Chicago Sports

Northwestern probing allegation of football hazingon January 11, 2023 at 10:49 pm

Northwestern has initiated an investigation into an allegation of hazing within its football program, the school said in a statement to ESPN on Wednesday.

The school was made aware of the allegation after the 2022 season, according to the statement. The university has hired an independent attorney, Maggie Hickey of the law firm ArentFox Schiff, to lead the inquiry. Northwestern said Hickey’s investigation likely will include interviews with players, coaches and staff members.

“While we do not yet know whether the allegations are true, hazing is prohibited by university policy, and we take these claims seriously,” Northwestern’s statement read. “The health, safety and well-being of our students is the first priority. The inquiry is in its very early stages and will be rigorously fair to everyone in this process. It will focus on gathering facts and will not jump to conclusions. Northwestern strongly supports members of our community who come forward with concerns and encourages anyone to report those concerns to the university.”

Athletic director Derrick Gragg informed players and coaches of the inquiry on Wednesday, according to a source.

Northwestern did not specify if the allegation came from a player or involved players, coaches or staff. The school said its athletic department will fully cooperate with Hickey during the investigation.

“The purpose of Ms. Hickey’s investigation is to find the underlying truth of the allegations — including the scope of any potential hazing activity or harmful culture,” the statement concluded.

Northwestern’s season ended in late November with a 1-11 record, the team’s worst since it went winless in 1989. Coach Pat Fitzgerald, a former national defensive player of the year at the school, has led the program since 2006.

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Bears’ GM Ryan Poles easily could be “blown away” by a college QB.

When a reporter asked Ryan Poles on Tuesday if he’d consider using the top pick in the draft on a quarterback, the Bears general manager said he’d have to be “absolutely blown away” by a college prospect to do it.

That calmed Justin Fields’ many fans, and possibly Fields himself, because the “experts” who rate college players for a living seem to think there isn’t a sure-thing superstar quarterback in the 2023 draft. Thus, the chances of Poles’ being blown away on draft day appeared to be remote. Bears fans could get back to worshiping at the altar of Justin.

But let’s keep in mind what a strange animal the NFL Draft is. It’s early January, the draft is in late April and in between is more than enough time for otherwise normal, clear-thinking talent evaluators to lose their minds. We’ve seen it over and over.

A drumbeat has started for Alabama quarterback Bryce Young to be the No. 1 overall pick. On Tuesday, ESPN’s Mike Tannenbaum, the former Jets general manager, gushed about Young, praising his physical ability and his intangibles. Know that when a football person starts talking about a college quarterback’s “intangibles,” it’s all over. It’s what led former Bears general manager Ryan Pace to trade up to take former Bears quarterback Mitch Trubisky with the second overall pick in 2017. The key word in the preceding sentence, used twice, is “former.”

Tannenbaum said the Bears should trade Fields and use the No. 1 pick on Young. What’s important here is not that Tannenbaum has this opinion. It’s that you can bet actual general managers, not just a former one, will eventually form the same opinion, if they haven’t already. At last glance, Poles was still an actual general manager.

All of Fields’ many fans, and possibly Fields himself, can start panicking now.

Something happens to NFL people when it comes to the draft and quarterbacks. Armed with the knowledge that the position is by far the most important in football and living with the reality that if they don’t find a good one they won’t have their jobs for long, GMs start seeing things. They start not seeing things, too. Young’s height, for example. He’s 6-foot, undersized for an NFL quarterback. This is a certainty: Whoever drafts the 2021 Heisman Trophy winner will say the kid’s height doesn’t matter. This from a league full of executives who measure everything as if a skyscraper’s structural integrity depends on it.

I’ve seen Young play multiple times the past two seasons. I’m not an expert, but I see a very good college quarterback who could be good in the NFL. That’s what I thought about Fields, who was a talented player surrounded by talented teammates at Ohio State. But would his skills translate in the NFL?

