Chicago police watchdog releases hundreds
of tapes of past incidents
Send a link to a friend
[June 04, 2016]
By Justin Madden and Fiona Ortiz
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A graphic 2012 video
of Chicago police shooting dead an unarmed black man who charged toward
them was among hundreds of audio and video recordings released on Friday
by Chicago's police oversight body.
The Independent Police Review Authority, or IPRA, said information about
101 incidents involving the use of force by police from January 2011 to
March 2016 showed its commitment to transparency in the wake of public
uproar over Chicago police shootings, mostly of black men.
The Authority said that in the future it would make public video and
audio recordings of incidents involving the use of force by police and
misconduct, along with police reports, within 60 days of an event.
"These past few months, as this city has struggled with so many
questions about policing and about police accountability, it has been
clear that we all agree that there's a lack of trust and that increased
transparency is essential to rebuilding that trust," IPRA head Sharon
Fairley told a news conference.
The Authority's investigations used to be largely secret. The change in
operating style came after Mayor Rahm Emanuel pledged to abolish and
replace the agency, blasting its investigations of police misconduct as
ineffective.
All of the incidents in the videos are under investigation by IPRA as to
whether the police action was justified. Some of them have already
resulted in civil settlements between the city and the person claiming
mistreatment by the police. Some of the 101 cases have multiple audio,
video and document files that have been made public.
In the graphic video of the 2012 incident, a number of police are seen
confronting, then tasering and shooting 28-year-old Ismael Jamison, who
was agitated and was approached by police after they received reports he
had assaulted a bus driver.
The union for Chicago police officers decried the release of the videos,
saying on its website that the images could put officers in danger and
violate terms of their collective bargaining agreement with the city.
[to top of second column] |
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel (R) and Chicago Police Superintendent
Eddie Johnson leave a news conference for the third annual Summer of
Faith and Action calling for violence prevention in Chicago, Illinois,
United States, May 19, 2016. REUTERS/Jim Young
IPRA was formed in 2007 to investigate problems at Chicago's police
force, which has a history of complaints of abuse. But the agency
has been plagued by budget and staffing shortages.
Emanuel fired his police chief when protests erupted in November
after the city released a video of a white police officer fatally
shooting a black teenager in October 2014.
It was one of a number of U.S. police killings that have sparked a
national movement over policing and race. The officer, Jason Van
Dyke, has been charged with murder in the shooting of 17-year-old
Laquan McDonald, and his trial is pending.
Federal investigators are looking at the Chicago Police Department's
history of use of force.
(Writing by Fiona Ortiz; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|