Black Chicagoans disproportionately face force by CPD
[March 02, 2026]
By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – American Civil Liberties Union Director Alexandra
Block argues a new study showing black city residents disproportionately
face aggression at the hands of Chicago police much more than whites
should be viewed as an indictment against the whole system.
Researchers from the University of Texas San Antonio and the University
of Pennsylvania studied upwards of 8,000 incidents over a four-year
period where force was used, concluding that in 73% of all such
incidents it was directed at a black resident, even though they comprise
just 29% of the overall population.
“What this really tells us is that the consent decree, which is the
court order that is supposed to be reforming the Chicago Police
Department and that required the police department to do the study, is
not achieving the kind of changes on the streets of Chicago,” Block told
The Center Square. “The central goal of the consent decree was to bring
down force against community members and especially community members of
color and that is not happening.”

Block adds much of the data uncovered essentially makes clear why the
disparities exist as they do.
“We suspect that a lot of the problem is over policing,” she said. “That
police are just initiating encounters with members of the community that
they don't need to; that police are responding to calls, for example, of
people in a mental or behavioral health crisis where an alternative
response would be better. It's going to take a sustained,
department-wide culture shift to a culture of community policing, a
culture of de-escalation and not a culture of what we can get away with
and claim that it's within CPD policy.”
[to top of second column]
|

While researchers for the study were hired by CPD as part of its
effort to comply with federally imposed changes instituted nearly a
decade ago to protect the constitutional rights of Black and Latino
residents, data shows thus far just 22% of consent decree
requirements have been completed and top brass has taken no action
in response to the study.
At the same time, the overall number of excessive force allegations
filed against officers nearly doubled between 2022 and 2025, as the
department faced growing pressure to change the way it trains,
supervises and disciplines officers.
“What it says is that the culture change that needs to happen hasn't
happened yet, that CPD needs to become a department that views
itself as serving members of the public, not harming members of the
public,” Block said. “Our clients are very mistrustful of the
Chicago Police Department because they're not seeing changes.
They're, they're not seeing that CPD is really committed to treating
people with dignity and respect, to understanding the communities
that that they're policing.”
Among residents suspected of a crime, researchers found Blacks had a
52% higher risk than whites and faced a 39% greater risk of being
arrested on suspicion of a crime, even as they comprise much less of
the overall population.
Police Superintendent Larry Snelling is on record in asserting he
does believe CPD officers are using force more often but are simply
doing a better job of reporting all such encounters in accordance
with changes to the system brought on by the consent decree.
All contents © copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved |