A follow-up report by the court-appointed monitor of the Chicago Police Department has found that many Black and Latino men still do not trust officers to treat them with "dignity and respect."
Words commonly used by the men to describe Chicago police were aggressive, racist, disrespectful, unreliable and unethical.
"I don't trust them. They don't care about what happens in the neighborhood," said a man who participated in the survey overseen by the monitor, Maggie Hickey, a former federal prosecutor. "When there is a shooting, I want [police officers] to do their jobs. They don't do their jobs. Not a source of justice or beacon of hope."
The survey provides a measurement of the police department as it continues to grapple with sweeping reforms ordered in a federal consent decree after the 2014 police killing of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald.
Earlier this year, Hickey's office found that the department was falling short in its efforts to engage and build trust among residents.
The latest report, released yesterday, found little improvement from a similar survey by the monitor in 2019. That report found Chicagoans gave the police department low ratings for trustworthiness and "procedural justice," with negative reactions strongest among Black and Latino men.
In the new survey, Black and Latino men from Chicago, ages 18 to 35, were interviewed from December 2020 through June 2021.
"Young Black and Latino men in Chicago continue to report that they do not experience procedural justice during their interactions with the [Chicago Police Department]," Hickey wrote. "Black and Latino men want to be treated with dignity and respect."
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