Chicago PD Announces Use-of-Force Policy Changes

Chicago Police officials on Wednesday announced policy changes intended to reduce use of force, particularly deadly force.

Chicago Police officials on Wednesday announced policy changes intended to reduce use of force, particularly deadly force.

The changes, made after months of debate and back-and-forth revisions, will tighten many of the department rules that experts and advocates have criticized as too permissive.

In a key change, the policy tightens the rules on shooting fleeing people. The new rules hold that officers can't shoot a fleeing person unless he presents an imminent threat to police or others. Previously, an officer could shoot any person who was fleeing after committing or trying to commit a felony using force, the Chicago Tribune reports.

The new policy also calls on officers to use their new de-escalation training to try to defuse incidents. The adopted language is less strict than the first proposal, though. Officers only have to try de-escalation "when it is safe and feasible to do so," it reads.

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