
The latest on
developments surrounding a federal civil rights investigation of the Chicago
Police Department (all times local):
8:45 p.m.
A grand jury has
indicted a white Chicago police officer charged in the shooting death of black
teenager Laquan McDonald.
According to a copy of
the indictment posted Wednesday on the Chicago Tribune's website (
http://trib.in/1T2Batl ), Officer Jason Van Dyke was indicted Tuesday on six
counts of first-degree murder and one count of official misconduct.
The indictment alleges
Van Dyke shot the 17-year-old knowing it "created a strong probability of
death or great bodily harm."
Van Dyke attorney
Daniel Herbert did not return a phone call Wednesday night from The Associated
Press.
Prosecutors initially
charged Van Dyke with one count of murder hours before video of the October
2014 shooting was made public.
McDonald was walking
down a street and carrying a knife with a 3-inch blade when he was shot 16
times.
———
4:45 p.m.
Controversy over the
Chicago Police Department and the shooting of Laquan McDonald has spilled over
into what would normally be a moment to celebrate for Chicago Mayor Rahm
Emanuel.
High school students at
Urban Prep's campus on the South Side chanted "16 shots!" for about
10 seconds on Wednesday after Emanuel announced the members of a new board
intended to create job opportunities for young minorities.
McDonald was shot 16
times by a Chicago police officer in 2014.
Emanuel regularly
visits the charter school, which says it sends all of its black male graduates
to college. The school's leader, Tim King, was one of the people Emanuel named
to the new board.
Emanuel spokeswoman
Lauren Huffman told the Chicago Tribune that the mayor knows people are
"understandably frustrated" and that he has "called for systemic
reform to bring safety to every community and rebuild trust where it has been
lost."
———
4:05 p.m.
Chicago Mayor Rahm
Emanuel is responding to Chicago police union claims that officer morale is the
lowest it's been in decades.
Fraternal Order of
Police President Dean Angelo has made the statement more than once, most
recently Tuesday evening during a city council committee meeting on the 2014
officer-involved fatal shooting of black teenager Laquan McDonald.
The federal Department
of Justice has launched a civil rights investigation of the police department
and federal agents met Wednesday with police department leaders.
Angelo has said the
mayor's City Council speech last week apologizing for the McDonald shooting
further strained relationships with officers.
Emanuel told reporters
Wednesday he's been meeting with officers in several districts over the last
few days and sees officers' dedication. But he says it's not surprising
officers are impacted by recent events.
———
2:50 p.m.
Chicago Mayor Rahm
Emanuel says he'll personally meet with U.S. Department of Justice agents who
have launched a probe of the city's police department.
The former White House
aide tells reporters that his meeting is scheduled for Thursday, a day after
federal officials were meeting with police department representatives in the
civil rights investigation.
Emanuel said Wednesday
that the investigation is in its beginning stages. He says two members of his
administration flew to Washington, D.C., last week to meet with federal
officials.
The DOJ announced the
investigation earlier this month after the release of video showing a white
officer fatally shooting a black teenager in 2014.
Emanuel says the city
will full cooperate and it's in Chicago's best interest to do so because of the
city's deep-seated problems. Initially, the mayor was cool to the idea of the
outside federal probe.
———
1:30 p.m.
A federal civil rights
investigation of the nation's largest police departments has begun in earnest,
with Department of Justice agents expected to sit down with top Chicago police
brass.
Interim Superintendent
John Escalante confirmed during a city council hearing on Tuesday that the
meetings would start Wednesday.
These initial meetings
are most likely get-acquainted sessions. In coming months, investigators will
talk to everyone from beat cops to residents who alleged police misconduct in
their neighborhoods.
The DOJ announced the
investigation Dec. 7 after the release of video showing a white officer fatally
shooting a black teenager.
Chicago police union
head Dean Angelo told WTTW-TV he's already met with top DOJ officials. He
described it as an off-the-record talk during which he said the union wanted to
"help facilitate ... the investigation."
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHICAGO — Dec 16, 2015, 9:46 PM ET
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