How Can You Be a Cop in a City That Hates You? – The Free Press

There might be no city in America that monitors its police force more than Chicago. There are at least six oversight agencies scrutinizing the department’s every move. Given all of that, perhaps it is no surprise that Chicago police are struggling with a suicide rate that was more than 60 percent higher than the national average.
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Old Joe
11 months ago

You can’t and shouldn’t even try.

TDG
11 months ago

The New Marxists own the state of IL, especially the city of chicago, lower case c intentional.
This won’t change until the electorate connects the dots, which they are willfully unable to do.

Fullbladder
11 months ago

Great article WP. As an avid follower of SCC, I read daily the things Mr. Nigro states. Watching Lori Lightfoot malign and impugn the police during the 2020 riots was one of the most disgusting displays of “hate-the-pigs” I’d ever thought I’d see in my life. At those moments in 2020, I truly thought that there would be a Blue Walk-Off like the country had never seen and the city would truly devolve into a Mad Max scenario; it’s still possible in the future. The city has Liberals to thank for the state of the city. I repeatedly get hated… Read more »

Admin
11 months ago

I hope you are able to read this despite paywall. The Free Press, which is on Substack, is outstanding.

Brian Jones
11 months ago

The article neglects the long history of police brutality in Chicago, Jon Burge being an example. Let’s put all the facts on the table.

The Railroader
11 months ago
Reply to  Brian Jones

“Three officers I spoke with pinpointed 2015 as the breaking point. That’s when the city released dashboard camera footage showing the fatal shooting of Laquan McDonald, a 16-year-old black boy carrying a knife but walking away from police. The backlash was immediate. In less than 24 hours, protesters disrupted rush-hour traffic until 2:30 in the morning.” Not enough remembrance for you? It might help to actually read the article before pontificating. This article isn’t about the history of police brutality in Chicago. It’s about the PTSD our police end up with as a result of cleaning up sometimes fairly gruesome… Read more »

Don Diego de la Vega
11 months ago
Reply to  Brian Jones

Go take a knee at the BLM altar of looting, burning, and violence. It will be your happy place

Wally
11 months ago
Reply to  Brian Jones

The Burge case dates back to 1982, over 40 years ago. Lot of things changed since then. Now, every action by a police officer is under a microscope or onlookers’ camera, including simple things like a traffic stop. And, every action is automatically assumed to be brutality or harassment. How can anyone function under those conditions?

Paul Boomer
11 months ago
Reply to  Wally

My grandfather told me that in 1932 a Chicago cop took $2.00 to not write him a ticket. I think it’s time for some serious investigations into police behavior.

The Railroader
11 months ago
Reply to  Paul Boomer

That’s a lot of money in ’32…

Fullbladder
11 months ago
Reply to  Brian Jones

And the Central Park 5 were innocent.

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Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.

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