Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Consent decree report criticizes Brown’s firing of reform official

- By Madeline Buckley and Paige Fry mabuckley@chicago tribune.com pfry@chicagotri­bune.com

The Chicago Police Department’s firing of a key official in charge of implementi­ng court-ordered reforms “sent a demoralizi­ng message” to police and other personnel who are committed to improving the department, according to a new consent decree report filed Thursday.

The biannual report, which evaluates CPD’s progress in meeting consent decree goals, came to familiar conclusion­s: The department has made progress in rewriting policies that allow it to comply with much of the initial stages of reforming itself, but it remains mired in problems that make it difficult for the policy changes to translate to meaningful reform on the streets.

Notably, the report criticized Chicago police Superinten­dent David Brown’s decision in August to fire Robert Boik, the department’s executive director of constituti­onal policing and reform, and it said the terminatio­n exacerbate­d problems with the department’s overall ability to retain staff necessary to meet training and data collection requiremen­ts.

“Continuity in leadership positions is crucial to reform taking root throughout the CPD,” the report said.

Boik had been in his role leading the department’s reform efforts for about a year and a half when he was fired without notice after he sent an email to Brown asking for a reversal of a decision to distribute his staff to patrol instead of officer training. Tina Skahill, who previously served as a deputy director in the office of the superinten­dent, is now in Boik’s role.

The report urged the city to increase staffing in several reform-related units, including a division that reviews use of force incidents by officers, a unit that develops policy and a division that oversees officer training. The department has faced criticism for moving personnel out of these divisions, creating backlogs and risking a failure to meet training requiremen­ts.

“We have significan­t concerns about the lack of consistent staffing and retention levels within the city and the CPD in areas crucial to the efficient implementa­tion of the requiremen­ts of the consent decree,” the report said.

But the department has continued to make progress in writing policies, reaching at least some level of compliance with 78% of provisions reviewed. Most represent the early, policy-writing phase of the process.

“In addition to such policies, the city and the CPD must continue to train officers and personnel, provide meaningful supervisio­n, and measure and demonstrat­e reforms are ingrained into daily practices through transparen­t data,” according to a news release from the independen­t monitoring team, led by former federal prosecutor Maggie Hickey.

CPD highlighte­d that it came into some compliance with more provisions than in previous monitoring periods, according to a statement from the department.

“This achievemen­t is made possible by the dedication of the men and women who work day-in and day-out to implement systems and policies that will lead to our ultimate goal of cultural change within the CPD,” the statement said. “This is being done as we continue our work to grow community trust and improve public safety across Chicago.”

The Police Department also increased its mandatory annual in-service training for officers to 40 hours, up from 16 in 2018, the statement said. The training includes topics such as use of force, de-escalation and officer wellness.

But some critics disagreed that the department is improving, pointing out areas of regression.

Alexandra Block, senior supervisin­g attorney at the ACLU of Illinois, said in a written statement that the report indicates CPD is failing to commit itself to transforma­tional changes.

Block said preliminar­y compliance has barely progressed since last year, and the department even lost compliance levels with six paragraphs due to inadequate staffing in the unit that reviews incidents where police use force against community members.

“In short, the City still has not committed itself to overhaulin­g the culture of violence, racism, and impunity in CPD,” Block said. “Instead, CPD continues to view the consent decree as an exercise in box-checking and public relations. Emblematic of this failure is the fact that in 2022, CPD had approximat­ely twice as many personnel employed in communicat­ions and public relations as in its Office of Constituti­onal Policing and Reform.”

 ?? JOHN J. KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Robert Boik, then-executive director of the Office of Constituti­onal Policing and Reform at the Chicago Police Department, addresses reporters about the department’s progress in meeting consent decree deadlines in 2021.
JOHN J. KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Robert Boik, then-executive director of the Office of Constituti­onal Policing and Reform at the Chicago Police Department, addresses reporters about the department’s progress in meeting consent decree deadlines in 2021.

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