The more levelheaded among us are still asking the same question about Fields: Does he have the ability as a passer to excel in the league? We’re not sure yet and, even though Poles declared during a Tuesday press conference that Fields would be the Bears’ starting quarterback in 2023, it was clear from his comments that he believes Fields has a ton of growing to do as a passer.

What’s interesting here is the gap between what lots of Bears fans think — Fields is just about the greatest thing ever – and what others without emotional ties to Fields think — he hasn’t proven himself as a legitimate NFL quarterback.

The other thing that stands out here is the possibility the Bears would make their fanbase go through this again. How many times can you expect fans to throw themselves at a quarterback? It was love at first sight with Jay Cutler, Trubisky and Fields. I’m sure I’m forgetting one or two or a hundred others who were called “franchise” quarterbacks upon arrival in Chicago.

The Bears created the most recent monster, in a good way. They realized halfway through the season that Fields was really, really fast and really, really elusive. He was incredibly entertaining, so entertaining that fans stopped blaming former coach Matt Nagy for everything that was wrong with Fields and enjoyed the show.

The possibility the Bears would ask those fans to let go of Fields would be shocking if it weren’t for the reality that nobody and nothing is sacred in the NFL. Poles didn’t select Fields. Pace did. The No. 1 goal in the league is to win. The No. 2 goal is to keep your job. Winning means some job security. Poles cares about Fields in the context of whether the kid can help him win games and stay employed. That’s it. It’s business.

I think the Bears will hold on to Fields, but I’m a realist. I’m looking forward to finding out if Fields is a good quarterback, but I can do that if he’s in a Colts uniform, too.

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NFL star would be “shocked” if the Bears don’t develop around Justin Fields

One NFL star would be shocked if the Bears opted to trade quarterback Justin Fields

This offseason, the Chicago Bears will encounter a unique circumstance. Thanks to a victory over the inferior Indianapolis Colts in Week 18, the Houston Texans just edged them out for the league’s second-worst record, giving them the No. 1 choice in the draft. With quarterback Justin Fields making strides, the team is in prime position to trade the pick and acquire assets.

But the national storyline has been surrounded around if the team will trade Fields or not.

One well-known NFL player responded clearly, and rationally during a Twitter conversation between NFL commentators about the subject.

Mhmmm can’t make a statement like that ! I’ll be shocked if Chicago don’t trade back or don’t go above and beyond to build around Justin ! https://t.co/JeVyN5YMKT

According to Ryan Taylor the Bears have “abundant options. They could trade down in the draft, acquire more capital, and continue rebuilding the roster. They can select one of the top defensive prospects in the draft (Will Anderson Jr., Jalen Carter) to instantly improve their putrid, bottom-tier defensive line”,

Although Young and C.J. Stroud make compelling arguments for being franchise signal callers, neither of them will astound you. Every discussion regarding the quarterback’s draft case brings up Young’s size (5-foot-11, 194 pounds). While Stroud excels in the classic pocket passer role, he has trouble avoiding rushes outside of the pocket.

In his sophomore year, Justin Fields turned into a real dual-threat quarterback last year. He passed for more than 2,000 yards and scored 25 touchdowns while rushing for more than 1,000 yards. He has room to improve as a passer, which makes it unlikely that the Bears will keep him. But the offensive line should make use of his arm talent as well as the additional and sufficient quality that has been added to the pass-catching group.

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Firefighters battling blaze at LaSalle chemical plant

Residents near a northern Illinois chemical plant were told to shelter in place Wednesday as firefighters responded to a fire that sent smoke plumes towering over the plant and prompted the plant’s evacuation.

After the fire began Wednesday morning at Carus Chemical in La Salle, local officials sent an emergency alert advising people who live in the city’s third and fourth wards to shelter in place.

La Salle Fire Chief Jerry Janick said the public should avoid the area and allow firefighters to work on dousing the fire.

