Chicago Sun-Times

TAKING A KNEE, PAYING A PRICE, AT A CHICAGO COP SHOP

- Follow the Editorial Board on Twitter: @ csteditori­als. Send letters to letters@ suntimes. com.

When two Chicago cops got down on a knee and raised a fist alongside an anti- violence activist in a police station, they must have known they were violating department rules.

Yet, they did it all the same. The two unidentifi­ed cops, both African- American, from the 6th District police station in the Auburn Gresham neighborho­od became willing participan­ts in an act of civil disobedien­ce and broke a rule for what they saw as a larger good.

We see great importance in both the CPD rule that prohibits cops from making political statements while in uniform and the officers showing solidarity with the activist by “taking a knee.”

The two cops almost certainly will be reprimande­d — and rightly so. If the department let them off the hook, it would invite other cops to make political statements while on duty. Similar to the military, we can’t have a police department that becomes politicize­d or an active participan­t in a social movement. It would hinder — directly or indirectly — the effectiven­ess of police. There can be no exceptions.

Another police officer, John Catanzara, also now faces a reprimand for making a political statement while on duty. The officer was photograph­ed standing, in uniform and outside a police SUV, next to a sign reading, “I stand for the anthem. I love the American flag. I support my president and the 2nd amendment.”

In another context in another time, those are hardly inflammato­ry views. But in this moment, with dozens of NFL football players being castigated for not standing for the anthem, Catanzara’s gesture is obviously political — and out of bounds for a cop.

Just as in the case of the officers who posed with the activist, there can be no allowance for Catanzara’s political activism under the rules. Let’s keep it that way.

We’d be remiss if we didn’t acknowledg­e, though, that flouting a rule can be worth the fallout, with a price worth paying. That’s how we see the cops who joined Englewood activist Aleta Clark in “taking a knee” in the police station lobby. It was an olive branch from two officers who work for a department that has been blistered by the Justice Department for its policing tactics, which includes coverups and mistreatme­nt of people in minority communitie­s. CPD still is trying to recover its reputation since video of then- cop Jason Van Dyke shooting Laquan McDonald to death became public in 2015.

So two cops expressing unity with an activist means something — something good.

Clark wrote on Instagram: “That Moment when you walk into the police station and ask the Men of Color are they Against Police Brutality and Racism & they say Yes… then you ask them if they support Colin Kapernick ( sic)… and they also say yes… then you ask them to Kneel!”

Kaepernick is the biracial NFL quarterbac­k who last season chose to kneel during the national anthem to protest police brutality and the oppression of people of color. He, too, is paying a price for civil disobedien­ce: He’s out of work despite being worthy of an NFL job. His actions took on newfound meaning after President Donald Trump said NFL players who disrespect the flag should be fired. ( It doesn’t matter at all to Trump that taking a knee is a peaceful protest meant to bring attention to injustice.)

Let’s remember that American history is replete with examples of high- minded people who have broken rules and laws to make this country a better place. In 1960, four college students sat at a whites- only lunch counter at a Woolworth’s store in Greensboro, North Carolina. Demonstrat­ors in Alabama endured horrific beatings in 1965 when they defied Gov. George Wallace to march from Selma, Alabama, to the capital in Montgomery. Rosa Parks in 1955 dared to sit at the front of a bus.

We are witnessing widespread protests again today because inequality remains too much the American story. We look around the country and we see states attempting to diminish the voting rights of minorities. We see police department­s brutalize people of color. We see a White House trash people because of their religion.

If you follow police blogs or rhetoric from the Fraternal Order of Police, you’d think all cops believe that attempts at police reform are oppressive, excessive and without justificat­ion. They have the loudest voices but don’t speak for all cops. That’s the real story of the photo of the two cops taking a knee in a police station. Chicago’s men and women in blue are hardly of one mind on issues of brutality and racism.

A year or two ago, a black activist wouldn’t have dared enter a police station to ask cops to partner in a message about brutality or oppression. The photo says something new and good is happening.

Political activism has no place in a police department. The two officers at the station will have to pay the price, as we suspect they knew all along. A politicize­d police force is a dangerous police force.

But somebody sure took a powerful photo, too.

 ??  ?? Two Chicago Police officers, along with anti- violence activist Aleta Clark, “taking a knee.” | INSTAGRAM ACCOUNT OF @ ENGLEWOODB­ARBIE
Two Chicago Police officers, along with anti- violence activist Aleta Clark, “taking a knee.” | INSTAGRAM ACCOUNT OF @ ENGLEWOODB­ARBIE
 ??  ?? Chicago Police Officer John Catanzara, in full uniform, appears in a photo holding a flag next to a sign that voices support for President Trump, a violation of department policy.
| FACEBOOK TIO
Chicago Police Officer John Catanzara, in full uniform, appears in a photo holding a flag next to a sign that voices support for President Trump, a violation of department policy. | FACEBOOK TIO
 ??  ?? San Francisco 49ers outside linebacker Eli Harold ( left), thenquarte­rback Colin Kaepernick and safety Eric Reid kneel during the national anthem in October 2016.
| MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ AP
San Francisco 49ers outside linebacker Eli Harold ( left), thenquarte­rback Colin Kaepernick and safety Eric Reid kneel during the national anthem in October 2016. | MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ AP

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