Chicago Sun-Times

SLOW GOING ON CPD FOOT-CHASE POLICY

Chicago police miss court-ordered deadline for reforming guidelines, saying more data is needed

- BY DAVID STRUETT,

The Chicago Police Department has missed a court-ordered deadline for reforming its foot pursuit policy, saying it needs to collect more data to get “the policy right.”

In announcing the delay Friday, police officials were unclear exactly what data they still need and how long it will take to collect it, though they still expect the changes to take effect before the end of the year.

A Latino group that’s been pushing for reforms since 13-year-old Adam Toledo was killed during a police chase called the request for more time “vague” and “a mystery.”

“If the purpose of the delay is that the city has a well-thought-out, constituti­on-driven policy for foot pursuits, we can wait another 30 or 60 days,” said Arturo Jáuregui, part of a coalition of Latino attorneys. “Beyond that we’re impatient.”

The city enacted temporary changes in June after the deaths of Toledo and 22-yearold Anthony Alvarez, both gunned down as they ran from officers. But community groups have complained that the interim policy is so unclear, it would not have prevented the deaths of Toledo and Alvarez.

Police officials said they are delaying a permanent new policy at the encouragem­ent of U.S. District Judge Robert Dow, who oversees the department’s compliance with a wide-ranging federal consent decree.

Negotiatio­ns continue between the police department and the state attorney general and a federal monitoring team, they said.

“CPD fully embraces this need for greater data transparen­cy and data-informed policy making, as we believe that getting the policy right is more important than completing the policy quickly,” the department wrote in a letter to community groups.

The department needs to collect more data because it didn’t start tracking foot chases until 2019, according to Robert Boik, executive director of the department’s Office of Constituti­onal Policing and Reform.

He said the department wants more informatio­n on the number of foot chases that end in the use of force, the level of force used in each incident, and why police were starting the chases.

The independen­t monitoring team, appointed by the federal court, has found the department averages about seven foot pursuits per day, about a third of them ending with use of force.

“We want the policy to draw clear lines for when officers can and can’t pursue,” Boik told reporters Friday. “It’s hard to say what the final version will look like.”

No new deadline has been set but the department hopes to unveil the new policy sometime this fall, Boik said. The department will then hold 15 days of public feedback.

The department has already conducted extensive outreach, including two citywide public meetings as well as meetings with six groups: The ACLU, the Lawndale Christian Legal Center, Moms of CPD, Streetervi­lle Neighborho­od Advocates, Illinois Latino Agenda and NAACP Southside.

Arturo Jáuregui’s group gave the department a seven-page list of suggestion­s. “We want to see a foot pursuit in place so we don’t see another incident like Toledo or Alvarez,” he said.

The interim policy put into effect after those deaths has been criticized by ACLU Illinois for being developed without input from minority communitie­s most at risk in foot chases.

The interim policy halts foot chases for offenses less than a Class A misdemeano­r, such as minor traffic offenses. It also gives a supervisin­g officer the power to call off a foot pursuit, but officers don’t need preauthori­zation from a supervisor to engage in one.

Like the department’s vehicle pursuit policy, the current foot pursuit policy calls for officers to consider a “balancing test” of whether the risk of the chase outweighs the risk of letting a suspect go.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? A memorial for 13-year-old Adam Toledo next to the spot where he was fatally shot by a Chicago police officer in March following a foot chase.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES A memorial for 13-year-old Adam Toledo next to the spot where he was fatally shot by a Chicago police officer in March following a foot chase.

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