Chicago police commander Paul Bauer dies after being shot multiple times

Second City Cop's take on Commander Bauer[halfmast]
https://secondcitycop.blogspot.ca/
A Voice of Reason

We would like to tell those reading today that Commander Bauer held a rare position in regard to this website:
  • He rarely, if ever, appeared here in print, whether it was a post or in the comment sections.
Think about that for a second. We've been around in one form or another under assorted management for almost twelve years now. And coppers like to complain - it's a national pastime. The number of high ranking bosses who haven't felt the lash of the blog are few and far between. And we can't think of a single significant instance where he was the target of someone's ire. That, ladies and gents, is a rarity and it speaks to the type of decent, hard working, appreciative boss he must have been to those he worked with.

Part of the reason - he thought like a lot of us do. Here's an article from the CWB blog from a few months ago. We aren't going to borrow the whole article, but some highlights to show what we mean:
  • Arrests are up from last year but what happens after an arrest is what frustrates the commander of downtown Chicago’s 18th police district.

    Commander Paul Bauer says there is a “high bar to prosecution” in Cook County, requiring Chicago police to get approval from the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office before a suspect can be charged.

    “Sometimes they want to come out and...talk to the victim,” said Bauer at the annual meeting of River North Residents Association. “If you think about it, we’re sometimes victimizing this person twice. You just got your phone snatched from you. You got knocked down. Now you’re going to be in the station. You got to stay here for another couple hours until the State’s Attorney gets out here.”

    [...] According to Bauer, 75 percent of the crime in the 18th district is theft-related, whether it’s theft from a building or theft from a person, including a suspect who, while riding a bicycle, recently swiped mobile phones from people in River North.

    “We caught that guy,” recalled Bauer. “and we figured he did about 30 [robberies] over the course of a couple months. We were only able to charge him with one felony theft [because] victim identification was a little hazy.”

    [...] “Even when we catch somebody,” says Bauer, “there’s still a long way to go to get them off the street.”

    In August, Chief Judge Timothy Evans replaced all the judges who presided over bond hearings in Cook County and directed new judges to set bail in amounts more affordable to defendants. This is at odds with Chicago police, who would prefer to see higher bail amounts for career criminals.

    “That guy, Willie, he’s a case in point. He needs a high bond. We got him for a number of burglaries. He’s on parole for burglary. He needs to sit. We got to get him off the street. It’s just like if you have kids, if there’s no consequences to your action, those actions are going to repeat.”

    And when they do go to jail, they need to stay there longer.

    “The Sheriff of Cook County, for whatever reason, is very proud of the fact he has reduced the population of the county jail. Maybe I’m jaded, I don’t think that’s anything to be proud of.”


    Bauer would like to see more career criminals in jail. “You can say, we don’t know if that’s going to reduce recidivism. This is how I look at it, I want them off the street. We’re not talking about the guy that stole a loaf of bread from the store to feed his family. We’re talking about career robbers, burglars, drug dealers. These are all crimes against the community. They need to be off the street.”

    It is frustration police deal with every day as they try to make communities safe, says Bauer.

    “This has been going on for quite some time but it’s getting worse.”
We've been saying exactly this for years, and Bauer obviously saw the same things and wasn't afraid to call it like he saw it. It's certainly a refreshing honesty not often seen on this Department nowadays. And now it's silenced.

He will be missed.

So, it seems that this very police commander had previously and pointedly made it clear that the low bails and revolving door jailing of repeat offenders in Chicago was a significant risk to public safety has been murdered by one of the very people he was referring to, a repeat gun offender who got out of jail after serving only fractions of his various sentences:

• Convicted in 1998 of armed robbery, gets a 16-year sentence, meaning he should have been in jail until 2014 with that, but . . .

• Charged in 2007 with being a felon in possession of body armor, possession of a defaced firearm and possession of heroin; received three years in prison on the gun charge, records show, so added to the original 16 that he should have served the remainder of as a parole violation, he should have been in jail until 2017, but . . .

• In 2011, was charged with resisting an officer and battery, and convicted of battery, so should have been a third strike (life in prison in IL?) but given 30 days of community service, and then . . .

• Convicted of drug possession in 2014, received a two-year prison term, so a FOURTH strike, and thus again should be serving a life term, but at the very least should have served all of his previous terms as a result of the parole violations, and so should have still been in jail until 2019.

So, riddle me how this guy was even out of jail in order to commit a murder of a police officer, while wearing body armor and possessing a firearm, both things forbidden to felons in IL, much less a repeated and multiple felon?

Maybe Rahm and company can help me out with the math here?
 
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