Pritzker commemorates 100 years of Illinois State Police as crime
remains campaign flashpoint
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[March 30, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD — From his ceremonial office at
the Capitol Tuesday, Gov. JB Pritzker proclaimed the 12-month period
beginning April 1 as the Illinois State Police centennial year, ordering
the ISP flag to fly atop the Capitol dome for the month of April.
The news conference in Pritzker’s office followed an appearance on the
Capitol’s east lawn, where a fleet of new black-and-white squad cars and
ISP officers lined up in front of the Abraham Lincoln statue.
Pritzker, at a news conference in his office, told a story of an ISP
that formed in 1922 to “maintain order and safety on its massive number
of newly paved roads.” ISP Director Brendan Kelly said the first class
of ISP troopers consisted of eight individuals driving motorcycles “that
were left over from the First World War.”
“It's safe to say the Illinois State Police has changed an awful lot
since then, as threats have evolved over the decades. As our
understanding of public safety has expanded, so too have the duties of
the Illinois State Police,” Pritzker said.
Pritzker said ISP duties now include “forensic testing, crime scene
services, investigations, intelligence, cybersecurity, disaster response
and a spectrum of support for all local law enforcement throughout the
state.”
“The makeup of the ranks of our state troopers has changed too. Women
and people of color weren't allowed to serve 100 years ago. Today they
are among ISPs highest ranks,” he said.
The centennial event came amid a political backdrop in which crime and
the state’s response to it is top of mind in the early stages of the
2022 campaign season in which every seat in the General Assembly and all
constitutional offices are up for grabs, including the governorship.
That much has been evident in the campaign materials from Pritzker’s
Republican challengers who are aiming to peg Democrats as soft on crime.
And it was evident Monday night when a Pritzker appointee to the
Illinois Prisoner Review Board received just half of the votes needed
for approval in a Senate dominated by Democrats.
It was also evident in the question-and-answer session following the
governor’s news conference, during which Pritzker fielded questions
about rising crime, officer-involved shootings and the political fight
for the PRB.
“I believe that our police are out there trying to protect our
communities as best they can, sometimes in extraordinary and difficult
circumstances,” Pritzker said. “So we ought to stand up for our police,
whether they're state police, local police. Obviously, where there are
police who aren't doing the job, people who are mishandling their
duties, they need to be held accountable for their actions.”
Pritzker acknowledged crime is up across the state and nation,
attributing the trends partially to a “pandemic recession.”
“And so we've got to make sure that we're bringing order back, that
we're putting away the people who actually committed crimes. And that
means supporting the ISP, it means supporting law enforcement. And I'm
going to continue to do that with the work that we do, not only to build
up the ISP and local law enforcement, but also to make sure that the
laws are adhered to.”
Pritzker’s budget proposal included an $18.6 million increase to the ISP
budget to allow for three classes of Illinois State Police cadets.
Previously passed infrastructure budgets include crime lab funding as
well.
But as Pritzker and Kelly headed out to the Capitol grounds to shake
hands with rank-and-file ISP troopers, Richard Irvin, a Republican
challenger for governor, issued a news release criticizing the
governor’s 2021 signature on a criminal justice reform bill known as the
SAFE-T Act.
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Gov. JB Pritzker and Illinois State Police Director
Brendan Kelly walk alongside a fleet of new squad cars and
rank-and-file Illinois State Police troopers outside the Illinois
State Capitol Tuesday. They were commemorating ISP's 100th
anniversary. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Jerry Nowicki)
The Irvin release also called attention to the votes of Pritzker
Prisoner Review Board appointees who voted to free two individuals who
were charged with the 1976 murder of ISP trooper Layton Davis. One of
those individuals, Aaron Hyche, 71, was released on medical parole and
suffers from cancer, Parkinson’s disease and dementia.
Four PRB members with controversial voting histories have exited the
board in recent days, one by resignation, one whose appointment was
pulled by Pritzker and two who were rejected by the Senate.
Pritzker said the PRB members are charged with examining the original
crime, whether the offender is rehabilitated, whether they caused
problems while incarcerated and whether they would be a danger to the
public.
“It's very easy just to say, ‘this person committed an awful crime so
many years ago,’ and to say, ‘we're gonna throw away the key, leave them
all in prison,’” Pritzker said. “That's what you're gonna end up with.
If that's what people want, well, let's hear that. But I don't think
that's what people wanted when we created the Prisoner Review Board.”
Republicans have seized on Pritzker’s signature on the SAFE-T Act which
eliminates cash bail beginning next year in favor of a system
prioritizing the offender’s threat level over ability to pay. It’s to be
defined in the courts. The bill also requires body cameras be
implemented by 2025, a measure which Pritzker said would increase
accountability and trust.
The original SAFE-T Act also changed use-of-force guidelines for law
enforcement, created a new police certification system and expanded
detainee rights.
The GOP has publicized the SAFE-T Act as detrimental to officer morale,
blaming it for resignations in sheriff’s offices and police departments
across the state and for making recruitment of new officers difficult.
When asked about recruiting officers, Pritzker pointed to a nationwide
labor shortage and emphasized the brotherhood of ISP and strong wages as
a recruiting hook.
Kelly said law enforcement is a “challenging and difficult job,” but
it’s also “a calling” and he’s optimistic recruits will continue to
materialize.
“Throughout history, the way the public feels and interacts with law
enforcement, that sentiment, it ebbs and flows,” Kelly said. “And I
believe we're at a point where the respect for law enforcement and the
desire to make sure that the role of law enforcement is strong, and that
it is within the expectations of the public, is moving in a positive
direction.”
Pritzker’s proposed budget also includes $4.5 million to fund body
cameras for ISP in accordance with a criminal justice reform bill passed
one year ago, as well as providing the Illinois Law Enforcement Training
and Standards Board with $10 million for distributing grants to local
law enforcement for body cameras.
Pritzker has also touted $240 million in proposed funding as part of a
two-year, $250 million commitment to the Reimagine Public Safety Act,
which aims at investing violence prevention resources in some of the
state’s most dangerous areas. Of that, $235 million is funded through
the federal American Rescue Plan Act.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
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Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |