ISP director talks challenges facing the agency
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[March 10, 2022]
By GRACE KINNICUTT
Capitol News Illinois
gkinnicutt@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Illinois State Police
Director Brendan Kelly told a state violence prevention task force this
week that expressway shootings, gun trafficking, trooper staffing levels
and officer wellness are some of the biggest challenges facing the
agency.
According to the ISP expressway shootings dashboard, in 2021 there were
310 reported expressway shootings in Illinois, 273 of which were
reported in Cook County. Capitol News Illinois reported earlier this
week on Kelly’s suggestions for addressing expressway shootings,
including expanding an automated license plate reader program, giving
tech companies a short window in which they must comply with warrants in
investigations of expressway shootings, and updating statutes to reflect
the danger of such shootings.
But Kelly also said easy access to firearms plays a role in expressway
shootings, and many of the weapons used in criminal activity have
previously been stolen.
Over the past two years, Kelly said the agency has gone through criminal
records to identify people who should not have firearms and revoked
about 17,000 Firearm Owners Identification cards and prevented about
25,000 attempts of people illegally obtaining a firearm in 2021.
Kelly suggested lawmakers update the state’s stolen firearm statute to
reflect a recently-passed “Fix the FOID Act” that requires ISP to create
a public database to provide information on guns that have been reported
stolen.
Kelly said that with anyone being able to access the stolen gun
database, there should be no ability for an individual to claim that
they did not know a firearm was stolen.
Signed into law in August 2021, House Bill 0562 made changes to FOID
Act, requiring ISP to remove guns from people with revoked FOID cards
and calling on the agency to continuously monitor state and federal
databases for prohibited gun buyers.
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Illinois State Police Director Brendan Kelly is
pictured in a file photo at the Illinois State Capitol. (Capitol
News Illinois file photo)
Kelly said the agency is working with local groups to aid crime victims
and help reduce violence. He said that in East St. Louis, they have been
implementing the Public Safety Enforcement Group that is an
investigative unit that takes a community-based, trauma-informed
approach aimed at reducing violent crimes.
The group works with organizations throughout the community that help
victims in dealing with trauma.
“It’s very hard to deter crime if you can’t solve crime,” Kelly said.
Kelly also addressed issues regarding staffing and the mental wellness
and safety of officers.
The agency has 1,836 sworn officers but Kelly said they have a
“retirement bubble” causing challenges with staffing due with a large
number of troopers hired in the late ‘90’s getting closer to retirement.
He said the agency is trying to get back over 2,000 officers.
The governor's proposed budget for the upcoming fiscal year includes
$18.6 million in general funds to support three ISP cadet classes to
hire and train 300 officers. Kelly said it would be the largest cadet
class in ISP history and will help the agency address staffing needs.
Regarding the public safety of officers, Kelly said protections need to
be strengthened for officers when it comes to violence and other
injuries.
He also said he wanted to see improvements regarding the mental
well-being and health insurance of officers. He said that the health
insurance troopers have is good but it creates cost barriers to
receiving proper mental health help.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is 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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