“Here is the story of his uncommon courage: The C.O., Deputy Inspector Charles Kelly, wanted to root out corruption and excessive force. But the cops struck back. One hundred of them gathered one evening to vote on a job action that would bring Kelly to his knees.
“The beers went round, the speakers rallied the troops, and they were ready to vote for no activity until the commander backed off.
“Charlie then asked to speak. He explained that he could not go along with a job action. If all Kelly wanted was to stop the corruption and brutality, then Charlie Cochrane supported the commander. He asked for the 90% of the cops in the room who were not corrupt to stand with him. There was no response from the cops — and there was no job action.”
McCARTHY RISES. When Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel fired Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy, some said McCarthy’s career was over — that he was toxic and could never become an urban police chief again.
The release of hundreds of his city emails, following a public records request, may reverse that perception.
Emanuel had forced McCarthy out after the release of a dash-cam video showed a white cop shooting black teenager Laquan McDonald 16 times as the 17-year-old appeared to walk away from him. Many suspected the mayor had suppressed the video, fearing its release might cost him re-election.
Because of the furor over police departments’ relationships with black communities across the country, McCarthy’s dismissal received national attention. That old Chicago hand, President Barack Obama —for whom Emanuel had served as White House chief of staff — weighed in, appearing to support the mayor.
OK, it’s true that McCarthy, egged on by his wife, Gina, has been a hothead. In 2005, as an NYPD deputy commissioner, he was arrested, handcuffed and disarmed by a Palisades Parkway cop after Garry protested a parking ticket issued to his daughter. When Gina grabbed Garry’s gun back from the Palisades officer, she, too, was arrested.
But McCarthy was also regarded in the NYPD as a pro — an aggressive, intelligent and community-minded officer — qualities he brought to Chicago, as reflected in his emails from top Chicago commanders.
Chicago First Deputy Supt. John J. Escalante, who would become interim superintendent after McCarthy’s ouster, wrote to McCarthy: “The last four-plus years has [sic] been a pleasure and we are all grateful this department was turned around in the right direction under a real Policeman. A street cop.”
Cmdr. Barbara West, who McCarthy had promoted to command two districts on the Chicago’s West Side, thanked him for “all of the things you taught me about leadership.”
In an email to his new wife, Kristin Barnette, who McCarthy married in 2014, he referred to his termination letter and noted of Mayor Emanuel, “He didn’t even have the balls to sign it himself.”
With the release of those emails, it may turn out that it’s not McCarthy’s career that is over, but Emanuel’s.