Crime Chicago cops may soon need permission before chasing a suspect on foot

CHICAGO - Mayor Lori Lightfoot is considering a momentous change to Chicago police procedure: requiring officers to get a supervisor’s permission before beginning a foot chase.

"No one should die as a result of a foot chase," she said.

The mayor promised to announce details of a new policy "soon."

The issue gained new urgency after an officer chased and fatally shot Adam Toledo. Video of the incident shows the 13-year old dumping what appears to be a firearm a split-second before he turns and raises his hands. Toledo apparently was handed the gun by Ruben Roman, who allegedly had just used it to fire eight rounds at a passing vehicle. Apparently, no one was hit.

Personal injury lawyer Arturo Jauregui called a news conference to urge reform.

"This is a tragedy that could have and should have been prevented had the police department had clear procedures governing the use of lethal force against children during foot chases," Jauregui said.

Rewriting police policy on all foot chases has now become a hot topic at City Hall. Alderman Brian Hopkins says an official in the mayor's office told him officers could soon be required prior to a foot chase to do what is now required before a vehicle chase: getting permission from higher ups.

"Of course that raises obvious problems," Hopkins said. "In the time it would take to do that, the person you're supposed to be chasing is actually long gone. The point would be moot then."

Hopkins noted one unintended consequence of the vehicle pursuit policy.

"We're seeing more vehicles flee from police officers because word has gotten out that they're probably not going to get permission to chase you," he said.


The mayor acknowledged the dilemma on Monday.

"I don't want people out there who are dangerous to think, ‘well, if I just run, then I’m safe. I can continue to wreak havoc.’ We can't live in that world either," Lightfoot said.

Hopkins says its past time to rewrite Chicago’s current vague rules.

"I'm sure the officers themselves would agree with me. The more guidance we can give them, the more comfortable they'll feel when they have to make these high-stakes decisions in the blink of an eye," Hopkins said.

 
My favorite part is that this thing is a lesbian apparently. Imagine someone is going down on you and you. feeling good and then you open your eyes and see this face staring back at you.
lol, non-pornstar lesbians having actual sex. You're a funny guy.

Pretty sure if you look up "lesbian bed death" that woman's (citation needed) headshot would be the entire definiton.
 
Policing is going to quickly go from one of the most dangerous jobs to one of the cushiest jobs imaginable.

Captain: "The suspect escaped on foot?"
Cop: *shrug* "You'll have that in these kind of neighborhoods." *eats donut*

In terms of worst leaders of Chocago and/or the state of Illinois, where does Lori rank?

lol this is such a hard thing to gauge because Chicongo leadership has been so fucking awful my entire life.
 
In terms of worst leaders of Chocago and/or the state of Illinois, where does Lori rank?
Good luck with that. You've got her, Rahm Emmanuel, the Richard Daley father/son combo...

Least it ain't D.C. where Mayor Barry was so in touch with his constituents he got nailed by the FBI for hitting the crack pipe on videotape.
 
Policing is going to quickly go from one of the most dangerous jobs to one of the cushiest jobs imaginable.

Captain: "The suspect escaped on foot?"
Cop: *shrug* "You'll have that in these kind of neighborhoods." *eats donut*



lol this is such a hard thing to gauge because Chicongo leadership has been so fucking awful my entire life.
Its chicago. they have a shit ton of sargeants on "merit" and they shit canned the tests because of disparate impacy. If youre the right race and suck the supernintendo off you can get a do nothing job.
 
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Policing is going to quickly go from one of the most dangerous jobs to one of the cushiest jobs imaginable.

Captain: "The suspect escaped on foot?"
Cop: *shrug* "You'll have that in these kind of neighborhoods." *eats donut*
The police will now try to pull over only wine moms for DUIs and let the monkeys roam free. Lower chance of them completely blowing the situation out of proportion and forcing the cops to become evil white supremacist Nazis by doing their jobs.

