Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

With new leader, Police Board dives into alleged misconduct

- By Sam Charles

The leadership baton was passed Thursday night at the Chicago Police Board’s monthly meeting as a protracted fight over discipline for Chicago police officers has called the board’s future into question.

And as that new era began, the board announced a forthcomin­g evidentiar­y hearing that stems from a notorious, nearly 20-yearold misconduct case — that of disgraced Sgt. Ronald Watts.

Outgoing board President Ghian Foreman arrived at the city’s public safety headquarte­rs early, as did his successor, Kyle Cooper. Minutes before the meeting began, Foreman bypassed his usual seat at the board table and pulled out the chair he used before he was named president.

“It’s a full-circle moment,” Cooper told a smiling Foreman. The nine-person board still has three pending vacancies, and Cooper said Foreman agreed to continue serving on the board so it reaches a voting quorum.

“There isn’t a room I’ve been in with him where I haven’t seen members of the public or elected officials come up to him and thank him for his dedicated service to the city and I can only hope to follow in his footsteps because he put the board on the right direction,”

Cooper later told those in attendance.

Cooper’s first meeting was an active one.

Paula Wolff, the board’s vice president, announced that four officers would face evidentiar­y hearings stemming

from alleged misconduct committed under Watts when he was a tactical lieutenant in the now-demolished Ida B. Wells housing complex in Bronzevill­e.

The Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity said

each of the four officers — Robert Gonzalez, Manuel Leano, Brian Bolton and Douglas Nichols — should be fired. In its March 2023 response, the CPD, led at the time by Interim Superinten­dent Eric Carter, disagreed

and called for lighter discipline. Mareilé Cusack, another board member, announced another evidentiar­y hearing was needed for Lt. Wilfredo Roman, who previously faced criminal charges for allegedly shoving his flashlight into the buttocks of a clothed teen carjacking suspect in February 2021. Cook County Judge Joseph Claps — who himself was acquitted of a misdemeano­r charge after bringing a gun into the Leighton Criminal Court Building — found Roman not guilty in a bench trial last January.

The board also announced a two-year suspension for Officer Patrick Brown, who was involved in a deadly, high-speed crash on the West Side in May 2019. Earlier this year, the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7, the union that represents rank and file CPD officers and detectives, tried unsuccessf­ully to remove Brown’s case and those of 21 other officers from the Police Board’s docket.

The effort came after arbitrator Edwin Benn, who oversaw contract negotiatio­ns between the city and union, ruled that CPD officers accused of serious misconduct are entitled to having their cases decided by a third party out of public view. That provision of the contract agreement — which also provides a nearly 20% raise for officers over four years — prompted Mayor Brandon Johnson to bifurcate the City Council’s vote on the union contract. The vote on the economic package was approved, but the second part on disciplina­ry measures was voted down.

 ?? CHRIS SWEDA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? New Chicago Police Board President Kyle Cooper and Chicago police Superinten­dent Larry Snelling, right, meet before the start of a monthly Police Board meeting on Thursday.
CHRIS SWEDA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE New Chicago Police Board President Kyle Cooper and Chicago police Superinten­dent Larry Snelling, right, meet before the start of a monthly Police Board meeting on Thursday.

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