Hate Squad.

AuthorFreund, Charles Paul
PositionBrief Article

Concern about "hate crimes" is resuscitating the Chicago police department's long-dormant Red Squad, an intelligence unit that specialized in infiltrating, harassing, and gathering intelligence on political groups. Since 1981, Chicago's cops have been under a consent decree that greatly limited such activity: They couldn't start spying on a group until they had evidence that a crime was likely to be committed. But in January, reports the Chicago Sun-Times, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals untied the Chicago cops' hands by modifying that decree.

The court ruled that threats from "terrorists" and "hate groups" presented a greater danger than police harassment and spying. "If the investigation cannot begin until the group is well on its way toward the commission of terrorist acts," it declared, "the investigation may come too late to prevent the acts or to identify the perpetrators." The decision was written by Judge Richard Posner, the court's chief judge and the author of last year's controversial study of the Clinton impeachment, An Affair of State (see "Sex, Economics, and Other legal Matters," page 36). Posner's ruling was hailed as a victory for Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley Jr., who has long argued that the 1981 consent decree needed modification.

While a police spokesman termed the decision "a tremendous victory for common sense," the American Civil Liberties Union called the ruling "a significant setback." Police...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT