Chicago mayor condemns reported gang
threats against police
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[August 10, 2016]
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Threats against
police officers by Chicago gang members angry about the police shooting
of an unarmed black teen last month were "unacceptable," Mayor Rahm
Emanuel said on Tuesday, as debate over excessive force by law
enforcement continues to roil U.S. cities.
On Monday, the Chicago Sun-Times reported that the Chicago Police
Department had warned officers that leaders of three gangs had met and
plotted to shoot police in response to the fatal shooting of 18-year-old
Paul O'Neal on July 28.
The department said it was routine to send alerts when police were
threatened, but did not provide further details or confirm that threats
had been made by the gangs.
"The idea that a bunch of gang members would threaten violence against
the men and women every Chicagoan relies on for their own safety is
absolutely unacceptable," Emanuel said in response to the newspaper
report.
A string of high-profile killings of black men by police in various U.S.
cities in the past two years has renewed a national debate about racial
discrimination in the criminal justice system and given rise to the
Black Lives Matter movement.
Protests erupted nationwide after the back-to-back killing of black men
in Baton Rouge and Minneapolis, but after a rally in Dallas, Texas, a
gunman shot dead five police officers in an ambush. Days later, three
Baton Rouge police officers were also killed in an ambush.
Tensions over the shooting of O'Neal picked up last week after
authorities released videos that captured the moments before and after
police shot him.
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Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel participates in a panel discussion in
Washington January 20, 2016. REUTERS/Gary Cameron
No firearms were found on O'Neal, who was shot in the back,
according to police.
The video footage released on Friday shows two officers firing at a
stolen car driven by O'Neal after it sped past them, the car
crashing into a police car, and O'Neal running into a backyard where
he was shot. The shooting is not shown. It is against departmental
policy to fire at or into a moving car when the vehicle was the only
potential use of force by a suspect,
(Reporting by Justin Madden; Editing by Sharon Bernstein and Alan
Crosby)
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