Task force hears from law enforcement on rising crime rate
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[January 22, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Police chiefs and sheriffs
told a panel of state lawmakers Friday that they need more resources and
support from the public and the General Assembly to combat a rising rate
of violent crime in Illinois. Some said they don’t feel they are getting
that now, especially in light of recently-enacted criminal justice
reforms.
“There are members in policing that believe that the community should
have nothing to say about what we do in our profession,” Hazel Crest
Police Chief Mitchell Davis said. “Conversely, there are members in the
community that want nothing to do with police officers of any kind. All
sides are entitled to feel the way that they feel. But until we are able
to work together in spite of our differences, we will never fully reach
our potential in equitably addressing the concerns of public safety and
violence in all communities.”
Davis spoke during a hearing of the House Public Safety and Violence
Prevention Task Force, a group that House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch,
D-Hillside, formed in September “to develop a collaborative approach to
the violence crisis.”
Welch formed the task force as Chicago and many other cities were
experiencing their most violent year in decades. Chicago alone had some
800 murders during the year, the most in the past quarter century.
The panel is co-chaired by Reps. LaShawn K. Ford and Frances Ann Hurley,
both Chicago Democrats.
The increase in violent crime has come just after the General Assembly
enacted a sweeping criminal justice reform package known as the Safety,
Accountability, Fairness and Equity-Today, or SAFE-T Act that included,
among other things, the scheduled elimination of cash bail in Illinois
beginning next year.
When that law takes effect Jan. 1, 2023, courts will still be able to
detain people they believe pose a risk to public safety, but those who
are not detained will be released on conditions other than posting bond.
Ford was the chief House sponsor of that bill, which passed during a
lame duck session in January 2021. It was an initiative of the Illinois
Legislative Black Caucus and it came about, in part, in response to a
large number of police shootings of unarmed Black people, including the
2020 killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, and the disproportionately
large number of Blacks and Hispanics being held in jail awaiting trial
because they could not afford the price of bail.
But it has come to be seen in some circles as part of a larger anti-law
enforcement movement, and Republicans in the General Assembly have
called for its repeal.
Lemont Police Chief Marc Maton said public criticism of policing in
general has led to officers being less willing to take aggressive
actions to stop crime.
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Hazel Crest Police Chief Mitchell Davis testifies
Friday before the House Public Safety and Violence Prevention Task
Force. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
“Our cops aren't laying down,” he said. “They see the media, proposed
legislation and community commentary, and they think that this is the
role that's expected of them, and that the community wants a less
aggressive approach to policing and is asking for this model of
policing.”
Springfield Police Chief Kenny Winslow said his department has been
losing officers who get trained in Illinois but later move to work in
other states that they perceive to be more supportive of law
enforcement.
“I've lost three officers to the state of Indiana in the last year, who
are going to a state that they think is more supportive,” he said. “I
recently had an officer who's talking about … accepting a job in Cedar
Rapids, Iowa, for the same reason, because they believe that the state
is more police friendly, more supportive of law enforcement.”
Meanwhile, Kankakee County Sheriff Mike Downey said he believes the
elimination of cash bail next year will only worsen the problem of
violent crime.
“Cashless bail has already proven in other states to not work and has
increased violent crimes in those states to record numbers and made
those states more violent and less safe, which is what we're trying to
avoid,” he said. “Cashless bail will also increase interaction with
police, something that I think the community wants to avoid.”
But Rep. Lindsey LaPointe, D-Chicago, said she believes people have
misinterpreted what the elimination of cash bail is really about.
“We are removing money as the factor of if we're going to detain
somebody or not,” she said. “And with our current system – and this
happens, unfortunately – people can buy their way out of jail pretrial,
because somebody is making a decision that, you know, it'll cost them
whatever $30,000 to get out.”
Ford tried to dispel the idea that the SAFE-T Act was meant to be an
anti-law enforcement measure or that he, personally, was anti-law
enforcement.
“Let me just say that I want to thank law enforcement for the things
that you do every day to make our streets safer and to work with the
communities,” he said. “I know that it is law enforcement that runs into
the line of fire. If I'm in trouble, I'm calling the police. And we want
to do everything to make sure that the police are strong, and make sure
that the police are well educated as it relates to serving the people.”
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
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