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Chicago Police Accountability Task Force
from Wikipedia
The Chicago Police Accountability Task Force final report

The Chicago Police Accountability Task Force (CPATF) was a task force created to "review the system of accountability, oversight and training that is currently in place for Chicago's police officers" in 2015.[1][2] It was announced via press release on December 1, 2015,[1] in the wake of the murder of Laquan McDonald and the protests and political fallout afterward.[3] On April 13, 2016, the task force released its final report, which found "racism and systemic failures in the city's police force, validating complaints made for years by African-American residents."[4]

Members

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The members of the task force included:[5][6]

  • Lori Lightfoot – president of the Chicago Police Board and Task Force chair[7]
  • Deval Patrick - senior advisor
  • Sergio Acosta – partner at Hinshaw & Culbertson and a former federal prosecutor
  • Joseph M. Ferguson – inspector general of the City of Chicago
  • Hiram Grau – former director of the Illinois State Police and former deputy superintendent of the Chicago Police Department
  • Randolph N. Stone – University of Chicago Law School professor, director of the Criminal and Juvenile Justice Project Clinic and former Cook County public defender

Public community forums

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Forum at South Shore Cultural Center

The task force held four public community forums in February 2016 and one press event in April 2016 and published the meetings on YouTube.[8][9]

Final report

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Task Force chair Lori Lightfoot unveils the report

The final report used Chicago police data to show that African-Americans were regularly and disproportionately abused and denied rights, which had been reported by many African-American residents of Chicago over many years.[10][11][12] Chicago's population is approximately one-third black, Hispanic and white and according to the report, 404 people were shot by the Chicago police between 2008 and 2015 and 74 percent of those were African-American.[10] According to the New York Times, the final report "was blistering, blunt and backed up by devastating statistics."[10]

Reactions

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As a result of the report, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced that he would be implementing roughly one-third of the 76 recommendations in the report.[13][14]

Dean Angelo, the president of Chicago's Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7,[15] declared the accusation of racism in the Chicago Police Department "biased".[16] Lori Lightfoot, who was on the task force, responded to Angelo:[17] "It is hard to fathom that Mr. Angelo maintains his reflexive, uninformed position when it is obviously belied by the facts. Does he really believe that a better trained, better prepared and more professional police force will not inure to the benefit of his members?"[18]

References

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