Family of Chicago officer slain by partner on duty files lawsuit against
city, shooter
[December 12, 2025]
By JOHN O'CONNOR
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — The Chicago Police Department knew that Officer
Carlos Baker was reckless and posed a threat to his partner, Krystal
Rivera, before Baker fatally shot her last summer while the pair
attempted to apprehend a suspect with a gun, a lawsuit filed Thursday
claims.
Rivera, 36, had told supervisors she feared for her safety with Baker as
her partner and had ended a two-year on-again, off-again romantic
relationship with him shortly before the shooting on June 5, according
to the lawsuit. Additionally, the department knew of Baker's history of
complaints, including one filed by a woman once romantically involved
with Baker who said he had threatened her with a gun in a bar, it adds.
The lawsuit was filed in Cook County Circuit Court by Rivera's mother,
Yolanda Rivera. It names Baker and the city of Chicago as defendants and
seeks compensatory and punitive damages of more than $50,000 for most of
its nine counts. It contends Baker shot Rivera in the back and failed to
notify anyone of the shooting or render even rudimentary first aid to
her.
“Krystal understood the dangers of this job. She accepted the risk that
came with policing. What she never should have had to fear was her own
partner,” Yolanda Rivera said at a news conference. “That betrayal cost
Krystal’s life."
Spokespersons for the city and the police department, which was not
named as a defendant, declined to comment on the lawsuit. Baker does not
have a listed phone number and it is unknown if he has an attorney.

Rivera and Baker, both members of a police tactical unit, had conducted
a traffic stop on a motorist suspected of having a gun. A foot chase
ensued and ended outside an apartment. According to the lawsuit, Baker
was positioned in front of the door, and Rivera was to the side or
behind him. Baker kicked in the door to reveal the suspect with a gun.
Baker fired his weapon but struck Rivera in the back, Rivera family
attorney Antonio Romanucci said, but instead of reporting that an
officer had been hit, he fled to another floor of the apartment
building.
“He did not attempt even the most basic first aid step of applying
pressure on her wound to mitigate blood loss, or try any other
lifesaving measures,” Romanucci said. “Baker left Krystal there on the
floor, literally gasping. Krystal radioed in her own shooting.”
The police department, he said, filed reports with state regulators
claiming the shots had come from a suspect who had been barricaded.
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Police officer Krystal Rivera talks about why she decided to become
an officer after a graduation ceremony, Oct. 20, 2021, at Navy Pier
in Chicago. (Anthony Vazquez/Chicago Sun-Times via AP, File)

The Cook County State's Attorney declined prosecution in the case,
but Romanucci said he hopes the office will reconsider based on what
his team has uncovered.
Romanucci said Baker currently has “no role, absolutely, in
policing."
Romanucci said Baker had accumulated 11 misconduct complaints in
three years, a record worse than 95% of Chicago police officers. In
December 2022, he threatened an ex-girlfriend in a tavern by
brandishing a weapon, a charge Romanucci said was investigated by
the Civilian Office of Police Accountability with no conclusion.
That office declined comment.
Rivera was hired as a Chicago police officer in February 2021 and
was partnered with Baker in January 2023. The two began a romantic
relationship in June of that year, but she requested a different
partner, citing Baker's “prior reckless conduct,” according to the
lawsuit.
The change was granted, but after Rivera was promoted to a tactical
unit, she learned in early 2024 that Baker would again be her
partner. Baker was removed as a tactical officer in April 2024
because his lack of years of service made him ineligible. However,
he was reassigned as Rivera's tactical team partner in March 2025.
Rivera learned last winter that Baker had a live-in girlfriend,
ended her relationship with Baker for good, and repeatedly told
Baker she intended to tell the other woman about their relationship,
the lawsuit says. She told colleagues she had concerns about Baker's
“negative and hostile reaction" to the breakup. The complaint says
that Baker continued to ask her to see him outside of work and
showed up at her home early on June 4 against Rivera's wishes.
“He never should have gotten past his probationary period. He was
not fit to police our communities, let alone carry a gun under the
color of law,” Romanucci said. “The decision CPD made to keep Carlos
Baker on the force was not costly. It was fatal.”
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