Governor, AG address expressway shootings, organized retail crime
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[February 08, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Two of the state’s top
officials each held news conferences Monday morning to outline current
and proposed responses to increasing crime, including expressway
shootings and organized retail thefts.
Gov. JB Pritzker appeared with Illinois State Police Director Brendan
Kelly in Chicago to outline actions taken and arrests made in expressway
shootings, while Attorney General Kwame Raoul appeared with the
president of the Illinois Retail Merchants Association to outline a
proposed legislative package taking aim at organized retail crime.
Pritzker and Kelly said more than 20 arrests have been made in recent
months related to expressway shootings and crime. The arrests included
three first-degree murder charges, one involuntary manslaughter, three
attempted murders, and other crimes such as aggravated discharge of a
firearm, reckless discharge of a firearm, aggravated vehicular hijacking
and aggravated fleeing and eluding.
While they were in the news conference, however, a shooting occurred on
the Dan Ryan expressway, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.
Kelly said expressway shootings have increased because of the prevalence
of cameras – from doorbell cameras to store security systems – almost
everywhere else, other than expressways. Putting cameras there can help
deter the shootings, he said.
“It's almost like a modern, 21st century form of dueling,” Kelly said.
“They say horrible things to each other on social media, they threaten
one another and they say let's take that out to the E-way. So let's take
this out to the expressway. And almost like Main Street in the Old West,
they're using these expressways for this type of violence.”
Pritzker and Kelly pointed to the installation of 99 cameras with
license plate readers on the Dan Ryan expressway in Chicago, where many
of the shootings have occurred, with “hundreds more” cameras coming.
In recent weeks, the ISP has worked with the Chicago Police Department,
Homeland Security and local law enforcement agencies, Pritzker said,
leading to the 20 arrests.
Kelly said the agency increased patrol presence on Chicago expressways
by over 150 percent at “peak criminal activity times.” Since October,
that has led to nearly 5,000 traffic stops, 132 DUI arrests, 69 firearm
recoveries and 133 criminal arrests in the Chicago area.
The Monday news conference touting the Pritzker administration’s
approach came as he and Democrats in the General Assembly have faced
consistent attacks from Republican lawmakers and political opponents
amid the recent rise in violent crime.
Republicans have painted a criminal justice reform bill passed one year
ago in January as a contributing factor to rising crime rates. That
bill, known as the SAFE-T Act, overhauls police certification, reforms
use-of-force standards, improves police accountability and abolishes
cash bail beginning in 2023 in favor of a system that prioritizes risk
of re-offending over an offender’s ability to afford release.
The GOP has introduced a package of bills looking to create mandatory
minimums for certain violent crime offenses and to create a special,
$125 million grant fund to beef up officer hiring and retainment
efforts.
State Sen. Chapin Rose, a Mahomet Republican, is the sponsor of the
Senate GOP’s crime package. In response to the governor’s budget
address, he outlined his view of the GOP and Democratic differences when
it comes to crime.
“This is, I believe, a major difference between Gov. Pritzker and the
Democrats and the Republicans,” he said. “They refuse to lock up truly
violent people talking about so called low-level nonviolent offenders …
all Gov. Pritzker wants to do is throw money at something that may or
may not work years down the road. Republicans want to take violent
criminals off the streets today.”
In recent budgets, Pritzker said his administration has increased
funding for ISP officers to retrieve illegally owned guns and to hire
new ISP cadets, including 300 in the upcoming fiscal year.
He also touted violence interruption spending, which he’s more than
doubled in his tenure, an increase made possible due to hundreds of
millions of dollars in federal COVID-19 response funding.
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Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and Gov. JB
Pritzker are pictured at a pair of news conferences from Chicago
Monday morning. Pritzker addressed expressway shootings and Raoul
addressed organized retail crime. (Credit: Illinois.gov)
“Stopping the cycle of violence also means tackling poverty and root
causes of crime, access to housing, health care, education and jobs,”
Pritzker said Monday.
He also noted recent state spending on crime labs which was included in
the 2019 Rebuild Illinois capital infrastructure plan.
“Catching and prosecuting perpetrators can reduce and deter crime right
now. And that's what our excellent Illinois State Police troopers, new
cameras and new crime labs are doing,” he said. “Between the stepped up
patrols and the new technology we've brought to bear, anyone, anyone
even thinking of committing violent crimes on our expressways ought to
be on notice that they're more likely today than ever before to get
caught.”
Retail crime bills
Warning of “criminal rings” and “illicit trade,” Raoul, appearing with
IRMA President Rob Karr, differentiated what he referred to as
“organized retail crime” and the types of retail theft committed by
“ragtag, low-level offenders.”
The legislative package addressing organized retail crime has not yet
been drafted. But Raoul and Karr said it will aim to define organized
retail crime in law, allowing prosecutors greater leeway to charge those
participating in it, while also holding online marketplaces accountable
and aiming to provide more state funding to address organized retail
crime.
“Organized retail crime is not like your customary retail theft, and our
laws should not treat them as such,” Raoul said. “These crimes are
perpetrated by sophisticated criminal enterprises coordinating the
thefts of many items of high value. Those items are often resold, and
the funds are often used to fund drug trafficking and human
trafficking.”
Raoul touted an organized retail crime task force overseen by his
office, a public-private collaboration that includes retailers, online
marketplaces, law enforcement agencies and state’s attorneys. Its first
major bust was announced in early December, when over $1 million of
stolen goods were recovered after an unrelated weapons arrest in
Chicago.
But law enforcement alone can’t stop organized retail crime, Raoul said.
The effort must also include retailers, online retailer platforms and
lawmakers.
According to a news release, in the new proposal, prosecutors would be
given wider discretion to bring charges regardless of where the crime
takes place, meaning if the conspiracy, theft, and selling all occurred
in different jurisdictions, each jurisdiction would have the ability to
prosecute the entire crime.
The AG would also have the ability to prosecute via a statewide grand
jury.
Online third-party sellers would be required to verify the identity of
high-volume sellers using bank account numbers, taxpayer IDs or other
information, and to suspend sellers for non-compliance.
The plan would also require the courts to give retail crime theft
victims seven days’ notice of a court hearing.
Karr said organized retail theft is not a victimless crime.
“While the (Magnificent Mile in downtown Chicago) and high-end stores
have captured headlines, neighborhoods and retail corners throughout the
state have been victims,” he said. “But it isn't just faceless stores
that are victims, either.”
Clerks who fear coming to work, consumers who worry about visiting
stores, commuters and tourists who worry about downtown shopping, the
hospitality industry which relies upon visitors, and anyone seeking
economic development are all victims, he said, as are Illinois
taxpayers, who rely on retail as the second largest generator of tax
revenue.
“In my nearly three decades involved with retail, this is the first time
that safety and crime has been one of the top two concerns as stores
decide whether to locate or keep stores open,” he said.
The proposal also calls for an unspecified amount of funding, according
to a news release, to create new positions in the AG’s office and
various state’s attorney offices to investigate and prosecute retail
theft and illicit trade.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering
state government and distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide.
It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
R. McCormick Foundation. |