Chicago Sun-Times

Big questions remain about new police review board.

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Let’s hope Chicago’s latest police reform doesn’t leave us, once again, feeling blue. Everyone’s hopes were high nine years ago, when the Chicago Police Department’s rightly excoriated Office of Profession­al Standards— charged with investigat­ing alleged policemisc­onduct— was replaced by the new and promising Independen­t Police Review Authority.

Finally, critics thought, investigat­ions into excessive force by police would be conducted outside the Police Department, by civilians who were free of insider politics and stonewalli­ng. So how did that work out? Even with subpoena power and an outside director, IPRA proved to be a rubber stamp. It investigat­ed hundreds of cases and almost never found that a police officer had violated the Police Department’s use- of- force policy. Even as the city was paying millions of dollars in civil suits, IPRA chugged along for its first eight years without recommendi­ng the firing of a single officer involved in a shooting. Police officers accused of abusing citizens rarely were discipline­d.

Now, Mayor Rahm Emanuel is taking another shot at reform, and a lot is riding on its success, given the abysmal state of relations between the police and many Chicagoans, especially minorities.

On Tuesday evening, Emanuel released the draft of an ordinance to create a new watchdog agency, the Civilian Office on Police Accountabi­lity, to replace IPRA. On paper, the proposed new agency, COPA for short, looks promising enough, especially when coupled with the creation of a new deputy inspector general position to handle public safety issues. The new deputy IG would, among other tasks, monitor whether COPA is fending off outside pressures and doing its job.

But major questions remain as to how the head of COPA would be chosen and whether the agency would be funded in a way that minimizes political pressures. Also at issue is whether COPA would be allowed to choose its own legal counsel, and how a “Community Oversight Board” to ensure community input into all these decisions would be structured. The draft ordinance Emanuel released Friday leaves that last issue entirely for another day.

The mayor pushed back to Sept. 29 a scheduled City Council vote on the draft ordinance, adding an extra two weeks for public debate. But given the importance of getting this just right, even thatmay not be time enough.

Ald. ScottWague­spack ( 32nd), leader of the City Council’s Progressiv­e Caucus, told us he is generally pleased with the draft ordinance. He noted that the new agency, COPA, would investigat­e the use of Tasers as well as police shootings. And the city’s police superinten­dent would be allowed just 60 days to respond to recommenda­tions for firings or suspension of police officers, with a possible 30- day extension. Currently, there is no deadline to respond, and such recommenda­tions tend to gather dust.

ButWaguesp­ack and other aldermen point out that there’s a serious conflict- of- interest built into the system if COPA cannot appoint its own independen­t lawyer, which appears to be the case, and must funded by a guaranteed percentage of the city budget, rather than by some amount determined by the City Council, to shield it against possible political payback. As we have seen from the experience of Chicago and other big cities in creating the position of inspector general, the more financiall­y independen­t a watchdog agency is, the bolder and the Community Oversight Board “will play a role.” And, as we have noted, nobody has figured out how that board will be structured or chosen.

Chicagoans long ago lost confidence in investigat­ions into alleged policemisb­ehavior. The department has yet to shake the memory of former Cmdr. Jon Burge and his detectives torturing suspects or the videotaped beating of a female bartender by Officer Anthony Abbate. The shooting of Laquan McDonald in October 2014 only further frayed relations between police and citizens. The mistrust eats away at the city’s efforts to build stronger ties between police and the communitie­s they serve.

So IPRA must go, clearly, even if Fairley has breathed life into it, and a brand- new police accountabi­lity agency, structured to be free of outside pressures, should take its place.

That would be COPA, or so we hope, with an able assist from a new and vigilant deputy inspector general.

But Mayor Emanuel’s not there yet. This ordinance has holes.

 ?? TIM BOYLE/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? On Tuesday, Mayor Rahm Emanuel released the draft of an ordinance to create a new police watchdog agency.
TIM BOYLE/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES On Tuesday, Mayor Rahm Emanuel released the draft of an ordinance to create a new police watchdog agency.

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