Carus Chemical workers were evacuated from the plant and all them have been accounted for, said La Salle Police Chief Mike Smudzinski. He told the News-Tribune there are no known injuries from the fire.

There were reports of explosions being heard at about 9 a.m. followed by smoke that was visible from the plant, the newspaper reported.

Kim Biggs, a spokesperson for the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, said the agency is still gathering information and will respond to the site.

Live video feeds around 11 a.m. showed multiple fire engines parked near the plant, aiming hoses toward the building. Gray and white smoke is still visible and some flames on trucks parked near the structure can be seen from the footage.

La Salle is located about 90 miles (145 kilometers) southwest of Chicago.

Carus Chemical produces potassium permanganate, an oxidant used to treat drinking water, wastewater, industrial process chemicals and for numerous other applications, according to the company’s website.

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Bears GM: Must be ‘blown away’ to draft QB at 1on January 11, 2023 at 6:04 am

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Should the Bears trade Justin Fields and draft Bryce Young? (1:53)Mike Tannenbaum and Dan Graziano explore the Bears’ options at QB after securing the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft. (1:53)

LAKE FOREST, Ill. — Bears general manager Ryan Poles backed Justin Fields as Chicago’s starting quarterback for 2023 and said he would have to be “absolutely blown away” to take a quarterback with the No. 1 overall pick in this year’s draft.

“Yeah. We had good conversations,” Poles said during his season-ending news conference on Tuesday. “I’m excited for the direction he’s going. As I mentioned before, he knows where he has to improve. I think he mentioned that the other day. We’re excited about his development and where he goes next. He showed ability to be impactful with his legs. There’s flashes with his arm. Now if we can put that together, I think we have something really good.”

The Bears entered Week 18 second in the draft order but then swapped spots with Houston for the No. 1 overall pick after the Texans beat the Indianapolis Colts 32-31. Alabama’s Bryce Young and Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud are considered the top quarterbacks in a draft class that could feature as many as four QBs taken in the first round.

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Poles appeared to temper debate on whether the Bears would take a quarterback with the No. 1 pick after committing to Fields as Chicago’s starter for next season.

“We’re going to do the same as we’ve always done,” Poles said. “We’re going to evaluate the draft class, and I would say this: I would have to be absolutely blown away to make that type of decision.”

Despite the Bears ending the 2022 season on a franchise-worst 10-game losing streak and 3-14 record, Fields showed signs of improvement in his second season that has the Bears general manager encouraged about his development.

“I thought Justin did a good job,” Poles said. “I thought we changed a lot, we adapted, we tried to put him in a position to be successful, he showed the ability to be a playmaker. Be impactful. He can change games quickly. Does he have room to grow? He does. He has to get better as a passer, and I’m excited to see him take those steps as we move forward.”

The Bears owned the league’s top rushing offense and worst passing offense, with Fields averaging 149.5 passing yards per game. He did not play in Chicago’s season finale against Minnesota due to a hip injury, finishing his season 64 yards shy of the single-season quarterback rushing record.

In two seasons with the Bears, Fields has led Chicago to five wins while completing 60.4% of his passes for 2,242 yards, 17 touchdowns and 11 interceptions, along with 160 carries for 1,143 yards and eight rushing TDs.

Poles pointed to the discrepancy between Chicago’s rushing and passing game as a lack of chemistry with the skill players around Fields. Aside from wide receiver Darnell Mooney and tight end Cole Kmet, who played with Fields during his rookie season in 2021, Chicago overhauled its entire wide receiver and tight end group in 2022.

“I noticed through the season that guys he had the most time within the offseason, that transferred into the season,” Poles said. “I think that’s why Cole had a helluva year. So, building that chemistry is big. And then just letting the game slow down to him. Everything’s new. This offense was new. You’re seeing everything for the first time. Time on task I think is going to help.”

Poles said he did not regret putting more offensive pieces around Fields as the quarterback improved during the season, citing that the Bears made uses of their resources to “the best of our ability” based on the players available.

