Includes Address 4 Phone 2 Email 2. Resides in Barrington, IL. Includes Address 15 Phone 8 Email 5. Resides in Rock Island, IL. Also known as Samuel Patton. Includes Address 8 Phone 5 Email 3. Resides in Gridley, IL. Includes Address 4 Phone 3. Resides in Valier, IL. Includes Address 1 Phone 2. Resides in Rockford, IL. Includes Address 1. Resides in Pawnee, IL. Resides in New Athens, IL. Related To Adelia Patton. Resides in Chicago, IL. Includes Address 1 Phone 1. Resides in Bettendorf, IA.
Also known as Mark S Patton. Includes Address 11 Phone 13 Email Resides in Chippewa Falls, WI. Also known as Stephen M Patton. Includes Address 8 Phone 5. Resides in Hampshire, IL. Also known as Steven J Patton. Includes Address 8 Phone 3 Email 1. Resides in Louisville, KY. Related To Clara Patton. Includes Address 7 Phone 3 Email 2. Resides in Columbia, IL. Also known as Steven M Patton. Includes Address 6 Phone 9 Email 1. Includes Address 8 Phone 6 Email 1.
Resides in Vienna, IL. Also known as Steve R Patton. Includes Address 5 Phone 3 Email 6. Includes Address 4 Phone 6. Resides in Carol Stream, IL. Also known as Steve And Ta Patton. Includes Address 4 Phone 3 Email 1. Chicago Law Department is sanctioned again for withholding police shooting records. He represented the industry. Emanuel issued a statement praising Patton's contributions during his tenure, including his work on police reforms, a landmark agreement with Pfizer on marketing of prescription opioids and crafting the sweeping reparations package for victims of Jon Burge, the former South Side police commander at the center of the long-standing allegations that detectives routinely tortured murder suspects.
While Patton's departure was described by sources as amicable and self-driven, it comes after a tumultuous period for the Law Department. In late , he was criticized for leading the unsuccessful fight against the release of a video of a police officer fatally shooting year-old Laquan McDonald. He cited ongoing criminal investigations. The video's eventual release in November — along with the public's furious reaction to it — prompted the Department of Justice to investigate the Police Department's policies and practices.
The Justice Department report, released last week, blistered the department for years of poor training of officers who all too often use excessive force, most often against the city's minority residents, as well as failing to adequately investigate problem officers and punish them.
The Police Department now faces the arduous task of fixing deeply rooted problems and regaining the community's trust, but Patton said the fact the city is now in full compliance with the Shakman decree — a year-old court order meant to address once-rampant political patronage in the city — shows significant change can occur. Patton's department also has been accused of enabling police abuse, however. Attorney General Loretta Lynch last week, asking her to launch a federal review of the Law Department's federal civil rights litigation division, which has been sanctioned eight times during Emanuel's tenure for withholding possible evidence in police misconduct lawsuits, which it defends.
A Tribune investigation last year that analyzed nearly cases alleging police misconduct since Emanuel took office found that a federal judge had to order the city to turn over potential evidence in nearly 1 in 5 cases. The issue came to a head in January , when a federal judge sanctioned one city lawyer for intentionally concealing evidence and another for failing to make a reasonable effort to locate key records in a lawsuit stemming from the fatal police shooting of Darius Pinex.
In response, Emanuel asked former U. Attorney Dan Webb to lead a review of the department's handling of police misconduct cases. Webb found no pattern of intentional misconduct among city attorneys, but he also recommended more than 50 reforms to address problems in the office. Patton instituted those reforms, along with several other measures he made immediately after the Pinex ruling.
Skip to content. Breaking News Chicago aldermen want federal investigation of city Law Department. In the wake of a federal report alleging police misconduct, a group of Chicago aldermen want Mayor Rahm Emanuel's Law Department investigated. By Stacy St. Clair and Jeff Coen. Jan 16, at AM.
Breaking News Landmark investigation says Chicago police conduct harms residents, endangers officers. The Justice Department issued a scathing report Friday describing a broken Chicago Police Department that falls woefully short on nearly every level.
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