Expect the cities to become hell on earth and the suburban and rural police departments to suddenly have tons of applications of bored cops looking for easy tickets.
 
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Good luck with that. You've got her, Rahm Emmanuel, the Richard Daley father/son combo...

Least it ain't D.C. where Mayor Barry was so in touch with his constituents he got nailed by the FBI for hitting the crack pipe on videotape.
The Daleys were at least competent machine politicians, if not quite Mussolini levels- the trains didn't run on time, but at least they ran. As far as governors go, sending them to prison is turning into a tradition over there.
Illinois, OTOH, has to be understood in the context of it's looming pension crisis which it is literally illegal to fix. Basically, every state-level leader (and the Mayor of Chicago is effectively a state-level leader) has to do the same or more with less and less as the entitlement black hole keeps devouring everything and the bond rating dips below third-world levels. Until the state actually breaks hard enough that avoiding reform is impossible, every subsequent leader is going to be worse than their predecessor because the math doesn't work out any other way.
 
looming pension crisis which it is literally illegal to fix
Sounds like California and CalPERS. Except its even worse since California is gonna California and CalPERS loves investing in some very, very questionable yet "socially responsible" investments that of course completely fail to show any RoI whatsoever up until the inevitable bankruptcy.
 
Its chicago. they have a shit ton of sargeants on "merit" and they shit canned the tests because of disparate impacy. If youre the right race and suck the supernintendo off you can get a do nothing job.
Wait the super nintendo entertainment system runs the police damn take that sega I... Guess
 
Policing is going to quickly go from one of the most dangerous jobs to one of the cushiest jobs imaginable.

Captain: "The suspect escaped on foot?"
Cop: *shrug* "You'll have that in these kind of neighborhoods." *eats donut*



lol this is such a hard thing to gauge because Chicongo leadership has been so fucking awful my entire life.
It got so bad the vigilantes took over and the fbi couldn’t do shit about it
 
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"Sir, I would have liked to ask your permission to chase down this triple homicide suspect."

"Why do you say 'would have'?"

"Because the suspect fled and we can't find them."
 
This is incredibly stup-

View attachment 2106414
Lori Lightfoot.

Oh, I get it now. This Negress looks like an aborted fetus, god damn.

Some people have a perpetual "Five O'clock Shadow" look to them, Lori Lightfoot has a "Shadow Over Innsmouth" look instead.

As for Chicago, there is no point trying to salvage it anymore. Cops should just walk away, wall off the whole damn place and let nature take its course.
 
And passed

Chicago cops barred from chasing people on foot who run away​

By
Snejana Farberov
June 22, 2022 10:09am
Updated

The Chicago Police Department has unveiled a new policy prohibiting its officers from chasing people on foot simply because they run away, or because they have committed minor offenses.

The policy, which was introduced Tuesday, also encourages cops to “consider alternatives” to pursuing someone who “is visibly armed with a firearm.”

Under the policy, officers may give chase if they believe a person is committing or is about to commit a felony, a Class A misdemeanor such as domestic battery, or a serious traffic offense that could risk injuring others, such as drunken driving or street racing.

Perhaps most significantly, the new policy makes clear that the days of officers giving chase just because someone tries to get away from them are over.

“People may avoid contact with a member for many reasons other than involvement in criminal activity,” the policy states.

The long-awaited foot chase ban is expected to go into effect by the end of the summer, after the city’s 11,900 uniformed cops receive training.

The new policy comes more than a year after two foot pursuits ended with cops fatally shooting 13-year-old Adam Toledo and 22-year-old Anthony Alvarez in separate March 2021 incidents.

Toledo and Alvarez, who were armed when they ran from police in separate March 2021 pursuits, were not mentioned in the news release announcing the policy or the policy itself.

Toledo was shot in the chest after dropping a gun and raising his hands, and Alvarez was shot in the back while brandishing a gun.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot demanded that the department create an interim policy after the March 2021 shootings and the county’s top prosecutor harshly criticized police over the Alvarez pursuit.

