Public Records Plumb The Depths Of Illinois Law Enforcement's Accountability Black Hole
from the regular-rogues-gallery-of-[lol]-public-servants dept
The Chicago Police Department isn't willing to police itself. That much is apparent from the actions of its officers, which includes the department setting up an inner city "black site" where arrestees were separated from the rights and representation in order to coerce confessions.
Nonexistent oversight has led directly to horrific outcomes, like unjustified killings and -- in just one jaw-dropping stat -- 100 misconduct accusations resulting from a single SWAT team raid of a wrong address.
Will it ever get better? It seems unlikely. In Illinois, police accountability isn't even an afterthought. Some reforms were passed earlier this year but with a large concession to police departments: a partial burial of officers' misconduct records.
At the same time that the 2021 law expanded the information in the misconduct database and required local departments to check it, a last minute amendment closed the database to the public and courts.
That loophole is on pg. 669 of the text. It reads: “The database, documents, materials or other information in the possession or control of the Board that are obtained by or disclosed to the Board pursuant to this subsection shall be confidential by law and privileged and shall not be subject to discovery or admissible in evidence in any private civil action.”
That's a pretty big loophole. There's a workaround, but it requires parties to approach individual law enforcement agencies to obtain these records, rather than simply get them from the state's Training Standards Board, which is charged with collecting them from all over the state. A little secrecy goes a long way. Records can still be obtained, but it all but makes it impossible for outsiders to quantify how much misconduct is being reported across the state or how much of that misconduct is resulting in punishment.
That's the way the police like it. Cops in the state -- especially in Chicago -- are tough on crime… unless it's criminal acts or rights violations committed by officers. The Pulitzer Center has obtained a number of records from across the state via public records requests, which shows how often officers walk away from sustained allegations and criminal charges.
Eighty-one Chicago police officers lost their badges over the past 20 years, but only after being investigated for 1,706 previous offenses – an average of 21 accusations per officer.
When law enforcement agencies say some horrible thing in the news is the result of a "bad apple," they're referring to officers like these ones. But agencies are obviously fine with having bad apples floating around their barrels. Bad apples create more bad apples. The simplest thing to do would be to send these officers packing when it becomes apparent they can't be trusted. Somehow, it is always anyone but police officials pointing out the worst of the worst, months or years after sustained damage has been done.
This is what Illinois residents' tax dollars are paying for:
From 2000 to 2020 law enforcement officers in Illinois kept their badges even if they engaged in domestic abuse, sexual harassment, racism, perjury, most misdemeanors and other offenses unbecoming of a police officer.
Over the entire year of 2020, Illinois decertified two officers – one for theft and the other for an offense labeled “other,” an ambiguous category occasionally used in the state’s decertification records.
From Jan. 1, 2000, to Jan. 1, 2021, Illinois decertified 347 officers, an average of fewer than 17 a year.
But that's not even the worst of it. This is:
[Norberto] Rodriguez held on to his police license for almost a decade after he went to prison on a 52-month sentence for transporting four kilos of heroin. The state decertification board said Chicago officials failed to notify them of the conviction.
Chicago police investigated Rodriguez for domestic abuse three times during the 1990s and he was suspended or asked to take an unpaid leave for a total of 48 days. In 1992, the department investigated him for assault/battery, an allegation the department sustained.
In 1997 prosecutors charged him with the attempted murder of his wife, Irma, for shooting her in an argument. These charges were dropped, but the department fired him.
[...]
Rodriguez killed his wife, Irma, in 2009, and a jury found him guilty of first-degree murder in 2017.
The twist? His police certification wasn't revoked until two years after he murdered his wife. And he held onto it for nine years after he pled guilty to federal drug charges and for twenty years after he was fired by the PD.
The Chicago PD has employed two officers who murdered their spouses.
[Rafael] Balbontin was decertified in 2007 for a “felony.” Before this, Chicago police investigated him for “murder/manslaughter” in 2005, which the department later changed in its final complaint category to a “domestic altercation,” for which it fired him.
The “domestic altercation” was in 2005 when Balbontin stabbed his wife, Arcelia, to death in her home. He was later convicted of murder and sentenced to 25 years in prison.
The PD can't even bring itself to acknowledge the actual crime committed by its officer. A "domestic altercation" can result in murder, but murder is never just a "domestic altercation"... unless it has to be documented in an officer's employment record.
And bad cops (there are plenty listed in this report) were free to bounce around the state, infecting other agencies after being (in very rare cases) fired or forced to resign. It wasn't until this year that the state's law enforcement agencies were required to perform background checks and verify prospective officers were still certified. Agencies were always free to approach the state's law enforcement training board to check on officers' certifications. But they never did.
