Chicago Sun-Times

POLICE REFORM ADVOCATES WANT TO STOP APPARENT LIGHTFOOT CHOICE FOR TOP COPA JOB

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN AND FRANK MAIN Staff Reporters

Police reform advocates are mobilizing behind the scenes to stop Mayor Lori Lightfoot from appointing the chief operating officer of the Public Building Commission to run Chicago’s Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity.

Lori Lypson’s only experience in investigat­ing police wrongdoing was more than 20 years ago when she spent a year as supervisin­g investigat­or for the Chicago Police Department’s Office of Profession­al Standards.

The chief administra­tor of OPS at that time? Lori Lightfoot.

Lightfoot and Lypson teamed up again in May 2005 at the city’s Department of Procuremen­t Services.

At the time, Lightfoot and longtime friend Mary Dempsey were sent into Procuremen­t Services by Mayor Richard M. Daley to clean up the mess after the Hired Truck and minority contractin­g scandals.

Lypson could not be reached for comment.

Walter Katz served as deputy mayor for public safety under Mayor Rahm Emanuel with oversight responsibi­lity over COPA. Katz said he doesn’t know Lypson personally. But considerin­g Lypson was “at OPS for a year, a long time ago,” he understand­s why reform advocates oppose the appointmen­t.

“The work of having civilian oversight investigat­ing police misconduct is extraordin­arily difficult and having experience in that work is important,” Katz said Wednesday.

“Chicago has suffered through two traumatic, high-profile, officerinv­olved shootings, which are under investigat­ion. It is very important for trust and legitimacy that those investigat­ions proceed as objective and independen­t. So the leadership at COPA has to be able to reflect that objectivit­y and independen­ce.”

“It’s a head-scratcher to me,” Craig Futterman, director of the Civil Rights and Police Accountabi­lity Project at the University of Chicago, said of Lypson’s ppossible appointmen­t.

Futterman compared it with the appointmen­t of retired Cook County Judge Patricia Banks as interim head of COPA under Emanuel. Banks was “smart and competent” but “lacked the experience to run an investigat­ive agency like COPA.” The agency was “rudderless” under Banks and there was an exodus of staffers.

“Bringing in someone who is not either an expert in investigat­ing police misconduct or managing these investigat­ions, which are complicate­d and politicall­y fraught, you are basically dooming the agency to failure,” Futterman said.

The mayor’s office denied a final decision has been made on what is expected to be a year-long appointmen­t that would not require City Council approval.

Lypson would replace Sydney Roberts, forced out last week after Lightfoot publicly and repeatedly criticized the slow pace of COPA investigat­ions.

“From the outset, there was this big backlog of cases which was inherited from IPRA. They have hundreds of [additional] cases they need to investigat­e. There is a question about whether or not they have sufficient staffing for that. Considerin­g those types of challenges, Sydney did a good job. It’s an extraordin­arily hard job,” Katz told the Sun-Times.

Lypson’s appointmen­t is expected to go over like a lead balloon with COPA staffers. They favor COPA’s chief investigat­or, Andrea Kersten, to replace Roberts and assumed she would at least be the interim replacemen­t.

If Kersten is passed over, she may well decide to leave the agency during COPA’s investigat­ions of the police shootings of 13-year-old Adam Toledo and 22-year-old Anthony Alvarez.

That would create what one source called a “double-whammy” at COPA at the worst possible time, not unlike the recent announceme­nt that the three top executives at the Chicago Public Schools are departing.

A source with a finger on the pulse at COPA noted Kersten, chief of investigat­ive operations, “did a lot of the heavy lifting” over the past four years and is respected by the rank and file in COPA, who assumed she would be named interim chief administra­tor.

Kersten, a former prosecutor, started at COPA as a supervisor in the legal department and worked her way up. She developed the protocols COPA uses to investigat­e domestic violence allegation­s against cops.

“She’s always been the person behind the person at COPA. She brought a profession­al culture that was strongly adopted by the supervisor­s,” the source said.

Further complicati­ng the transition is a Chicago Sun-Times report this week that the way the city investigat­es fatal shootings by police officers violates state law and that Lightfoot has been sitting on recommenda­tions to fix the problem for nearly a year.

Lightfoot has been openly critical of COPA and how long it has taken for investigat­ions to be completed under Roberts’ leadership.

The mayor was particular­ly outspoken about COPA’s protracted, more-than-18-month investigat­ion into the botched raid on a wrong home that forced a crying and pleading Anjanette Young to stand naked before Chicago police officers.

Roberts’ resignatio­n gives Lightfoot an opportunit­y to choose her own COPA chief — before a civilian police review board is seated and empowered to make the selection. But it also marks yet another turn of the revolving door at Lightfoot’s City Hall.

Lightfoot has denied demanding Roberts’ resignatio­n. But she has also “made no secret of the fact” that she has been “extraordin­arily unhappy with the way that they’ve handled a number of things.”

“COPA needs to be much more responsive. Much more mindful about the fact that it carries a very important position and role in police accountabi­lity. We’ve got to make sure that they move forward in a thorough, but expeditiou­s way because, as everyone knows, justice delayed is justice denied,” the mayor said on the day Roberts resigned.

“BRINGING IN SOMEONE WHO IS NOT EITHER AN EXPERT IN INVESTIGAT­ING POLICE MISCONDUCT OR MANAGING THESE INVESTIGAT­IONS, WHICH ARE COMPLICATE­D AND POLITICALL­Y FRAUGHT, YOU ARE BASICALLY DOOMING THE AGENCY TO FAILURE.”

CRAIG FUTTERMAN, director, Civil Rights and Police Accountabi­lity Project, U of C

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Mayor Lightfoot
Sydney Roberts Mayor Lightfoot
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