Friday, December 16, 2011

Did Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy beg parolees not to shoot each other?

Second City Cop says, yes.

According to one of the police blog's Friday, December 16th entries, McCarthy and a boatload of Chicago Police Department bosses met with 60 parolees Wednesday at the Columbus Park Refectory at 5701 West Jackson Boulevard.

"Parole agents rounded them up and ordered them to show up or it would be a violation of their parole," said Second City Cop.

During the police/convict conference McCarthy, who was once accused of shooting out streetlights, purportedly asked the alleged gang bangers not shoot at each other.

We wonder what Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton have to say about a white man begging black men not to kill each other over the holidays.

Source

6 comments:

  1. Despicable. If they are likely to shoot someone, how about not paroling them in the first place...

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  2. We had this debate before under Wies. Police warn them, they dont listen, police arrest them. Old news

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  3. Yeah didn't Weis do this when he rounded up all the gang leaders & asked them to stop comitting crimes?

    This is so absurd, I don't even know what to say.

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  4. This is equivalent to Obama asking Iran for our drone. How many more idiots can Chicago politics create?

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  5. McCarthy is an idiot! just ask the people in Newark N.J. he abandoned his job there when his strategies were ineffective in lowering crime. He is getting over 250,000. a year in his new position. Pretty good for someone who did 4 years as a patrolman!

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  6. Despite the creation of a task force that included State Police and federal investigators, carjackings in Newark rose for the third straight year in 2011, jumping 16 percent from the previous year, according to police statistics.

    There were 337 carjackings in Newark last year, compared to 290 in 2010. Newark police did not track carjackings as an individual crime until 2010, when they surged, according to a police spokesman. However, the city’s 2010 total was 24.5 percent higher than the 233 carjackings in all of Essex County, which includes Newark, in 2009.

    ReplyDelete

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