File #: 16-0546    Version: 1 Name: Recognizing and Appreciating the Contributions of Journalist Brandon Smith to the Causes of Transparency and Justice in Government
Type: Consent Calendar Resolution Status: Approved
File created: 12/8/2015 In control: Board of Commissioners
On agenda: 12/16/2015 Final action: 12/16/2015
Title: PROPOSED RESOLUTION RECOGNIZING AND APPRECIATING THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF JOURNALIST BRANDON SMITH TO THE CAUSES OF TRANSPARENCY AND JUSTICE IN GOVERNMENT WHEREAS, the Nov. 24 video release of LaQuan McDonald being fatally shot 16 times on Oct. 20, 2014, by a Chicago police officer focused the attention of the City, the State and the country on the need for comprehensive reform in the Chicago Police Department; and, WHEREAS, Brandon Smith, the journalist who filed the Freedom of Information Act request that led to the court-ordered release of the aforementioned video, fought for the video's release out of a commitment to transparency and justice; and, WHEREAS, Brandon Smith began his journalism career in 2007 working as an editorial assistant at the Washington Court House Record-Herald in Ohio where he reported and photographed breaking news stories; and, WHEREAS, in 2009, Brandon Smith moved to Chicago to study journalism at Columbia College, where he worked for Th...
Sponsors: RICHARD R. BOYKIN
title
PROPOSED RESOLUTION

RECOGNIZING AND APPRECIATING THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF JOURNALIST BRANDON SMITH TO THE CAUSES OF TRANSPARENCY AND JUSTICE IN GOVERNMENT

WHEREAS, the Nov. 24 video release of LaQuan McDonald being fatally shot 16 times on Oct. 20, 2014, by a Chicago police officer focused the attention of the City, the State and the country on the need for comprehensive reform in the Chicago Police Department; and,

WHEREAS, Brandon Smith, the journalist who filed the Freedom of Information Act request that led to the court-ordered release of the aforementioned video, fought for the video's release out of a commitment to transparency and justice; and,

WHEREAS, Brandon Smith began his journalism career in 2007 working as an editorial assistant at the Washington Court House Record-Herald in Ohio where he reported and photographed breaking news stories; and,

WHEREAS, in 2009, Brandon Smith moved to Chicago to study journalism at Columbia College, where he worked for The Columbia Chronicle as an assistant sports & health editor; and,

WHEREAS, Brandon Smith is committed to the notion of journalism in the public interest, and a form of investigative journalism that fulfills the role of "watchdog" on the public's behalf; and,

WHEREAS, Brandon Smith was first made aware through activist William Calloway, that a video existed depicting the shooting of 17-year-old LaQuan McDonald 16 times by Chicago Police Office Jason Van Dyke, and that Officer Van Dyke was unprovoked; and,

WHEREAS, Brandon Smith and William Calloway determined the best course of action in order to bring the incident to the awareness of the public at large was to file a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request with the City of Chicago to seek the video's release; and,

WHEREAS, the City of Chicago initially rejected Brandon Smith's FOIA request, which gave him standing to sue the City of Chicago in Cook County Circuit Court; and,

WHEREAS, on November 19, 2015...

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