It will be interesting to see how this plays out. Hopefully it will lead to a spirit of openness and cooperation.
U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush has filed a complaint saying he was racially profiled by Chicago police after two officers pulled him over while driving on the South Side in August, according to police sources and city records.
According to the sources, the Wentworth District officers were running plates while on patrol on Aug. 4 because of a rash of vehicle thefts in the Bronzeville neighborhood.
The officers ran the plate on Rush's Lexus and were told it was registered to a Cadillac, the sources said. The officers then stopped Rush shortly before 3 p.m. in the 4700 block of South King Drive, according to the sources and city records obtained by the Tribune through a Freedom of Information Act request.
Rush, 69, was let go without a ticket being issued.
About an hour later, Rush filed a complaint about the alleged racial profiling with the Independent Police Review Authority, the city agency that investigates more serious allegations of police misconduct, according to the records. An IPRA supervisor reviewed the complaint the following day, and on Aug. 8, the matter was transferred to the Police Department's Bureau of Internal Affairs, according to the records.
The Chicago Democrat drives a maroon Lexus SUV with an Illinois license plate of "1." The words "U.S. Congressman" are displayed under the "1" in smaller letters.
According to Illinois Secretary of State records, another "1" vanity plate is registered to a 2016 Cadillac owned by a man who lives in the Near North neighborhood.
Anthony Guglielmi, the Police Department's chief spokesman, confirmed that officers made a traffic stop on that date and at that location, but he declined to identify Rush as the driver.
"We take the allegations very seriously," Guglielmi said. "We do have an internal affairs investigation, and we will do a very methodical review of the evidence, including the body camera footage and interviews with the complainant."
The police sources defended the officers' conduct, saying at least one of them wore a body camera equipped with both video and audio that captured the stop.
Police officials, citing a new state law, said the Tribune would be able to obtain the camera footage only if Rush gave permission for its release.
But efforts by the Tribune to contact Rush have been unsuccessful. The Tribune sent repeated emails to top Rush staffers seeking to interview the congressman about his racial profiling allegations. A reporter also attempted to interview him at his South Side home, but Rush sent him away, telling him to contact his staff to arrange an interview. But continued requests to his aides went unanswered.
Rush uses taxpayer dollars from his congressional office budget to pay nearly $1,000 a month to Lexus Financial Services for an automobile lease, government records show. The model is not specified in those records.
The onetime co-founder of the Illinois Black Panther Party has been in Congress since 1993, representing parts of the South Side and Cook and Will counties. He was a Chicago alderman for a decade before that. He lost a race for Chicago mayor in 1999.
An ordained Baptist minister, Rush handily defeated Barack Obama in a primary challenge for the congressional seat in 2000, Obama's only electoral loss.
_________________ Joe Orr Road Rod wrote: The victims are the American People and the Republic itself.
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