Chicago Sun-Times

Predecesso­r’s strategy to reduce violence didn’t work, Brown says

- BY FRANK MAIN AND MANNY RAMOS

Chicago Police Supt. David Brown said Thursday his predecesso­r’s crime-fighting strategy didn’t work and defended his own decision to create roving citywide teams of cops, saying they’ve reduced violence — even though the perception is that murders and shootings are out of control.

Brown, who rarely gives news conference­s, marked his first year in office by addressing reporters at Chicago Police Department headquarte­rs, where he also tried to put to rest the recent chatter that he was about to be fired by Mayor Lori Lightfoot.

“Let me start with rumors and gossip. I haven’t dealt with those since junior high school, and I don’t plan on doing it now,” Brown said. “I think this city has a great mayor — I believe Mayor Lightfoot is one of the best mayors in the country — and I support her wholeheart­edly, and I am going to work my fingers to the bone for her.”

Brown also discussed the death of 7-yearold Jaslyn Adams, calls for civilian oversight of the police department and its efforts to comply with the 2019 federal consent decree requiring police reforms.

Rumors that Brown might be resigning were driven in part by his lack of visibility after some recent high-profile incidents. While he said the resignatio­n rumors didn’t warrant a response, he said criticism of his not holding more news conference­s was fair.

“I am not the kind of leader that chases the camera and says, ‘Look at me,’” Brown said. “I’d much rather be criticized for doing the work, the hard work, and not the PR.”

Also fueling those rumors: rampant Chicago violence over the past year, including a surge in carjacking­s and a more than 50% increase in murders in 2020 compared with 2019. According to the department’s own crime statistics this year through March 28, killings were up 33% compared with the same period of 2020, and shooting incidents were up 39%.

Interim Supt. Charlie Beck — Brown’s predecesso­r — had enacted a sweeping reorganiza­tion, focusing on putting cops in districts. Brown said he reorganize­d again at the end of July 2020, creating large units that can be mobilized across the city to fight crime.

“I just try not to do stuff that doesn’t work. That structure wasn’t working.”

Brown acknowledg­ed the perception his reorganiza­tion increased violence.

“The facts are, the old structure wasn’t working in the new landscape of global pandemic and a social justice movement around race. That’s the facts.”

Brown said he’s committed to reforms based on the requiremen­ts of the consent decree, saying, “the ultimate goal is changing the culture of the police department.”

He also took another shot at his predecesso­rs: “I walked in the door a year ago and, just to be quite frank with you, the department wasn’t taking the consent decree very seriously . ... We had to dig ourselves out of a hole.”

Still, the department is meeting only slightly more than half of the 72 deadlines being assessed by an independen­t monitor of the consent decree, Brown acknowledg­ed.

Beck, a former Los Angeles police chief, couldn’t immediatel­y be reached for comment. He was acting superinten­dent from November 2019 until April 2020.

Brown also spoke about the death of Jaslyn — holding her father responsibl­e, in part, for having her in a car with him when she was shot to death Sunday at a McDonald’s drive-thru.

“This is about a young African American male ... deciding to live the life of crime, getting in conflict with others who have decided to live a life of crime and putting your precious babies in the car with you, and this has happened time after time after time — and it’s beyond enough,” Brown said, adding police believe the father was “targeted” by the shooter.

“But,” Brown added, “all of this is colored in race, poverty, social justice, investment on the West and South sides — this despair we feel when we are in impoverish­ed conditions.”

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES ?? Police Supt. David Brown said at a news conference Thursday, “The facts are, the old structure wasn’t working.”
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES Police Supt. David Brown said at a news conference Thursday, “The facts are, the old structure wasn’t working.”

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