Illinois had 5th most police officers killed in the line of duty in 2021
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[September 09, 2022]
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Crime statistics from
the FBI show an upward trend in violent crime. Among those crimes on the
rise in Illinois are police killed in the line of duty.
Data the FBI published in May shows the number of police feloniously
killed across the country and by state.
“2021 was a really bad year in the United States for police officers
feloniously killed, there were 73 of them,” said Wirepoints Senior
Editor Matt Rosenberg, who analyzed the data. “We had a 52% jump over
the rolling yearly average in 2021.”
Rosenberg called it a “great unraveling,” something he said has
intensified in the past three years.
“And we’re seeing it in Illinois,” Rosenberg told WMAY. “We had the 5th
most felonious homicides in 2021 out of 50 states among law enforcement
officers and if you look at the 10 year stretch, we rank No. 7 out of
50.”
Illinois had 14 police officers killed in the line of duty over the past
decade ending in 2021. The majority of those came in the last three
years of data, which Rosenberg notes was during Illinois Gov. J.B.
Pritzker’s term. Eight were in the last three years. Five were killed in
2021.
In reviewing other violent crime stats, Rosenberg doesn’t see the trends
relaxing.
“Armed robberies, carjackings, crimes on transit in big cities, there
are very worrisome things going on and it loops around and connects back
with the violence towards police,” Rosenberg said.
He was critical of Pritzker defending the controversial legislation
becoming law Jan. 1 to reform the state’s system of bail.
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“This has occurred and spiked here in Illinois under Gov. J.B.
Pritzker,” Rosenberg said. “He has signed and stoutly defended
Democratic enacted state legislation in 2021 to abolish cash bail,
decrimnalize trespassing and to consider ending qualified immunity
for police against lawsuits for just doing their job.”
Pritzker’s Republican opponent Darren Bailey Wednesday released a
plan to repeal the SAFE-T act that includes the Pre-Trial Fairness
Act.
“Though Governor Pritzker likes to claim that the law simply diverts
low-level drug offenders from sitting in prison before trial, the
fact is that the SAFE-T Act will put hardened criminals back on the
street,” Bailey said in a statement.
Last month, state Rep. LaShawn Ford, D-Chicago, defended the SAFE-T
Act and the cashless bail provision. He told Chicago AM 560 the
discretion will be up to the judge, who he said he trusts will keep
violent criminals in jail pre-trial. The rest, he said, should be
presumed innocent before trial and let go.
“It costs taxpayers millions and billions of dollars over the years.
Those people won’t be locked up in county jail anymore and taxpayers
will be grateful for that,” Ford said.
Republican state Sen. Chapin Rose, R-Mahomet, said with an increase
in crime, there are a slew of other problems with the bill. He
doesn’t expect to turn bill sponsors into opponents.
“If a few of these suburban Democrats who voted for it lose this
election on the issue of crime, I think the Democrats that come back
in the spring, their attitude would have changed greatly,” Rose told
The Center Square.
The election is Nov. 8. Lawmakers return for the scheduled fall
session the following week. |