Chicago Police

17 Chicago Cops Suspended After Video Showed Them Resting in Congressman's Burgled Office

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Chicago Police suspended several officers captured on video during last summer's widespread unrest who were lounging — and apparently even sleeping — inside a burglarized congressional campaign office as people citywide vandalized and stole from businesses.

The department confirmed the suspensions in a statement Thursday, saying that the officers will be given the opportunity to appeal the suspensions if they choose to do so.

“The members have been notified of the results of the investigation,” the department said in a statement. “Each member may elect to challenge the decisions based on their collective bargaining agreements, which initiates the grievance process. We are unable to release further information regarding the results of the investigation at this time due to the ongoing grievance process.”

Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara told the Chicago Sun-Times that the suspensions ranged from one day to 20 days. He also said the union has filed grievances challenging all of the suspensions.

Catanzara did not return calls Thursday for comment from The Associated Press or from NBC 5 Chicago.

The video was recorded as Chicago police and other departments nationwide were scrambling to quell widespread vandalism, theft and arson in the wake of George Floyd’s death after a white Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee into the Black man’s neck for several minutes.

The video in which Chicago officers could be seen relaxing and apparently sleeping in the campaign office on the city’s South Side of Rep. Bobby Rush (D-Chicago), with some officers apparently brewing coffee and making popcorn, quickly turned into a national news story that angered and embarrassed Mayor Lori Lightfoot, Police Superintendent David Brown and others.

Videotape shows more than a dozen officers "lounging" in U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush's campaign office, one even making popcorn, as protests and looting erupted in Chicago earlier this month, he revealed Thursday. NBC 5's Mary Ann Ahern reports.

“We should all be disgusted,” Lightfoot told reporters after Rush watched the video and turned the footage from May 31 and early June 1 over to her. “We should all feel hurt and betrayed in this moment of all moments.”

Brown asked incredulously during a press briefing at the time: “Sleep during a riot? What do you do on a regular shift when there’s no riots?”

After the video was released, Rush was critical of the officers. He was the individual who notified his alderman, who then alerted Lightfoot.

“They took such a lackadaisical attitude, a non-caring attitude in my own personal space while looting was occurring all around them,” he said. “They didn’t care.”

Shortly after the video became public, Brown vowed to suspend those involved.

As he did after the video was made public, Catanzara this week said looting at the strip mall where Rush's office was located was over by the time officers arrived, He said the officers secured the area before they went inside.

”They had already secured the whole property..." he told the newspaper. “They came around the front. There was nothing going on. That was done. Period. Are they supposed to stand at attention in the mall?”

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