“I wish there was a perfect scenario where you could just clean up everything and get good,” the general manager said. “So I thought we made, solid, sound decisions to do that. Yeah, I wish it was perfect across the board so it was clean as much as possible, but it just doesn’t always happen that way.”

The Bears did attempt to bolster the receiving corps at the trade deadline when they sent their own second-round pick (No. 32) to Pittsburgh in exchange for Chase Claypool. Despite his lack of production (14 catches for 140 yards in 7 games), Poles is confident that the wide receiver will contribute in 2023.

“That’s the difference between trades in baseball and basketball, it’s like plug and play,” Poles said. “There’s an entire offseason and half of a season of installs and all the things you need to do collectively to play and execute offensive play. On top of that, it was a little bit choppy with Justin getting dinged up, he got dinged up. So it was a little bit choppy of a start. I told Chase, and we had a really good conversation, I’m not blinking at that one at all. I think he’s going to help us moving forward and I’m excited about it.”

As Chicago turns the page to the offseason, Poles pointed out the “flexibility” the team has to improve the roster given the ample resources the Bears have, from over $108 million in salary cap space for free agency to the No. 1 draft pick.

While Poles dispelled the notion that Chicago will “go crazy” with their spending in free agency, the leverage the Bears have sitting in the No. 1 draft slot is not lost on the GM.

“We can evaluate the talent there, we can see what player presents themselves in that position to help us, and then we can look at the scenarios,” Poles said. “If the phones go off, and there are certain situations where that can help us, then we’ll go down that avenue too. I think we have really good flexibility to help this team, regardless of if it’s making the pick there or moving back a little bit or moving back a lot. We’ll be open to everything.”

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High school basketball: Kenwood beats Simeon for the first time in history

Simeon was founded in 1949 and Kenwood opened in 1965. The schools haven’t always been conference rivals, but the Wolverines have always beaten Kenwood in basketball. Until Tuesday.

Dai Dai Ames, Kenwood’s star guard, had no idea that his school had never defeated Simeon, so he wasn’t burdened with the weight of history as he calmly sank two free throws with five seconds left to seal the 46-43 victory.

“There’s a first time for everything,” Ames said.

The Kansas State recruit was the best player on the floor. He finished with 20 points, six rebounds and four steals. His backcourt partnership with Leo transfer Tyler Smith has grown over the first stretch of the season. The duo gave the undefeated, nationally-ranked Wolverines fits offensively and defensively.

“We are definitely playing better off each other,” Ames said. “Today we needed defense and we focused on that and it helped us come off with the win.”

No. 3 Kenwood (14-2, 4-0 Red-South/Central) forced 17 Simeon turnovers. The Broncos led by four after three quarters and slowed the game down to a crawl in the fourth.

“That was the strategy because coming into Simeon’s hostile environment I understood the assignment,” Kenwood coach Mike Irvin said. “We had to control the tempo. When we were up three there was no rush. We took our time.”

Top-ranked Simeon did retake a 43-42 lead on a jumper from Jalen Griffith with 1:46 to play. But Smith responded with a driving layup for the Broncos and the Wolverines didn’t score again.

Smith scored 13 points for Kenwood. Irvin started a very defensive lineup, opting to leave some of the state’s most talented juniors on the bench and go with Solomon Mosley and junior Edwon Duling.

It worked. Mosley, a 6-8 senior, was able to at least slightly contain Simeon’s 6-9 Rubin twins, Miles and Wes.

“I grew up with them so I know all their moves,” Mosley said. “I just had to use my strength. They might have all the skills but I have the strength.”

Miles Rubin had seven points, seven rebounds and four blocks. Wes added seven points, eight rebounds, three assists and two blocks.

“Mosley was the key to the game,” Irvin said. “He’s muscle. We can go big or small. That’s the beauty of this team. Mosley knew this was his time.”

