Republicans cite SAFE-T Act as reason Chicago man not charged with
murder
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[February 10, 2022]
By GRACE KINNICUTT
Capitol News Illinois
gkinnicutt@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Illinois House Republicans on
Wednesday continued a push to repeal a criminal justice reform bill
passed one year ago, citing the law as the reason a Chicago man was not
charged with murder for his role in a shootout that left one bystander
dead.
A Cook County grand jury declined to indict Travis Andrews, 26, for the
murder of Melinda Crump, 54, who was shot in the abdomen during a
shootout initiated by Andrews while walking to a convenience store in
December, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.
While Andrews initiated the shootout by firing multiple shots at someone
else, his bullet did not kill Crump. Bullets apparently fired by the
intended target, who has not been identified, struck Crump in the
abdomen.
State law, in certain circumstances, allows a person who did not
directly take the action that led to a death to be charged with
first-degree murder. But reformers, in passing the criminal justice
reform law, tried to lessen prosecutors’ ability to file those so-called
“felony murder” charges if a person’s action doesn’t directly cause the
death.
The reform bill, called the Safety, Accountability, Fairness, and
Equity-Today, or SAFE-T Act, passed during a lame duck session in
January 2021. It changed one of three subsections to crimes contained
under first-degree murder.
Under the SAFE-T Act, it allows for felony murder charges of an
individual if “he or she, acting alone or with one or more participants,
commits or attempts to commit a forcible felony other than second degree
murder, and in the course of or in furtherance of such crime or flight
therefrom, he or she or another participant causes the death of a
person.” The previous version did not include the language which said
“causes the death of a person.”
Andrews was indicted on weapons charges in the shooting but not on the
first-degree murder charge.
While grand jury deliberations are secret, the Sun-Times reported that
Assistant State’s Attorney James Murphy told a judge during a hearing
that jurors cited the SAFE-T Act as the reason for not pursuing the
murder charge.
“The Cook County grand jury’s decision not to indict Travis Andrews on
first-degree murder because of the SAFE-T Act highlights what we have
been saying all along,” Rep. Dan Ugaste, R-Geneva said at a news
conference Wednesday. “The SAFE-T Act has made Illinois a less safe
place to live.”
“How does [Gov. Pritzker] explain this dismal failure that played out
before the Cook County grand jury on this investigation,” House minority
leader Jim Durkin, R-Western Springs, said.
But Jobi Cates, executive director of Restore Justice Illinois, said the
reforms “narrow the wrongdoings” and make it difficult to charge people
with first-degree murder when they did not intend to kill the person who
died.
Cates said the change in the statute is intended to prevent the
possibility of charging someone with a first-degree murder when the
killing was committed by a third party.
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House Minority Leader Jim Durkin, R-Western Springs,
discusses a recent change to Illinois' felony murder statute and
Republicans' ongoing efforts to repeal a criminal justice reform
known as the SAFE-T Act. (Credit: Zoom.us)
“It’s a minor change to the statute, people can still be charged,” Cates
said in a phone interview with Capitol News Illinois Wednesday.
“We want to actually solve for violence,” she added. “We want to
actually make communities safer.”
Rep. Justin Slaughter, D-Chicago, released a statement following the GOP
news conference and grand jury’s decision, saying he hoped the person
responsible for Crump’s death would be arrested.
“The criminals who instigated and participated in the shooting that led
to Melinda Crump’s death must be brought to justice,” Slaughter said. “I
am glad Travis Andrews is facing more than a decade of jail time, and I
hope the gunman who shot and kill Ms. Crump is found and charged with
murder.”
Republicans have continually claimed that the criminal justice reform
bill has led to an increase in violent crime. In response, they filed
House Bill 4499 to repeal the SAFE-T Act
Among other provisions, the SAFE-T Act overhauls police certification
and decertification, reforms use-of-force standards, increases police
accountability and abolishes cash bail.
“The Democrats insist on staying the course with the SAFE-T Act. They
refuse to acknowledge the policies they passed are leading to spikes in
crime,” Ugaste said.
Durkin said that Illinois is becoming a “lawless state when it comes to
crime,” and that repercussions need to be put in place to prevent
violent offenders.
“We need to immediately repeal the failed Democrat law, the SAFE-T Act,
before more tragedies occur,” Durkin said.
Slaughter said the SAFE-T act makes the justice system more fair and
effective and that “Republicans are continuing their scare tactics by
twisting the law and the facts of this case in order to score political
points in an election year.”
Pritzker was asked about the Andrews case Wednesday in a news
conference.
“Well, let's begin by saying that the crime that was committed and the
death, of course, heinous and something that someone should have the
book thrown at them for,” he said. “The fact is that what he's been
charged with, would result in, if convicted, 14 years in prison without
possibility of parole. Not every crime will have first-degree murder as
the charge that gets brought against somebody, but I am at least pleased
that he's been apprehended and that he will be prosecuted on those
crimes.”
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. |