Reforms after Massey shooting could include better police employment
screening
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[August 09, 2024]
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – There is agreement from all sides about the need
for reforms for how police are hired in Illinois, but what reforms there
need to be is still unclear.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker continued taking questions Thursday about the
aftermath of the police-involved shooting death of Sonya Massey last
month in Springfield by then-Sangamon County sheriff’s deputy Sean
Grayson, and what policies could change to prevent such events in the
future.
“There are ideas that are floating around. I don’t think there’s a bill
that anybody has put together. It’s hard to tell exactly what can be
done especially when there isn’t transparency in the sheriff’s
department,” Pritzker said after cutting the ribbon on the 2024 Illinois
State Fair in Springfield.
Pritzker has called for Sangamon County Sheriff Jack Campbell to resign.
Campbell has refused, saying he’s working to find ways to reform the
system to keep bad actors out of policing.
“The one responsible is in jail and will never work in law enforcement
again,” Campbell said in a statement Wednesday. “Calls for my
resignation are nothing more than political maneuvering during a tragic
event and only hurt the good citizens of Sangamon County.”
Grayson was fired shortly after the shooting and charged with murder.
Campbell said his office used a hiring process they believed was
consistent with statewide standards.
“If these standards are deficient, we would advocate a change at all
necessary levels,” Campbell said.
Illinois Sheriffs’ Association Executive Director Jim Kaitschuk said
there could be reforms, but what those reforms look like isn’t quite
clear.
“But we’re going to go through a process to try to examine that
thoroughly and make sure that we can make changes that are helpful to
the profession and bring more good people back in,” Kaitschuk told The
Center Square Thursday.
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An image from body camera footage of the fatal police-involved
shooting of Sonya Massey on July 6, 2024, in Springfield, Illinois.
Someone wanting to get into law enforcement goes through a rigorous
series of steps that includes no felonies, written and physical
tests, psychological exams and lie detectors, Kaitschuk said. Once a
merit commission grants eligibility, and the applicant completes
class and field training, they can then be hired.
Pritzker said the former deputy, Sean Grayson, had an abysmal
employment history.
“These are questions that a sheriff who’s hiring somebody ought to
be asking,” Pritzker said. “I don’t know whether he asked those
questions. It seems to me he could not have. If he had he would have
learned a lot.”
As to possible blindspots for employment histories, that’s something
Kaitschuk said should be examined.
“Maybe there’s a process where there has to be a release of
information provided by that individual, the applicant, that says
‘hey give all my information out’ and then the agency that has the
information, make sure they make the request that’s required,” he
said. “I think there’s some things that could be looked at there.”
It’s expected the issue could be discussed further by state
legislators heading into fall veto session after the November
election.
“With that said, I hate for this situation to be politicized, and
that’s what I feel like some of this is occurring now and I think
that, again, let’s focus on how we can make things better for
everybody,” Kaitschuk said.
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