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Attorney: Chicago cop who shot Anthony Alvarez will keep job

The family attorney of Anthony Alvarez, fatally shot by a Chicago police officer last spring, said Thursday that the Civilian Office of Police Accountability (COPA) denied a recommendation to fire the officer.

Associated Press
Associated Press
3 min read
Attorney: Chicago cop who shot Anthony Alvarez will keep job
The fatal police shooting of 22-year-old Anthony Alvarez in the spring of 2021, which happened shortly after the fatal police shooting of 13-year-old Adam Toledo, led to significant foot pursuit reforms for the Chicago Police Department. The officers in both incidents were cleared of any wrongdoing.

CHICAGO (AP) — The family attorney of a man fatally shot by a Chicago police officer last year said Thursday that the Chicago Police Board denied a recommendation to fire the officer.

Police Board member Stephan Block reviewed the Civilian Office of Police Accountability’s investigation and recommendation of dismissal and denied it, said Todd Pugh, an attorney for the family of Anthony Alvarez.

The Chicago Police Board is an independent civilian body that decides police disciplinary cases.

Alvarez, 22, was fatally shot by Chicago police Officer Evan Solano following a foot chase in March 2021.

Pugh said Block’s decision was based on the Police Department not having a formal foot pursuit policy at the time, the Chicago Tribune reported.[1]

The Alvarez family is "appalled by Mr. Block’s decision to merely recommend a 20-day suspension of a police officer who COPA determined violated numerous policies and directives before killing Anthony Alvarez," Pugh said in a statement.

Alvarez was shot while moving away from Solano, who was pursuing him and yelling at him to “drop the gun,” a video of the shooting released last year showed. Solano fired shots, and footage shows Alvarez drop a pistol as he fell to the ground. He was shot in the back and thigh, an autopsy later revealed.

His family filed a lawsuit in February alleging the city bears responsibility for his death partly because the Chicago Police Department did not have a policy on foot pursuits at the time.

In March, Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx announced her office would not bring criminal charges against Solano.[2] She said prosecutors determined Solano reasonably believed he was in danger when he opened fire.

The Police Department released its final version of a foot pursuit policy in June, which was in the making for over a year since the Alvarez and Toledo shootings.[3]


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Notes & References


  1. Fry, Paige, and Annie Sweeney. “Police Board Rejects Copa Recommendation for Officer's Dismissal in Anthony Alvarez Case.” Chicago Tribune, July 22, 2022. https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/breaking/ct-anthony-alvarez-copa-police-board-investigation-20220721-22grrtcvnbh4fdrvs6g3fcjdyq-story.html. ↩︎

  2. Chicago Journal. “No Charges against 2 Chicago Officers in Fatal Shootings.” Chicago Journal. Chicago Journal, March 15, 2022. https://www.chicagojournal.com/no-charges-against-2-chicago-officers-in-fatal-shootings/. ↩︎

  3. Press, Associated. “Chicago Police Unveil Long-Awaited Foot Pursuit Policy.” Chicago Journal. Chicago Journal, June 21, 2022. https://www.chicagojournal.com/chicago-police-unveil-long-awaited-foot-pursuit-policy/. ↩︎

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