Chicago Sun-Times

MIGRANTS RETURNED TO CONTROVERS­IAL POLICE STATIONS AS CRISIS INTENSIFIE­S

- BY MICHAEL LORIA, STAFF REPORTER mloria@suntimes.com | @mchael_mchael Contributi­ng: Tom Schuba and Elvia Malagón Michael Loria is a staff reporter at the Chicago Sun-Times via Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster t

A pair of police stations at the center of ongoing sexual misconduct investigat­ions involving officers and migrants staying there temporaril­y have begun being reused as temporary shelters this week.

Dozens of migrants were brought to the Ogden and Town Hall police district stations, which the city had stopped using as temporary shelters after the Chicago Police Department and the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity announced their investigat­ions.

In a July update, COPA said it hadn’t identified any victims of sexual misconduct by Chicago police officers, but investigat­ions continue.

The city aimed to preclude “any kind of complicati­ons” by bringing only single men to the West Side Ogden district and families to the North Side Town Hall district, said Juan-Antonio Montesinos, a prominent member of the large volunteer force caring for migrants at police stations.

“If you put the right controls in place, and if it’s done properly, then hopefully there is no risk for those allegation­s to be reproduced,” he said.

Not only single men were there, according to a source at the Ogden district, who said migrants were first moved back Sunday, but many show up without being directed by the city, they said.

The city did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on whether it had a plan to ensure that the Ogden district remained a temporary shelter for only single men, given the investigat­ion.

Many migrants at the stations came from overcrowde­d police stations around the city, Montesinos said. That includes the Central district, which fills up because of its proximity to Union Station, and the Near West district.

The move to resume using the stations as temporary shelters was first reported by Block Club Chicago Thursday morning and comes as Chicago’s migrant crisis is expected to intensify.

Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administra­tion didn’t answer direct questions about his administra­tions’ plan to get migrants out of police stations and other temporary shelters, but in a statement, he said the administra­tion was committed to putting migrants on a “path to resettleme­nt and self-sufficienc­y.”

More than 13,000 immigrants have arrived in the city since Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and others began busing them to Chicago and other cities last year.

Around 6,500 are spread among

the city’s 15 shelters, but 1,500 were waiting at Chicago police stations and airports for room at those shelters Thursday morning, according to the Office of Emergency Management and Communicat­ions. Another three buses were expected to arrive Thursday, each carrying around 50 people.

Reusing the two stations was necessary “because of the rising numbers and lack of space,” according to a written statement from OEMC spokespers­on Mary May.

“The City of Chicago is focused on the safety of all Chicagoans, including our new neighbors,” May said. “We are committed to working with CPD to ensure there are protocols in place to keep new arrivals at police stations safe while they wait for more adequate shelter.”

There are about 30 migrants now staying at the Ogden station and 30 staying at the Town Hall station.

Using police stations as a way station for migrants has been in practice since at least the start of the year, according to reporting by the Sun-Times.

Since then, the number of migrants waiting for shelter space has grown, doubling in the last month.

The Ogden station, at 3315 W. Ogden Ave. in North Lawndale, and Town Hall station, at 850 W. Addison St., in Lake View, have remained empty during that time, even as some police district stations became home to about 100 people, many sleeping outside because there wasn’t room inside.

Ogden closed first, after COPA was made aware of allegation­s July 6 accusing an officer there of “sexual contact with an unidentifi­ed, underage female migrant,” said COPA’s chief administra­tor Andrea Kersten.

During the Ogden investigat­ion, Kersten said other complaints involving immigrants were lodged, including another unsubstant­iated claim of unidentifi­ed officers from the Town Hall District, “engaging in sexual misconduct” with an immigrant.

“WE ARE COMMITTED TO WORKING WITH CPD TO ENSURE THERE ARE PROTOCOLS IN PLACE TO KEEP NEW ARRIVALS AT POLICE STATIONS SAFE WHILE THEY WAIT FOR MORE ADEQUATE SHELTER.”

MARY MAY, OEMC

 ?? OWEN ZILIAK/SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Migrants gather their belongings outside the Ogden district police station last month.
OWEN ZILIAK/SUN-TIMES FILE Migrants gather their belongings outside the Ogden district police station last month.

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