In response to a FOIA request, the board acknowledged it had no record of a local department requesting the certification status of an officer from 2000 to 2019.
The board excused this lack of interest in its certification records by pointing out agencies could get the same information from the Professional Misconduct Database that was created in 2019. Most agencies couldn't be bothered to do that either.
This database was used 48 times in its first year of operation but never by the Chicago Police Department as of December 2020, according to a FOIA request.
Don't ask, don't tell: law enforcement edition. This is how the Chicago PD (and others in the state) came to employ (for years on end) rapists, fraudsters, extortionists, domestic abusers, actual murderers, and officers with misconduct rap sheets longer than the criminal records of the people they arrested. If accountability begins at home, the state's police agencies stepped out to buy a pack of smokes shortly after formation and never looked back.
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Filed Under: chicago pd, foia, illinois, public records, transparency
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Shotspotter under the spotlight
Inside the controversial US gunshot-detection firm https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-59072745
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Have you no poetry in your soul?
Oh, come on, Bobvious. You should know the headline should read
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Re: Have you no poetry in your soul?
I didn't know that was my role
To wallow here in hyperbole
It could become a higher goal
To make your spirit feel it's whole
This day some fox becomes a stole
And flags unfurl upon a pole
And now I leave with this cajole
Before Χαρων collects his toll
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Re: Re: Have you no poetry in your soul?
It's an okay poem, but having to pronounce hyperbole so egregiously wrong makes me wince.
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Re: Re: Re: Have you no poetry in your soul?
It's poetique licencse, and that's what you get for 2 minutes work.
Besides, one must not mention that big aim.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Have you no poetry in your soul?
Better hyperbole than superbole. The latter would probably get you arrested.
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Re: Shotspotter under the spotlight
https://deadline.com/2021/10/vice-media-shotspotter-defamation-lawsuit-1234854558/
They've also started suing people for reporting on them. i'm sure next they'll do a Taser and build up an array of academics who serve as 'expert' witnesses who'll sweat blind that whatever Shotspotter claim, they'll have a hard time topping Taser inventing a lethal medical condition that just so happens to have nothing to do with the use of their product. ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excited_delirium#Taser_use )
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It is possible to hold poliice to higher standards Police dismissals (home office forces) pdf The reason for dismissal section is worth a a scan as it includes things like:
Failure to act with respect and courtesy 9
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Re:
Someones not read the union contract where someone they pay gets to make the final say if the bad apple can be removed from the barrel or put back in with back pay.
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Re: Re:
Is there any way to hold the union liable for aiding and abetting criminal behavior?
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how can any government allow this sort of behavior from those who are supposed to be so honest as to be trusted to look after the safety of the public? it's absolutely disgraceful! the USA is so degraded now as to be on par with countries we take to task over behavior there. the corruption, the sel- protection, the killing of innocent citizens, the thieving of citizens assetts under any false charge and circumstanse that can be invented at the time, the incrimination and imprisonment of often innocent people is absolutely beyond belief! what happened to the country that was the envy of the Globe? what happened to the country that so many others tried to become, tried to aspire to? what happened to make the Constitution a meer scrap of paper that has had it's 'forged in blood' meaning brought to almost nothing? those who have let and are letting this happen are more like criminals than the criminals themselves and should be ashamed. at least there are codes in play with them. but money speaks louder than anything, until they are themselves affected!
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Re:
It goes further than just wrongful convictions and stolen assets, just interacting with the police allows them to decide to fuck up your life.
https://citylimits.org/2021/10/27/opinion-beyond-wrongful-convictions-the-burden-of-accusation -still-weighs/
As is often said, "you may beat the rap, but you won't beat the ride" -- meaning that even if the charges don't stick, they've still caused your life to be put on knife's edge - or if already on knife's edge, then to spiral. Power corrupts, unchecked power corrupts deeper.
Have a good portion of US police always just been thugs with guns?
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Re: Re:
Yes. It's only because of ubiquitous cell phone cameras that it's coming to light.
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On the plus side...
Police deaths are up sharply because of coronavirus. Hopefully the ones too stupid to get the vaccine are also the shitty ones being shielded.
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Re: On the plus side...
So during the pandemic the virus is slowly catching up to single vehicle collisions and heart attacks as a feller of those hiding behind the thick blue line.
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Easy to fix
Clearly there are more records that need to be exempt from FOIA requests
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Hey, some of them may be murderers, thieves, and rapists, but they are our murderers, thieves, and rapists.
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