Griffith and junior Rashad McKennie each scored 10 for the Wolverines (14-1, 3-1).

Kenwood’s Darrin “Dai Dai” Ames (4) controls the ball in front of Simeon’s Jalen Griffith (2).

Kirsten Stickney/For the Sun-Times

“This team didn’t lose all spring or summer and started the season with 14 wins so this group is like 40 something and one now,” Simeon coach Robert Smith said. “Eventually we were going to have to lose. I’m not upset. I’m not mad, I’m just ready for the next game.”

Simeon entered the game on a wave of hype, having won games at major national shootouts over the weekend. Kenwood, which lost to Young in the championship of the Proviso West Holiday Tournament, had receded out of the spotlight a bit after a great start to the season.

“We are ready to see anybody and everybody,” Irvin said. “This is our city, I keep telling everyone that. It’s the first time beating Simeon and we did it right here on their home court. They were No. 10 in the country. They say we are cocky but we are confident.”

Kenwood will face another test at Curie on Thursday. And Irvin has finalized a game against another national power, Camden, N.J. The Broncos will face Camden and DJ Wagner, the top player in the country, at DePaul’s McGrath-Phillips Arena on Jan. 20.

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Jim Kendros brings music and philosophy to elderly residents at Belmont Village

“Good afternoon everyone. I’m very happy to be back again at Belmont Village. My name is Jim Kendros, and I had such a wonderful time being here before. We’re going to explore great music today.”

An audience of about two dozen people, including my parents, gathered in the lobby of a senior living community in Buffalo Grove last week.

“Today I have a program called ‘Mozart and More,'” Kendros continues.

He plays “Carol of the Bells” on the piano. It quickly becomes clear that the lobby is not the best environment for a recital. Noisy conversations erupt. Phones ring. A few residents arrive, late and loudly. A janitor rolls a garbage can rumbling by.

None of this fazes Kendros, talking major versus minor, diving into musical theory.

“Chances are you have heard something we call the ‘incipit’ in music,” he says. “I-N-C-I-P-I-T. It’s a Latin word that basically means the smallest part of a melody.”

Kendros does this for a living. He also lectures before concerts, as well as social clubs and libraries. He is a composer, creator of the Mount Prospect Overture.

For me, just visiting here once a week can be an occasion for somber reflection. I wondered how Kendros views his audience.

“They’re near the end of their lives, even though I hope they will live another 20, 30 years,” he told me, earlier, over the phone. “I would like to believe I’m bringing them not only new things to think about but helping them to feel younger.”

Jim Kendros, a suburban music lecturer and composer, talks to an audience of residents at Belmont Village, a senior living community in Buffalo Grove.

Neil Steinberg/Sun-Times

Music certainly is an elixir of youth. And Kendros offers food for thought. What most impressed me about him the first time I heard him was when he said the reason America leads the world in popular music is because we have such a diverse population — so many different ethnic groups bringing so many musical traditions to the table. I’d never thought about it that way before, and it made sense. I also liked the idea of learning something new in the lobby of a place like this.

Kendros plays “Moon River” by “the immortal Henry Mancini” — the “and more” part of the “Mozart and More” program. Music appreciation is not the only appreciation he encourages.

“We live better than the kings of Mozart’s time,” he says. “Even the most modest among us have luxuries that the kings of Mozart’s day wouldn’t have had when you think about it.”

His focus shifts from the greats to those assembled.

“Mozart had a fascinating life, dying just before he was 36,” Kendros says. “Then again, people died of things we could easily cure today. When you look at it, life was so precarious. My gosh, if you made it into your 40s or 50s, you were considered lucky. When you think about it, the quality of life we have today, and how we’re extending it, is just amazing.”

That’s true. My dad is 90. His father died at 61.

“Does anyone know what is a piano concerto?” Kendros asks. I’ve heard the word, and have a vague idea. Something symphonic.

“What are the attributes?”

