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mick silver
9th December 2015, 03:34 PM
Calls For Rahm To Resign Continue, Even After Garry McCarthy Firing by Kate Shepherd (http://chicagoist.com/author/Kate%20Shepherd) in News (http://chicagoist.com/news) on Dec 1, 2015 2:13 pm






http://chicagoist.com/attachments/chicagoist_chuck/2013_4_10_emanuel.jpg
Photo credit: Scott Olson/Getty Images
Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy took one for the team when Mayor Rahm Emanuel formally asked him for his resignation this week (http://chicagoist.com/2015/12/01/_mayor_rahm_emanuel_has_1.php). But some Chicagoans do not think ousting McCarthy is enough to quell the public outcry about the Laquan McDonald video, and calls for Emanuel's resignation are getting louder.
It's been quite a tough year for Emanuel: an unexpected runoff (http://chicagoist.com/2015/02/24/rahm_emanuel_forced_into_april_runo.php) with Jesus "Chuy" Garcia, Chicago's fiscal crisis (http://chicagoist.com/2015/03/02/extra_extra_moodys_slashes_chicagos.php), a massive tax hike proposal (http://chicagoist.com/2015/09/22/rahm.php) and the Barbara Byrd-Bennett scandal (http://chicagoist.com/2015/10/13/_ex-chicago_public_schools_chief.php). But the mounting allegations that people within his administration "covered-up" the Laquan McDonald shooting video until compelled to release it by court might be the final straw for his administration.
"City leaders did everything in their power to keep the homicide from the public as long as possible," former University of Chicago law and political science professor (and current Columbia University professor) Bernard Harcourt wrote in an New York Times op-ed (http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/30/opinion/cover-up-in-chicago.html) calling for the resignation of Emanuel, McCarthy and Cook County State's Attorney Anita Alvarez.

Reporters peppered Emanuel with questions about calls for him to step down and whether or not he's a become "distraction" during an extremely rare news conference Tuesday morning announcing a new police accountability task force (http://chicagoist.com/2015/12/01/mayor_rahm_announces_a_police_task.php). He deflected the questions before abruptly walking out of the conference:


Protestors then took to City Hall to ask for Emanuel's resignation, including African-American ministers who say the Mayor has blood on his hands, according to CBS2's Jim Williams (https://twitter.com/JimWilliamsCBS2/status/671755412169842688).
Criticism of the Emanuel's handling of the McDonald situation is so widespread that more than 10,000 people from Chicago and as far as Charleston, S.C. and San Mateo, Calif. have signed a Roots Action petition (http://act.rootsaction.org/p/dia/action3/common/public/?action_KEY=11804) asking for Emanuel to immediately step down.
Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke has already been charged with first-degree murder for the death of McDonald but many are left wondering why it took more than a year (and a lawsuit for the video to be publicly released) for the charges. Some say the blame falls squarely on Alvarez's office, but Harcourt examined the possible motivations behind various other players in the case:

We can surmise that each had particular reasons. Mayor Emanuel was fighting for re-election in a tight race. Superintendent McCarthy wanted to keep his job. Ms. Alvarez needed the good will of the police union for her coming re-election campaign and probably wished to shield the police officers who bring her cases and testify in court. None of that alters the fact that these actions have impeded the criminal justice system and, in the process, Chicago's leaders allowed a first-degree murder suspect, now incarcerated pending bail, to remain free for over a year on the city's payroll.
Organizations, including Service Employees International Union Healthcare Illinois and Black Lives Matter Chicago, are also calling for Emanuel to leave office.
"Today's news is the direct result of communities fighting back and doing whatever it takes to reclaim their city," SEIU Healthcare Illinois Vice President Greg Kelley said in a statement following McCarthy's firing. "But it does not change the fundamental reality: True justice requires that Alvarez and Mayor Emanuel resign."

Black Lives Matters Chicago is planning to meet outside CPD Headquarters and 35th and Michigan this evening to "celebrate" McCarthy's firing:



People have been asking for Emanuel's resignation on social media since the McDonald video was released last week. And there's been no shortage of tweets Tuesday expressing that McCarthy's firing is not enough and Emanuel still must resign:


Many local activists believe the chain of command that led to the suppression of the McDonald shooting video doesn't stop with McCarthy. Whether the resignations stop here is now yet another open question of the case.

mick silver
9th December 2015, 03:35 PM
Rahm Emanuel’s Learning What Happens When You Ignore Half Of The City The Chicago mayor must be held accountable for obstructing justice for Laquan McDonald, activists say.




