Extremism in the Ranks

An investigation by the Sun-Times, WBEZ and the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project that looks into the records of Chicago cops on a leaked roster of an anti-government group and the efforts to hold those officers accountable.

Investigation

Months after the Oath Keepers played a major role in the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, a list of about 38,000 people from across the country who had joined the anti-government extremist group emerged publicly. But little was done to investigate the Chicago police officers on those rolls.

The Sun-Times and WBEZ filed more than 200 open-records requests with the Chicago Police Department and other law enforcement agencies across Illinois. Those requests sought the personnel files for dozens of current and retired cops around the state whose names appeared in the leaked list.

In this monthslong investigation, we found troubling allegations against some of these officers and spoke to people who filed official complaints.

This investigation is in partnership with the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project.

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At least 27 Chicago police officials appeared in leaked rosters for the Oath Keepers, an anti-government extremist group. At least nine are still with the department.
Officer shoulders-oath keepers investigation
A new civilian oversight panel is working with Chicago police on a policy that would bar officers from joining hate and extremist groups.
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The Oath Keepers’ membership rolls included an Illinois state trooper, a campus cop for the University of Illinois Chicago and an officer in a village known as “America’s First Black Town.”
Additional reporting
The move by the Cook County state’s attorney’s office comes weeks after WBEZ and the Sun-Times identified officers who appeared on leaked membership rolls for the anti-government group.
The policy was approved Monday after Chicago police investigated but took little action against cops with connections to far-right groups including the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers and Three Percenters.
Without the three-part investigation ‘Extremism in the Ranks,” how long would the problem of Oath Keepers and other extremists in the Chicago Police Department have been left to fester?
Police with extremist ties are a clear and present danger to normal society and responsible law enforcement, a Hyde Park letter writer says.
The Stephenson County sheriff says Chief Deputy Andrew Schroeder’s association with Oath Keepers was “brief” and that he is an “exemplary” cop. Other officials in the county remain concerned.
The Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability on Thursday recommended the city’s inspector general investigate officers named on an Oath Keepers list so any extremists can be “rooted out” of the department.
The Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability will vote Thursday on asking the city’s inspector general to investigate cops named on an Oath Keepers list.
Supt. Larry Snelling and other brass did not explain the department’s lack of action since a membership list was leaked two years ago.
When Chicago cops joined the KKK 55 years ago, the department moved quickly to fire them.
A new civilian oversight panel is working with Chicago police on a policy that would bar officers from joining hate and extremist groups.
Coverage
Leaked chat logs appear to show Officer Robert Bakker communicating and organizing meetups last summer with members of the Proud Boys, which has been designated as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.
The city’s inspector general on Friday questioned the thoroughness of an internal investigation into the officer after it was reported he was a member of the Oath Keepers.
Chicago City Council members repeatedly expressed frustration Wednesday as police officials gave conflicting, sometimes puzzling reasons why they have not moved more aggressively against officers tied to far-right groups implicated in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot.
Officer Robert Bakker has been the subject of four internal investigations that were all opened last year, according to records obtained by the Sun-Times.
CPD Supt. David Brown said CPD has “zero tolerance” for sworn officers joining or associating with hate groups. But given what can be proved, he said, a 120-day suspension is as far as he legally can go.
“The injection of white nationalists in this conversation, for me, I will tell you personally, I was afraid,” State’s Attorney Kim Foxx said.