Nobody volunteers. Kendros explains “concerto” means “a dialogue between the orchestra and a soloist. A piano concerto is a work for orchestra with a piano. You can do it with a violin. We can have a concerto for anything. I have heard concertos for bassoons — Vivaldi wrote well over 30. Accordion. Harmonica. Ukulele.”

His view on talking with the residents of senior homes may be surprising.

“It’s a joy,” he said, previously. “An absolute joy. They have the most incredible stories. When you get them to open up, they have amazing stories to tell. … They are people who have Alzheimer’s. People in wheelchairs, with breathing conditions. The point is, new knowledge and looking at people as though they are just people helps them to feel younger, makes them feel more vital. They have hard-won life experience, and they have something to contribute to society.”

He said the problem is that others tend not to listen.

“If we just talk to them as normal people would, as you and I would like to be spoken to, you see a dramatic transformation. I see it all the time. They just glow.”

That is a truth of life: You get out what you put in. Music helps. As does learning new stuff. So it makes sense that learning new stuff about music really helps.

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Veteran former All-pro WR to be traded and the Bears could be a destination

The Chicago Bears could trade for a former All-Pro Wide Receiver

With Jordan Schultz of The Score reporting that DeAndre Hopkins will be made available via trade this offseason, the NFL media world has been sent into a frenzy.

Sources: #AZCardinals plan to try and trade All-Pro WR DeAndre Hopkins this offseason. DHop has 2 yrs and $34.36M left on his contract and is likely to seek a new deal. Owner Michael Bidwill plans to express this to GM candidates.
My story, via @theScore: https://t.co/xX8NHkULYH

How the Chicago Bears make sense

Before we dive in on why the Chicago Bears are the perfect landing spot for the former All-pro, let’s just start with saying that Ryan Poles will in no way include the Bears 1st overall pick in any deal for DeAndre Hopkins.

With that being said Nuk would be the perfect addition to the Bears WR room. The Bears saw progress from Justin Fields this year and it seems like the Bears are sticking with him as QB1 so why not give him the Bears best receiving threat since Brandon Marshall.

Last season the Bears traded for Chase Claypool at the trade deadline which did not really work out with Claypool having 14 catches for only 140 yards. The Bears leading receiver last season was Darnell Mooney who led the team in receptions (40) and receiving yards (493). Clearly these numbers are not going to cut it going forward. Ryan Poles needs to find a way to bring in new talent to the Bears WR corps, whether its Hopkins or someone else there needs to be change.

How the Bears would pull off a deal

The Bears have more than enough draft capital to swing a deal and more than enough cap space to sign Hopkins to a new deal. With the Roquan Smith trade the Bears were able to nab two additional picks in the 2023 draft and currently have the most available cap space in the NFL heading into the offseason. Really it comes down to if the Bears want Hopkins or not as they appear to be one of the best and clear landing spots for Hopkins.

One more factor that could possibly affect a potential Hopkins deal is the Arizona Cardinals current situation. They do not have a head coach or a GM at the moment. This is all coming from the Cardinals owner Michael Bidwell who plans to express to potential new GM candidates that he wants to trade Hopkins. Don’t expect this situation to gain any more traction until the Cardinals fill their vacancies.

What has Hopkins done in Arizona?

DeAndre “Nuk” Hopkins was sent to Arizona from Houston back in March of 2020. At this point Hopkins was coming off his 3rd straight 1,000+ receiving yard season (the 5th of his career at that point) and was ready to keep that going in Arizona with Kyler Murray. In his first year in Arizona Hopkins had a monster season (115 Rec, 1407 receiving yards, 6 TD) however ever since the 2020 season it has been all down hill for Hopkins. In 2021 Hopkins only saw the field in 10 games and posted one of his worst seasons yet (note that even in a down year by Hopkins standards he still caught 8 TDs).

