San Francisco Chronicle

Ex-officer who killed teen freed

- By Don Babwin Don Babwin is an Associated Press writer.

CHICAGO — Former Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke left prison on Thursday after serving less than half of his nearly seven-year sentence for killing Black teenager Laquan McDonald — an early release that was widely viewed as a setback in the city’s efforts to improve relations between its police department and Black community.

Van Dyke, who is white, became the first Chicago officer in about half a century to be convicted of murder for an on-duty killing in 2018, and many Black leaders hoped his conviction for seconddegr­ee murder and 16 counts of aggravated battery signaled a willingnes­s to hold officers accountabl­e. But they say word that he would be freed after serving about three years and four months of his sentence of six years and nine months has turned McDonald and them into victims again.

“This is the ultimate illustrati­on that Black lives don’t matter as much as other lives,” said the Rev. Marshall Hatch, a prominent minister on the city’s West Side. “To get that short amount of time for a murder sends a bad message to the community.”

Mayor Lori Lightfoot made a similar point.

“I understand why this continues to feel like a miscarriag­e of justice, especially when many Black and brown men get sentenced to so much more prison time for having committed far lesser crimes,” she said in a statement Thursday.

To be sure, the 2014 shooting eventually led to a court-ordered consent decree that resulted in several reforms, including the creation of a civilianle­d police oversight board and new rules governing investigat­ions into police shootings. And after the city refused to release the police video of McDonald’s killing for more than a year and only did so after a judge ordered it to do so, it now must release such videos within 60 days.

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