Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United States

Chicago Police Department Arrest API Shutdown is Its Own Kind of 'Cover Up' (chicagoreporter.com) 152

Asraa Mustufa and David Eads, reporting for Chicago Reporter: With Chicago reeling this week from a bloody July 4 weekend that saw more than 80 shootings claim the lives of at least 17 people, including young children, police Superintendent David Brown doubled down on his approach to stemming the violence at a press conference Monday. "We must keep violent offenders in jail longer," Brown said, arguing that arrestees are getting released too quickly and that the electronic monitoring program is "clearly not working" and needs to be revamped. Mayor Lori Lightfoot agreed on the need to keep violent offenders locked up in order to reduce crime. Brown had deployed an additional 1,200 officers on the streets ahead of the holiday weekend to break up "drug corners," in a strategy not unlike that of police chiefs before him. His plan was criticized by civil rights advocates and criminologists, WBEZ reported. "Our endgame is arrests for the precursors to violence," Brown said. "But when we clear the corner, we're pleading with the court systems: Keep them in jail through the weekend."

Brown's remarks raise many questions. How did officers carry out this policing strategy? Did they make arrests for violent crimes or other charges? How long were arrestees in police custody? Do these defendants quickly bond out or remain detained? Do these kinds of arrests really keep violent offenders off the street and effectively prevent more violence? Queries like these are key to digging into Brown's claims and gauging how effective CPD's tactics are. But it's now substantially more difficult to check CPD's claims and details about arrests. That's because the department recently shut down its arrest API used by journalists and researchers. A data API, or application programming interface, provides access to structured information in a way machines can read, akin to the difference between getting data in a spreadsheet file versus copying it by hand into a spreadsheet. CPD's API provided access to comprehensive and timely data about arrests going back to 2014 in ways that can be processed and analyzed by software engineers and reporters.

The Chicago Reporter used the API last month to analyze police tactics during local mass protests following the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd. CPD had released figures stating that the majority of arrests made on the weekend of May 29 were for criminal conduct related to looting, not protesting. But by using CPD's own data from the arrest API, we found the opposite to be true: the majority of civil unrest-related arrests made that weekend had been for offenses related to protesting. [...] Within a day of our publishing this analysis, CPD removed access to the API for all users.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Chicago Police Department Arrest API Shutdown is Its Own Kind of 'Cover Up'

Comments Filter:
  • This article is kind of like newspaper reporters on the Titanic complaining they cannot use the wireless to send dispatches about what is taking place on the ship after it struck the iceberg.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    "Our endgame is arrests for the precursors to violence," Brown said. "But when we clear the corner, we're pleading with the court systems: Keep them in jail through the weekend."

    When cops talk about arresting violent offenders, as an American I always try to remember that the most they can possibly really mean is "accused violent offenders."

    If you don't like the 5th Amendment, go back to your shithole country and leave America out of your radical bullshit.

    Or, ok, stay in America but come out in public as

    • by weilawei ( 897823 ) on Friday July 10, 2020 @09:46AM (#60283002)

      This.

      Amend the Constitution, go through proper channels (as you always want to insist poor or minorities do), or STFU.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      They can test the offenders for clinical psychopathy, 1% of the general population, 15% of the prison population and 50% of violent crimes. It's genetic and the outcomes are pretty clear, expect them to reoffend upon release, it is in their genetic nature. Doesn't matter colour of skin or religion or any other claim, some people are born with broken brains, just like any other organ.

    • by Cederic ( 9623 )

      The police chief didn't talk about arresting violent offenders in your quote. He talked about arresting people for crimes that lead to violence.

      He's not even saying they're guilty. He sends them to the court system, which is the correct way to determine guilt.

      His complaint is that the court system then releases them immediately on bail, which lets them go back to whatever it was that leads to violence.

      Net result: Chicago continues to top national murder statistics.

  • by drew_kime ( 303965 ) on Friday July 10, 2020 @10:05AM (#60283084) Journal
    "Who's the idiot that gave reporters access to raw data?" Just another example showing that we can't believe the police when they tell us what happened when no one was looking. Mandate body cams. Mandate open access to statistical records. (ie: Suitably anonymized.) Make it a fireable offense (at a minimum) to file reports that are contradicted by the body cam or official records. Filing a false report is a crime. Why are police never charged with it?
  • by StormReaver ( 59959 ) on Friday July 10, 2020 @10:06AM (#60283092)

    This is typical of corrupt police forces and corrupt Government in general. They rely on no one fact-checking bogus claims, and then remove (or downplay) the source of facts when those claims are exposed for the lies that they are. And Chicago seems to be one of the most corrupt cities in the U.S., if not THE most corrupt.

    I would say that Chicago needs a new police chief and a new major, but then I have to wonder if the corruption in Chicago is so systemic that no one running for office there knows how to behave differently. And will the voters be able to tell the difference? Do they care enough to even try?

    • by Cederic ( 9623 )

      no one running for office there knows how to behave differently

      When you're willing to break the law to pay for politicians, in Chicago there are cheap ways to pay to remove them too.

  • A report issued by CPD at the end of the week following the initial protests stated “1,258 individuals were arrested” during that weekend and, of those, “699 arrests were related to criminal conduct tied to looting and destruction of property.”
    ...
    But according to updated numbers provided by the department Tuesday to the Reporter, only 213 of the 1,052 arrests were for looting-related incidents, about 70% less than the CPD’s initial figures.

    This is how reporters lie. They take one statistic and then compare that to a statistic that they came up with but use a weasel word to obfuscate what that statistic actually covers.

    • You mean how cops lie.

      provided by the department

    • I don't see how this got modded up unless I am greatly misunderstanding. Couldn't we be more specific about what the arrests are for? It certainly seems that CPD got caught in a lie so they took away the API that showed they were lying. How is this a reporters fault? If the reporter misrepresented the data, why close down the API and not clarify?
      • The discrepancy seems to be centered on your interpretation of "and".

        699 arrests were related to criminal conduct tied to looting and destruction of property.

        • If you interpret that stat as "looting and destruction of property", then you'll think the PD is lying and the reporter uncovered it.
        • If you interpret that stat as incidents of "looting" + "destruction of property", then you'll think the reporter is lying by comparing the number of those two combined, to just "looting".

        AFAIK, arrest charges of looti

  • by mad7777 ( 946676 ) on Friday July 10, 2020 @10:53AM (#60283262)
    nobody knows what happened after that
  • Jailed Men (Score:2, Troll)

    by cygnusvis ( 6168614 )
    Most of people jailed are men, so its sexist (better not start quoting crime stats bigot).
  • it's a travesty that the API data access was blocked, especially given the results clearly show they were arresting peaceful protesters. There needs to be a lawsuit.
  • The part of this story that surprises me most is that the API actually ever gave accurate data. I imagine someone got in quite a bit of trouble when it was revealed that the system allowed this.

Put your Nose to the Grindstone! -- Amalgamated Plastic Surgeons and Toolmakers, Ltd.

Working...