Chicago Sun-Times

PATH TOWARD PROGRESS?

With city’s police leadership in flux, new report on the nation’s law enforcemen­t ‘crisis’ offers roadmap forward

- BY TOM SCHUBA, CRIMINAL JUSTICE REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @tomschuba

With the mayoral election looming and a nationwide search for the city’s next top cop underway, a report released Wednesday charts a path forward for a police department pushing to comply with sweeping court-ordered reforms.

The report issued by 21CP Solutions, a firm started by the former top cop in both Philadelph­ia and Washington, D.C., outlines a “threefold crisis” facing law enforcemen­t agencies nationwide: public trust in police has eroded, the number of officers has dwindled and crime has risen after years of decline.

Former interim Police Supt. Charlie Beck said all the issues raised in the 37page report apply to the Chicago Police Department, which he briefly led before David Brown. In a meeting with the SunTimes editorial board alongside other policing experts, Beck said a restructur­ing is in order while acknowledg­ing that change won’t happen overnight.

“Whichever mayor is selected, it will take two terms, I think, to get where you want to go with CPD,” said Beck, who also served as chief of the Los Angeles Police Department when it was under a consent decree.

Among other things, the report’s “roadmap for progress” recommends strong community involvemen­t during the reform process, embracing that police officials are part of the communitie­s they serve and an oversight system similar to the one Chicago already has in place.

But it also calls for a “dynamic change agent” who works with other leaders to implement reforms, as well as an acute focus on community policing and shifting officers to patrol and away from specialize­d units.

Those boxes largely went unchecked during Brown’s tenure, which ended unceremoni­ously last week when he returned to Texas to work for a personal injury law firm.

Brown routinely canceled officers’ days off, moved scores of them to citywide units and implemente­d a quota system for conducting “positive community interactio­ns,” a program that had to be overhauled after the Illinois attorney general’s office urged city lawyers to pause the effort after finding it was “rife with significan­t downsides.”

He also lost the confidence of police leaders and notably fired his reform chief, Robert Boik, a move the independen­t monitoring team overseeing consent decree compliance said “sent a demoralizi­ng message to police officers, supervisor­s and other CPD personnel.”

Boik, who like Beck agreed with the report’s findings but didn’t contribute, said it should inform the search for superinten­dent candidates and ultimately the next mayor’s pick. “It really does offer that guide of how a leader such as a mayor ought to be thinking about the position,” he told the editorial board.

Crime and policing quickly emerged as central issues in the mayor’s race. The remaining candidates have conflictin­g visions for public safety, though both Brandon Johnson and Paul Vallas have walked back polarizing comments they respective­ly made about defunding the police and “handcuffin­g” officers.

Both candidates have committed to implementi­ng the consent decree. But Vallas has also criticized the city’s new foot chase policy and has been endorsed by the Fraternal Order of Police, whose controvers­ial leader has also pushed back on reforms.

Boik said the consent decree hinges on having leaders who embrace the process. And while he acknowledg­ed the foot pursuit policy is “imperfect,” he noted it was the “result of a hard-fought negotiatio­n” and can’t simply be rolled back.

Kathleen O’Toole, one of the report’s authors, said she has seen reform “from every perspectiv­e” — as Seattle’s police chief, as a consultant to the U.S. Department of Justice, as a member of various monitoring teams and as a negotiator with the attorney general’s office.

She insisted the consent decree process shouldn’t boil down to “a box-ticking exercise” and should instead “be a tool to really embed this culture of innovation” and change.

O’Toole said her report is ultimately aimed at police leaders, elected officials and community members “as they engage in thoughtful discussion­s about the future of policing.”

“Anyone who wants a voice in the process should have a voice in the process and should be listened to very carefully,” said O’Toole, who also served as Boston’s top police official. “The input and feedback from the community is absolutely essential to building legitimacy and trust in the police organizati­on.”

 ?? SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES ?? Chicago police officers attend a graduation and promotion ceremony in the Grand Ballroom on Navy Pier on June 15, 2017.
SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES Chicago police officers attend a graduation and promotion ceremony in the Grand Ballroom on Navy Pier on June 15, 2017.
 ?? ?? Charlie Beck
Charlie Beck

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