Los Angeles Times

The killing that shook Chicago

It’s been two years since black teen Laquan McDonald was shot by a white police officer. How much has changed?

- By Christy Gutowski Gutowski writes for the Chicago Tribune.

CHICAGO — Two years ago, a white Chicago police officer fired 16 bullets at a black teenager in a fatal shooting captured on video that sparked outrage and reforms in a city that remains far from healed.

On the anniversar­y of the Oct. 20, 2014, shooting, amid surging gun violence, Chicago still faces uncertaint­y as it awaits the conclusion of a federal civil rights investigat­ion of Police Department practices and the criminal trial of the officer at the center of the storm.

Still, experts say, there is reason for hope that the legacy of slain teen Laquan McDonald will be one of change.

“I think the release of the video was a defining moment for the city,” said Craig Futterman, a clinical law professor who directs the University of Chicago’s civil rights and police accountabi­lity project. “It didn’t just reveal what everyone agrees to be a horrible and unnecessar­y killing of a 17-year-old boy. What is also revealed is the routine operation of a police code of silence. The lack of police accountabi­lity is a decades-old reality that won’t just evaporate overnight, and it would be wrong not to recognize the real progress and real changes that have occurred since the release of the video.”

An uproar ensued after the court-ordered release of the dashboard-camera video in November. The footage prompted the city months earlier to pay McDonald’s family $5 million. Officer Jason Van Dyke, 38, faces murder charges for gunning down McDonald, who authoritie­s allege was on PCP, holding a knife and ignoring repeated commands to surrender.

The video shows Van Dyke opened fire within seconds of arrival while McDonald appeared to be walking away from police, not lunging with the weapon as alleged.

The fallout cost the city’s top cop his job and exposed the failings of how Chicago police handle officer shootings and citizen complaints, especially those involving minorities. State’s Atty. Anita Alvarez lost reelection in large part because of her delay in bringing charges.

Police Supt. Eddie Johnson is pursuing terminatio­n proceeding­s against Van Dyke and four officers who are accused of a coverup.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel responded by urging widespread changes aimed at staying ahead of federal authoritie­s who may seek to enforce reforms. His task force delivered a blistering report that found police practices rooted in racial disparity and discrimina­tion.

Much of the mayor’s focus has been on the Independen­t Police Review Authority, which recommends discipline in many of the most serious cases. A Chicago Tribune investigat­ion showed the authority has often been biased in favor of officers, even when evidence suggests misconduct. The City Council voted to replace the agency with the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity, giving it broader authority to investigat­e wrongdoing.

The Police Department also has proposed policy changes to cut down on certain uses of force. Officers may not shoot, for example, unless a f leeing person poses an “immediate threat.” Current rules allow police to fire on anyone who has committed or attempted a felony using force.

Officers also would be compelled to use the lightest force possible in any situation under the new rules, which reflect new training on defusing tense incidents as well as crisis interventi­on.

The mayor and police administra­tion face a tough balancing act, though, as gun violence surges on the city’s south and west sides. Some attribute the bloodshed, in part, to officers avoiding confrontat­ions that could land them in scandal. According to Tribune data, Chicago has far outpaced other major cities with at least 605 homicides this year. The majority of the homicides involved gun violence, with at least 3,503 people shot.

Dean Angelo Sr., president of Chicago’s Fraternal Order of Police, said it remained unclear what good had actually come since McDonald’s death. He noted the availabili­ty of more Tasers for police, saying, “If there was a Taser on the street that day, it’s over long before” McDonald is shot and killed.

But Angelo said some of the suggested restrictio­ns were in response to critics who knew little about police work. He fears the pendulum has swung too far, leading to policies that restrict and endanger police and embolden criminals.

“It’s a very tough job that requires instant decisions,” Angelo said. “My hope is that the officer is allowed to perform in a manner that ensures they go home at the end of their shift.”

Frank Giancamill­i, a Police Department spokesman, called McDonald’s death a tragedy that led to improved policies, transparen­cy and training.

The department “is committed to increasing trust and accountabi­lity, which are critical to our efforts to rebuild the relationsh­ip between our officers and the residents they serve as we work to make Chicago safer,” he told the Tribune in a statement. “Under Supt. Johnson, the department has committed to and is implementi­ng the most sweeping reforms in recent memory.”

On Thursday, the second anniversar­y of McDonald’s death, about 300 people gathered outside police headquarte­rs with small yellow markers of the type police use to signify bullets at crime scenes. They set out 16 markers for the number of shots Van Dyke fired at McDonald.

Among the speakers was Gwendolyn Moore, 56, whose son, Jamaal Raymond Moore, was 23 when he was shot and killed by police four years ago.

“It’s important to talk about because the system has created injustice for its people,” she said. “If we don’t voice how we feel and just lay down with blinders on, it will not change. I don’t want to see another child dead on the streets. It doesn’t matter, black, brown, white, we are all one.”

 ?? Terrence Antonio James Chicago Tribune ?? PROTESTERS last week mark the anniversar­y of Laquan McDonald’s fatal shooting. They rallied outside police headquarte­rs in Chicago with a mock crime scene indicating the 16 shots fired at the 17-year-old.
Terrence Antonio James Chicago Tribune PROTESTERS last week mark the anniversar­y of Laquan McDonald’s fatal shooting. They rallied outside police headquarte­rs in Chicago with a mock crime scene indicating the 16 shots fired at the 17-year-old.

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