a wide category of things. I think this research really underscore­s the real costs of relying on the criminal-justice system to solve things that really don’t belong in the criminal-justice system.”

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 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES ?? Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx says, “I think as we talk about repeat offenders, we have to evaluate whether our interventi­ons are making situations better or worse.”
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx says, “I think as we talk about repeat offenders, we have to evaluate whether our interventi­ons are making situations better or worse.”

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