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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Mitch Dudek

Police unveil website tracking gun offender bond information

Police Supt. Eddie Johnson unveils the “Gun Offender Dashboard” Monday at a news conference at police headquarters.  | By Mitch Dudek for the Sun-Times

Seeking to highlight, and eventually change a criminal justice system that makes it too easy for some gun offenders to return to the street, the Chicago Police Department on Monday unveiled a publicly accessible database that tracks the bond amount that judges issue for such crimes.

The “Gun Offenders Dashboard” also tracks whether those accused were able to come up with the cash and go free.

“I’m not blaming judges for somebody else going out there and picking up a gun and using it, but what I do need their help on is sending that message of accountability, that’s the point,” Supt. Eddie Johnson said at a news conference at Chicago police headquarters.

The dashboard will update data from the previous week every Wednesday, with information on the site dating back to January of last year.

Criminal histories of each person accused are also available with the tap of a mouse.

Johnson stressed “the importance of making gun offenders accountable and not making it easy for them to return to the streets mere days after being arrested on felony gun charges.”

It needs to be harder for gang members to pool together funds to buy the release of gunman, Johnson said.

“Shooters in gangs, that’s one of their most prized assets, because everybody doesn’t have the stomach to do that,” he said.

Paying $100 is a sum a gang can absorb time and time again — paying $10,000 is not, Johnson said.

“It has to be a consequence that’s severe enough for them to give pause to leaving home with an illegal gun,” he said.

“CPD can do better, our prosecutors can do better and certainly our judges can do better, we can all do better,” Johnson continued. “I’m not going into a back and forth thing with our other partners, that’s not the point of all this. I think we have to come together as a team and figure out what’s the best way to convey that message that we won’t tolerate it.”

A spokesman for Timothy Evans, the chief judge of the Circuit Court of Cook County, did not immediately return a message seeking comment.

A spokeswoman for Cook County County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx, who ran for office on the issue of reforming a bond system that filled the county jail with poor people, also didn’t immediately return a message.

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