Thunderstorm Light Rain
66°
Morris, IL
Thunderstorm Light Rain|Forecast »

Chicago mayor inches closer to police redeployment plan in wake of violent January

  Comments (...)
Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(MCT) — CHICAGO — Following the most violent January in more than a decade and the high-profile murder of a 15-year-old high school band majorette, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and his police chief moved closer than ever Thursday to reintroducing the very police strategy they dumped when they took over in 2011.

Emanuel said he would move 200 officers off desk duty to bolster the size of roving teams aimed at suppressing outbreaks of murderous violence that have plagued the city for more than a year.

Disbanding such large teams was one of several moves that Emanuel’s hand-picked police Superintendent, Garry McCarthy took nearly two years ago. Instead, McCarthy said, the department would put in place a strategy that called for more officers on neighborhood beat patrols and less reliance on those so-called “saturation teams” that he said alienate communities without making them safer long-term.

In addition to disbanding those large units, McCarthy also combined several police districts. That included closing the Prairie District that encompassed Harsh Park in the North Kenwood neighborhood where 15-year-old Hadiyah Pendleton was shot Monday afternoon while hanging out with schoolmates.

The combined changes gave McCarthy the ability to redeploy scarce resources to parts of the city he considered more dangerous. But the events of this week show that tragedy can strike anywhere, and calibrating how and where to stretch those resources is difficult in a city with a deeply entrenched culture of violence.

A community leader in the neighborhood where the student died greeted the latest initiative with skepticism. Jawanza Malone, executive director of the Kenwood Oakland Community Organization, said when their neighborhoods were absorbed into other police districts last year they told police officials it would create more problems than it would solve.

“The police we had, the beat cops that we knew were all replaced and the commanders we had relationships with were all gone. So I had to laugh today when I heard Mayor Emanuel say he is going to put 200 more cops on the street, because that is the same thing we were promised a year and half ago,” Malone said.

Previous Page|1||||

Comments

Total Comments
0

View/Add Comments

There have been no comments made about this story.

Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all