Meeting Name: Criminal Justice Committee Agenda status: Final
Meeting date/time: 7/27/2020 3:30 PM Minutes status: Final  
Meeting location: Virtual Meeting
Published agenda: Agenda Agenda Published minutes: Not available  
Meeting video:  
Attachments: Click to watch meeting live, To comment on an item on this agenda, click here, Proposed Substitute to File 20-2867.pdf, Speaker List 1-200 Criminal Justice 2-27-2020.pdf, Public Comments 1-200 Criminal Justice 2-27-2020.pdf, Speaker List 201-300 Criminal Justice 2-27-2020.pdf, Public Comments 201-300 Criminal Justice 2-27-2020.pdf, Jeremy Rosen - Shriver Center on Poverty Law Testimony.pdf, Sarah Ross Testimony.pdf, Sharlyn Grace - Chicago Community Bond Fund Testimony.pdf, Bri Hanny Testimony.pdf, Elaine Miller Testimony, Cindy Eigler Testimony, Emma Tai Testimony, Janet Horne Tesimony.pdf, Juliana Pino Testimony, Reverend Otis Chandler Monroe Testimony, Willette Benford Testimony.pdf, Defender's for All Testimony.pdf, Speaker List 301 - 322 Criminal Justice 2-27-2020.pdf, Public Comments 301-322 Criminal Justice 2-27-2020.pdf
File #Ver.Agenda #NameTypeTitleMotionResultAction DetailsVideo
20-3365 1 Criminal Justice minutes from the meeting of 9/25/2019Committee MinutesCOMMITTEE MINUTES Approval of the minutes from the meeting of 9/25/2019approvePass Action details Not available
20-2867 1  ResolutionPROPOSED SUBSTITUTE TO FILE 20-2867 PROPOSED RESOLUTION JUSTICE FOR BLACK LIVES WHEREAS, throughout the history of the United States, policing, criminalization, and incarceration have been used as tools of violence and retribution against marginalized groups seeking safety, especially Black people; and WHEREAS, policing was in part developed as a tool to preserve the institution of slavery in the 1700’s, focusing on chasing down runaway slaves and shutting down slave revolts, grew into a weapon to disrupt labor uprisings in the 1800s, and matured in the 1900s to be used as the single most effective tool in repressing the civil rights movement; and WHEREAS, policing has had a troubled history in Cook County, most conspicuously visible in the wrongful conviction of more than 125 Black people over dozens of years as a result of the police work enabled by disgraced Chicago Police Commander Jon Burge and his associates, thereby permanently damaging the lives of hundreds of accused people, their family members, and Black communities at large; and WHEREAS, the historic resistance to aaccept as substitutedPass Action details Not available
20-2867 2  ResolutionPROPOSED SUBSTITUTE TO FILE 20-2867 PROPOSED RESOLUTION JUSTICE FOR BLACK LIVES WHEREAS, throughout the history of the United States, policing, criminalization, and incarceration have been used as tools of violence and retribution against marginalized groups seeking safety, especially Black people; and WHEREAS, policing was in part developed as a tool to preserve the institution of slavery in the 1700’s, focusing on chasing down runaway slaves and shutting down slave revolts, grew into a weapon to disrupt labor uprisings in the 1800s, and matured in the 1900s to be used as the single most effective tool in repressing the civil rights movement; and WHEREAS, policing has had a troubled history in Cook County, most conspicuously visible in the wrongful conviction of more than 125 Black people over dozens of years as a result of the police work enabled by disgraced Chicago Police Commander Jon Burge and his associates, thereby permanently damaging the lives of hundreds of accused people, their family members, and Black communities at large; and WHEREAS, the historic resistance to arecommend for approval as substitutedPass Action details Not available