Lydia O'Connor (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lydia-oconnor)General Assignment Reporter

11/25/2015 07:39 pm ET
http://img.huffingtonpost.com/asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/565642ea1700004b00e1a9a5.jpeg

Chicago Tribune via Getty Images



Chicago mayor Rahm Emanuel is facing mounting criticism from activists and allies of the black community who say he should be held accountable for delaying justice in the case of Laquan McDonald, a teenager who died 13 months ago after being shot 16 times by a Chicago police officer.
A court order forced Chicago city officials to release squad car video of the gruesome death, which they did on Tuesday, hours after the Cook County State's Attorney's office charged Officer Jason Van Dyke with first-degree murder in the teen's killing. Viewers were outraged by how much the footage conflicted with the police department's initial account of the shooting, which claimed that McDonald was acting strangely and lunged at police (http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chi-chicago-shootings-violence-20141021-story.html) before shots were fired.
The video, which Emanuel's administration and the state's attorney's office have long fought to keep from being publicly released (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/laquan-mcdonald-video_5654e329e4b079b281897fc2), instead shows 17-year-old McDonald carrying a small knife and walking away from officers before Van Dyke opens fire from about 10 feet away. After McDonald falls, Van Dyke continues to shoot for at least 15 seconds. Punishing Van Dyke, who has been out on paid leave since the shooting and has 18 previous complaints against him (http://abc7chicago.com/news/at-least-18-complaints-filed-against-cpd-officer-now-charged-with-murder-/1098265/), is not enough to address the incident, activists say.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson told The Huffington Post that he met with a cross-section of leaders Wednesday who want Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy ousted and Cook County State's Attorney Anita Alvarez, whose office knew of the video two weeks after the shooting, off the case. In addition, he believes Emanuel must answer for the video's delayed release and the troubled state of police-civilian relations in Chicago.
"He must be [held accountable]," Jackson said. "Clearly the mayor and the police chief … saw the tape and determined they should not release it."
Emanuel holds he did not see the video until it was released publicly, but critics point out that he called the video "hideous" (http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-chicago-cop-shooting-video-laquan-mcdonald-rahm-emanuel-20151123-story.html) the day before. The mayor's office did not immediately respond to a HuffPost request for comment on when he first saw the video or on other concerns raised by activists in this article.
The shooting, Jackson noted, took place just a month before Emanuel was up for re-election. Chicago Tribune reporter John Kass also raised the coincidence of that timing in a column Tuesday calling on people to hold the mayor accountable.
"If the video had come out during the election campaign, Rahm Emanuel would not be mayor (http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/kass/ct-laquan-mcdonald-video-kass-met-1125-20151124-column.html) today," he wrote.
Jackson doesn't entirely buy arguments that releasing the tape would have unfairly prejudiced the case against police.
"Their argument is that it might incite the public," he said. "But one might argue that it's also covering up valuable information in this day of cameras on police cars. ... The whole idea of the cameras is to protect the public."
While many Chicagoans began using the hashtag #RecallRahm (https://twitter.com/hashtag/RecallRahm?src=hash) after the video's release, Veronica Morris Moore, a member of the organization Fearless Leading by the Youth, told HuffPost that she's seen the black community's "growing frustration" with him for some time.
"Mayor Rahm Emanuel needs to step down and hang up his political belt," she said. "It’s obscene that he would act like he’s happy about punishing this officer when he waited to punish him for so long. And I know the only thing that motivated him to punish this officer is that it now became a very public issue and case. ... He is insulting people, and nobody’s buying it."
Emanuel also drew ire last month for lending credence to "the Ferguson effect," (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/rahm-emanuel-crime-chicago-police-brutality_561d491fe4b050c6c4a30548) a statistically unsupported idea that the Black Lives Matter movement's demands for more police accountability has scared cops away from proactive policing, leading to a surge in crime.
"That was a miscalculation," Jackson said of Emanuel's comments. "Police are not being suppressed."
Moore said the mayor's suggestion the "Ferguson effect" is at play is an insult to the "very alive and well-organized community" that's been rallying around police issues in Chicago for years.
Ultimately, both Jackson and Moore argue, the root of the problem is the mayor's high police spending (http://chicago.suntimes.com/news/7/71/995236/chicago-police-overtime-pay).
"All the focus is on police and containment. There’s no focus on development," Jackson said. "The amount of money spent on police is money that could be spent on sustaining teachers and schools without libraries and schools without books."
Also on HuffPost:

Cebu_4_2
9th December 2015, 06:05 PM
Rahm looks to be becoming a shrunken head.

Shami-Amourae
9th December 2015, 06:12 PM
http://s7.postimg.org/hvodw2u2j/das_rite_simple_cap.jpg

JohnQPublic
9th December 2015, 06:12 PM
But, but, but, he was Obama's man.

Cebu_4_2
9th December 2015, 06:19 PM
But, but, but, he was Obama's man.


Butt buddies no doubt.

StreetsOfGold
9th December 2015, 07:12 PM
But, but, but, he was Obama's man.

Hell hath no furry like a faggot scorned