Texarkana Gazette

Lawsuit: 13-year-old’s hands up when shot by Chicago police

- By Michael Tarm AP Legal Affairs Writer

CHICAGO — A 13-yearold boy shot in the back by a Chicago police officer was unarmed and had his arms raised to surrender when he was hit by the bullet, according to a lawsuit filed Thursday, saying the incident illustrate­s deeply flawed implementa­tion of department policy on the pursuit of suspects.

The bullet severely damaged part of the Black teenager’s spine, possibly rendering him permanentl­y paralyzed by the May 18 late night shooting, the filing in Chicago’s U.S. District Court says. Police have said previously the boy was in a car suspected of involvemen­t in a carjacking in a nearby suburb the day before and that he jumped out and started running. He hasn’t been charged.

The excessive force lawsuit says the seventh grader, who had been a passenger, was complying with orders from several officers running behind him through the grounds of a West Side gas station and screaming for him to put up his hands.

The boy, referred to in the lawsuit only by his initials, “was unarmed and did as he was instructed. But the officer still shot him — recklessly, callously, and wantonly — right through his back,” the filing alleges.

The shooting is the latest to put a spotlight on the Chicago Police Department’s history of aggressive pursuit practices, which the city had vowed to change. Reform advocates say a still-inadequate pursuit policy and poor training has too often led officers to chase and shoot suspects who posed no threat. Police have said they are finalizing a permanent policy, but one was still not in place.

The officer’s name hasn’t been released and he is referred to as John Doe Officer in the filing. He was relieved of his police powers last week. The lawsuit names Doe and the city of Chicago as defendants and seeks unspecifie­d damages for, among other things, mental anguish and future caretaking expenses.

The city’s law department said in a Thursday statement that it hadn’t been officially served with the complaint and that it wouldn’t comment further on the pending litigation.

The filing says the boy did not have a weapon and did nothing to make the officer believe he was armed or a danger to anyone. It adds that the use of use of force “was not objectivel­y reasonable” and “was neither necessary nor proportion­al.”

Police Supt. David Brown said last week that the fleeing teenager turned toward the officer and the officer fired. No weapon was found at the scene, the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity, the agency that investigat­es officer shootings, confirmed last week. COPA said it had footage from the officer’s bodyworn camera but couldn’t release it because the boy is a minor.

Thursday’s filing says the officer knew or should have known that safer alternativ­es to a foot pursuit were available. Among the options, it says, was to establish a perimeter to contain the boy, then eventually arrest him. At least one police helicopter was overhead and other officers and patrol cars were in the area, honing in on the boy, it says. The lawsuit says the department has been agonizingl­y slow in bringing its pursuit policy up to best-practice standards, saying that prior to June 2021 the department had “no pursuit policy at all.”

A scathing 2017 report by the U.S. Department of Justice that accused the Chicago Police Department of “tolerating racially discrimina­tory conduct” by officers also singled out its pursuit practices for blistering criticism. “We found that officers engage in tactically unsound and unnecessar­y foot pursuit, and that those foot pursuits too often end with officers unreasonab­ly shooting someone — including unarmed individual­s,” the report said.

The report led to a federal consent decree, a court supervised plan to overhaul the department that, among a long list of requiremen­ts, demanded that a fully upgraded police pursuit policy be in place by autumn of last year, according to the lawsuit. But the suit said the city missed the deadline.

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