It was early in 2022 when the league announced that DeAndre Hopkins violated the NFL’s PED violation and was suspended the first 6 games of the 2022 season. From that point Hopkins appeared in 9 games and likely would have posted yet another 100 catch, 1000 yard season if it wasn’t for Kyler Murray getting hurt and the Cardinals being god awful posting a -109 point differential.

Hopkins would likely benefit from a change of scenery and odds are he will be suiting up elsewhere in 2023. Nuk ultimately will get the final say on where that potential change of scenery would be as he has a no trade clause in his contract meaning he will have to approve any trade.

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Head of City Council’s public safety committee renews call to fire Chicago cop with ties to far-right Proud Boys

Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29th) says he wants to keep the heat on Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Chicago Police Supt. David Brown to fire an officer with alleged ties to the far-right Proud Boys and send a message that hate groups won’t be tolerated.

Taliaferro held a news conference Tuesday, days after the Southern Poverty Law Center sent a scathing letter to the mayor and superintendent over the decision to suspend the officer, Robert Bakker, instead of firing him.

The West Side alderperson and two other members of the City Council are sponsoring a resolution calling for Brown to attend a public hearing on the investigation into Bakker.

The resolution hasn’t been called to the City Council floor.

Taliaferro said previous superintendents would’ve fired the officer, not just for his extremist ties, but because an internal investigation found that he lied in an internal police investigation.

“My opinion is that the superintendent should fire this officer,” Taliaferro said Tuesday at a meeting of the Leaders Network at the Columbus Park Refectory, 5701 W. Jackson Blvd.

“We have fired officers in the past with less transgressions in their associations,” said Taliaferro, who is chair of the City Council’s Public Safety Committee.

Brown has defended his decision not to fire the officer, claiming in an October City Council meeting that investigators didn’t have evidence to prove Bakker was associated with the Proud Boys or any other hate group.

At the October meeting, CPD Internal Affairs Chief Yolanda Talley claimed the probe “would have looked totally different” had the FBI labeled the Proud Boys as a hate group. But Taliaferro said that position defies common sense.

“If anyone associates with a group — whether or not the FBI has labeled them a hate group or not, but they’re generally viewed in public as a hate group — they should be fired,” he said.

Asked to comment, the police department repeated a statement issued last week that it doesn’t tolerate its members associating with hate groups and will investigate any new allegations that arise against Bakker.

Bakker’s suspension ends March 1, following two internal investigations into his ties to the Proud Boys.

Those investigations began after antifascist activists outed Bakker’s ties to the Proud Boys in May 2020 by releasing private communications between him and the group.

Police investigators then learned Bakker had failed to disclose that FBI agents contacted him months earlier about his ties to the far-right group.

Bakker was initially handed a five-day suspension for failing to disclose the interview, but other allegations on his association with criminals and members of the Proud Boys were not sustained.

The case was reopened at the request of city Inspector General Deborah Witzburg, who in November 2020 said investigators overlooked incriminating evidence and “inconsistent statements” Bakker made to investigators.

Taliaferro said the second investigation resulted in five sustained allegations against Bakker, including one allegation that he made contradictory statements to investigators.

Bakker then offered to serve a 120-day suspension for those violations.

Taliaferro, who served as a Chicago police officer for 23 years, said he had never heard of an officer recommending their own suspension.

“I served in internal affairs for nine years, and I never had an officer recommend a penalty. It’s unprecedented,” he said.

Although that suspension was the result of a binding agreement between Bakker and the city, Taliaferro said the superintendent can still fire the officer.

“I want to stress that,” Taliaferro said.

Taliaferro claimed CPD has taken a relaxed attitude toward officers accused of breaking a department rule against lying in investigations.

When Taliaferro was an officer under Supt. Jody Weis, he said it was a given that any officer would be automatically fired for lying in an investigation.

“The officer would be fired because he would no longer be credible in court,” Taliaferro said.

Taliaferro said the new Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability should take a stand on the issue.

“We also have to engage that commission as well to push for policies that could hold the superintendent accountable,” the alderperson said.

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