Chicago Sun-Times

MAYOR TRIES TO PUT OUT FIRE OVER REFORM CHIEF

Day after Robert Boik was fired, triggering an avalanche of criticism from former mayoral aides, Lightfoot says CPD’s compliance with federal consent decree won’t miss a beat

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Chicago Police Supt. David Brown’s surprise decision to fire the man charged with implementi­ng court-ordered reforms — after Robert Boik protested deep cuts to his office — will not slow CPD compliance, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Wednesday.

Boik was summoned to Brown’s office and summarily fired in apparent retaliatio­n after sending an email criticizin­g Brown’s decision to move 46 officers under Boik’s supervisio­n to the Bureau of Patrol as part of a larger reorganiza­tion of the Chicago Police Department.

The firing triggered an avalanche of criticism from former top Lightfoot aides, including Charlie Beck, former interim police superinten­dent; Maurice Classen, Lightfoot’s first chief of staff; and Susan Lee, former deputy mayor for public safety.

Arne Duncan, a former U.S. Education Secretary and onetime Chicago Public Schools CEO, even went so far as to suggest Boik was “fired for blowing the whistle and telling the truth — that he has no support and that the administra­tion is not serious about police reform.”

The criticism recalls what Lightfoot said about then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel four years ago when she was Emanuel’s hand-picked Police Board president and co-chair of the Task Force on Police Accountabi­lity, created by Emanuel after the court-ordered release of the Laquan McDonald shooting video.

On Wednesday, Lightfoot insisted her commitment to reforming the department is unwavering, no matter who is running CPD’s Office of Constituti­onal Policing and Reform.

“People will say lots of things going out the door. But what I can tell you is that the work on reform, and particular­ly the emphasis on training, is going to continue going forward. … I don’t see any basis for any concern that we [will stop] and not meet our obligation­s under consent decree,” the mayor said.

“The training is obviously critically important. It’s mandated by the consent decree. We will not take steps back and I don’t anticipate that’s going to happen. The work that needs to be done to continue on the path of reform is larger and bigger than one individual person. It always has been.”

In the email that triggered his firing, Boik noted he recently proposed sending 23 officers to the police academy as “trainers” to ensure the department would meet its “court-mandated obligation to provide 40 hours of in-service training to every sworn officer.”

Instead of approving that request, Boik was told to “send 46 individual­s back to patrol.”

Even as she argued CPD won’t miss a beat in the slow, steady march toward reform and consent decree compliance, Lightfoot defended Brown’s decision to move those 46 officers.

“Every single bureau within this department has been asked to give some additional resources, for officers who are doing non-police work to contribute with the crime fight, to help with security on the CTA. Every single bureau has said yes. There can be no exceptions. Period,” the mayor said.

Alexandra Block, supervisin­g attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois, strongly disagreed with the mayor’s reasoning.

Block argued Boik’s office should have been exempt from the personnel raid. The transfer of dozens of officers can’t help but slow the painstakin­g reform effort, she said.

“The idea that the Office of Constituti­onal Policing can meet its goals without an executive director just doesn’t pass the straight-face test,” Block told the Sun-Times.

“Even more concerning is the idea that the superinten­dent retaliated for a legitimate disagreeme­nt about whether the office could meet the consent decree’s requiremen­ts with the personnel provided. … It only stands to reason that, if a significan­t portion of the personnel detailed to that department are no longer available for consent decree compliance work, that work just isn’t going to get done. It shows the mayor and superinten­dent are not sufficient­ly prioritizi­ng reform.”

Block pushed back hard against Lightfoot’s claim that no unit of CPD can be exempt from the need to get officers out from behind desks and back on the streets or the CTA.

“Crime won’t come down and public safety won’t increase until the police department is working with the community, instead of against the community,” she said

“Consent decree reforms are sorely, sorely needed to make policing effective in Chicago. This idea that they have different officers running from beat to beat, chasing yesterday’s headlines or hot spots, is not a long-term, effective strategy for policing, let alone an effective strategy for constituti­onal policing.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? Robert Boik
SUN-TIMES FILES Robert Boik

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