As the city of Chicago lurches forward with its lawsuit against actor Jussie Smollett, John Legend penned a blistering op-ed last week, taking aim at Chicagoβs powerful police union.
Writing for the Chicago Tribune, the singer accused the Fraternal Order of Police of posing βa grave threatβ to Chicagoβs safety by obstructing efforts to instill much-needed police reform in the nationβs third largest city. The op-ed was co-written by Neill Franklin, a former cop and executive director of the advocacy group Law Enforcement Action Partnership.
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Legend and Franklin began by lauding recent efforts by prosecutor Kim Foxx, the stateβs attorney for Cook County, Ill., to reform Chicagoβs criminal justice system, namely by ceasing marijuana prosecutions and reducing the use of cash bail. Chicago Police Chief Eddie Johnson also receives praise for moving toward more community policing.
βBut there is one influential group in Chicago that poses a grave threat to this cityβs safety: Chicagoβs police union, the Fraternal Order of Police,β the pair wrote. βThe union is a relic of the past, with a commitment to protecting all officers, even those who give it a bad name. After Van Dyke killed McDonald, the FOP not only vociferously defended Van Dyke, but the union also hired him.β
βIf we do not call them out, we embolden their voices, make them credible and allow them to drown out the work of good police officers and public officials while halting necessary change,β Legend and Franklin added.
In the wake of Foxxβs office dropping charges against Smollett, the FOP have set their sights on undermining and removing the cityβs top prosecutor. Alongside a group of suburban police chiefs, the union gave Foxx a vote of no-confidence earlier this month. Theyβve called repeatedly for her resignation.
Others have weighed in on the public face-off between Foxx and the FOP, including Illinois Democratic Rep. Bobby Rush, who called the union βthe sworn enemy of black people.β
βThe FOP has always taken the position that black people can be shot down in the street by members of the Chicago Police Department, and suffer no consequences,β Rush said in a press conference on April 6.
βLetβs be clear: Kim Foxx, her battle, is with the FOP and all of their cohorts,β he continued.
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