Sessions says reforms of Chicago police could boost crime
CHICAGO — Attorney General Jeff Sessions warned Friday that reforms planned for the Chicago police force could cause a surge in violent crime and pointed to the recent murder conviction of a police officer as evidence that such reforms aren’t necessary because officers who break the law are already “prosecuted and jailed.”
In a speech sponsored by the Chicago Crime Commission, Sessions reiterated statements he made a week ago when the Trump administration informed a federal judge that it was seeking to scuttle a proposed consent decree between the city and the state to of Illinois that calls for the department to be under close federal court supervision.
“Micromanaging the CPD through a federal court order isn’t just unjustified, it’s an insult,” he said. “We do not need to treat Chicago’s officers like some sort of rogue police department because of the actions of a few.”
Sessions did not mention by name either Jason Van Dyke, the officer convicted of second-degree murder, or Laquan McDonald, the black teen he shot 16 times. But he spoke of a New York Times editorial supporting the consent decree that ran after the verdict.