But back in April 2021, Lightfoot acknowledged that having police officers seek permission from a supervisor before engaging in a foot pursuit was not ideal.

“I don’t want people out there who are dangerous to think, ‘Well, if I just run, then I’m safe. I can continue to wreak havoc,'” the mayor said. “We can’t live in that world, either.”

Chicago Police Superintendent David Brown told reporters Tuesday that police had been discussing a foot pursuit policy “for several years before those shootings happened.”

He said he expects the new rules will make the officers and the public safer, as has happened in other cities that have adopted similar policies.

“The impact on crime has been studied (and) we can look back at what has made officers safer, has made communities safer for over a decade,” he said at a press briefing.
The new policy includes a number of circumstances in which an officer must call off a chase, including a requirement that the pursuit must end if a third party is injured and needs immediate medical attention that can’t be provided by anyone else.

If officers realize they do not know exactly where they are, which is possible in a chaotic situation in which they are running through alleys and between houses, they must stop. And if they find themselves unable to communicate with other officers, because they drop their radios or for another reason, they must stop.

The policy also makes a point of reminding officers that they or their supervisors will not be criticized or disciplined for deciding against a foot pursuit or calling one off.

Officers are also prohibited from provoking chases, such as by employing a tactic in which they speed in their squad cars toward a group of people, stop suddenly and jump out “with the intention of stopping anyone in the group who flees.”

Other major cities, such as Baltimore, Philadelphia and Portland, Oregon, have already implemented similar foot pursuit policies — and the dangers surrounding such chases have been a topic in the Windy City for years.

The policy comes after years of discussion about the danger of foot chases.

Five years ago, the US Department of Justice issued a scathing report saying that too many police chases in the city were unnecessary or ended with officers shooting people they did not have to shoot. And three years ago, a judge signed off on a consent decree that included a requirement to adopt a foot pursuit policy.

A Chicago Tribune investigation found that a third of the city’s police shootings from 2010 through 2015 involved someone being wounded or killed during a foot pursuit.

The policy change, however, has sparked a backlash from conservative commentators, including Chicago talk radio host Bill Cameron, who tweeted: “So, if cops can’t chase bad guys, and judges won’t keep so many of them in jail and the states (sic) attorney so often won’t prosecute them, why is it called law enforcement? #Crime”

Andrew Wilkow, the host of “The Wilkow Majority” on SiriusXMPatriot, sarcastically remarked of the fleeing suspects: “But what if they are white guys in #MAGA hats with a rope and bleach?”

Many Twitter users slammed Democrats for the new policy and expressed concern that it would lead to even higher crime rates in Chicago.

“This will embolden criminals & make the city even more dangerous,” tweeted Paul Vallas, former Chicago Public Schools CEO who is running for mayor of Chicago in 2023. “We need MORE proactive policing, not less!”

Another critic Sean Wilson opined: “If you think crime can’t get any worse in Chicago–just wait. Democrats want to disarm law abiding Americans while ignoring crime and refusing to protect the public.”

The ban on police foot chases was introduced against the backdrop of Chicago’s sky-high crime rates.

The latest figures from the Chicago PD indicate that while murders and shootings in the Second City were down 11% and 17%, respectively, as of June 19 — compared to the same period last year — nearly all other offenses were significantly up.

Thefts jumped a whopping 65%, car thefts increased 40%, and burglaries registered a 31% year-over-year spike. Overall, crime in Chicago was up 34% compared to June 2021.

With Post wires

So you can run around the city holding a firearm and the cops won't chase you.
 
When I saw this thread I thought it was funny...
Then I realized it was from a year ago and bumped because the law just passed...

God help the people of Chicago, it's going to be San Fran times 1000. Cops are just gonna stop enforcing the law if they ever did at all.
 
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