Dismissal of Robert Rialmo

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DateDecember 26, 2015; 10 years ago (2015-12-26)
LocationChicago, Illinois, U.S.
Participants
  • Chicago Police Officer (CPD) Robert Rialmo (shooter)
  • Quintonio LeGrier (victim)
OutcomeDismissal of Rialmo
The Dismissal of Robert Rialmo
DateDecember 26, 2015; 10 years ago (2015-12-26)
LocationChicago, Illinois, U.S.
Participants
  • Chicago Police Officer (CPD) Robert Rialmo (shooter)
  • Quintonio LeGrier (victim)
OutcomeDismissal of Rialmo
DeathsQuintonio LeGrier, Bettie Jones
InquestChicago Police Board
AccusedCPD Officer Robert Rialmo
ChargesWrongful death
TrialJune 2018
VerdictNot guilty

The Chicago Police Board voted on October 17, 2019, to dismiss Chicago Police (CPD) Officer Robert Rialmo who fatally shot Quintonio LeGrier and neighbor Bettie Jones on December 26, 2015, while answering a 911 domestic violence call at the LeGrier residence in Chicago. The dismissal capped a "chaotic finish to a high-profile trial"[1] where a judge first announced that the jury found Rialmo unjustified in his shooting of LeGrier, but erased the verdict promptly, after declaring that the jury found Rialmo feared for his life when he shot LeGrier.[1][2][3]

Officer Rialmo, who confronted 19-year-old LeGrier brandishing a baseball bat, shot LeGrier after he had swung the bat at Rialmo twice. Unbeknownst to the responding police officers, LeGrier had a history of behavioral issues and had previous episodes with law enforcement.[4] Additionally, one of Rialmo's bullets struck and killed a neighbor, 55-year-old Jones, which had been intended for LeGrier.[5][6][1]

Attorneys for the City of Chicago initially argued against Rialmo, contending he could have employed an alternative method of force. However, Rialmo was unequipped with a Taser on December 26, 2015.[7] The Cook County State's Attorney's Office reviewed the incident and concluded that there wasn't any evidence to charge Officer Rialmo, stating that he had acted within boundaries and standards set forth by CPD and State of Illinois police conduct.[7] This led to LeGrier's family filing a lawsuit in civil court for wrongful death, but the 2018 verdict had also found Rialmo's shooting justified, ruling that Rialmo had reacted out of reasonable fear when confronted by LeGrier who was swinging a baseball bat at him.[7][1] A judge presiding over the wrongful death lawsuit against the City of Chicago and CPD Officer Robert Rialmo for the fatal shooting of Quintonio LeGrier in 2015 reversed a jury finding in favor of the teen's family.[1] The jury's decision of justifiable homicide was unanimously supported by Chicago's Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson and Chicago's Fraternal Order of Police.[8] Rialmo countered with his own lawsuit of “emotional pain inflicted as a result of the shooting.”[6] Neither Rialmo nor the LeGrier family received any compensation from their respective lawsuits; the family of Bettie Jones received $16 million.[6][9][1]

Controversy arose when the Chicago Police Board and its fledgling independent civilian arm, the Civilian Office of Police Accountability (COPA), was found to have hired an outside expert on the judicial use of force to investigate the shooting.[2][1] It also was uncovered that COPA hid the report after their third party expert found the Rialmo shooting to be justified, overriding COPA's initial report of wrongdoing. CPD Superintendent Eddie Johnson objected to COPA's concealment of their expert's discrepant findings. Johnson further affirmed that the shooting was lawful and in-policy, reiterating his earlier decision of defending Officer Rialmo. However, his objections were disregarded and a disciplinary case was sent to the Chicago Police Board nonetheless.[1]

Eventually, the controversy culminated in Superintendent Eddie Johnson's reversal of his original decision and stated that Rialmo was unjustified in the shooting of LeGrier and Jones, which contradicted his early defense of Rialmo calling the shooting justified. The Chicago Police Accountability Task Force[10] (CPATF) called for by Mayor Rahm Emanuel to investigate the murder of Laquan McDonald and headed by the present Mayor of Chicago Lori Lightfoot,[11] recommended Officer Rialmo be fired in December 2017. After months of controversy, investigations, and flip-flops, Rialmo was dismissed from the Chicago Police Department in October 2019.[12][13][8][14]

Profile

Quintonio LeGrier

Quintonio LeGrier was 19 years old, born on Chicago's South Side and raised by a foster mother from the age of five. On the morning of December 26, 2015, he argued with his biological father and mother concerning his withdrawal from Northern Illinois University[4] where he was a student in its College of Engineering in DeKalb, Illinois.[4] LeGrier had been arrested by the DeKalb Police Department on five different occasions. On January 15, 2015, and March 1, 2015, he was charged with resisting arrest, obstruction and attempting to disarm an officer. The following day, March 2, 2015, he was arrested and recharged with obstruction. On May 6, 2015, LeGrier was arrested a fourth time and charged with aggravated battery. He was arrested a fifth time, September 22, 2015, and charged with disorderly conduct, assault, and resisting/obstructing an officer. LeGrier had a history of behavioral issues and “on more than one occasion sought medical help for his erratic behavior.”[4][15]

CPD Officer Robert Rialmo

Robert Rialmo was born and raised on Chicago's North Side. He joined the United States Marine Corps (USMC) and was deployed for one tour of duty in Afghanistan.[15] After serving four years, he was honorably discharged from the USMC and joined the Chicago Police Department.[15] Prior to the instigating event for his dismissal, he had ten documented use of force incidents and one complaint of neglect of duty, later deemed to be unfounded.[16] In November 2017 he was suspended for 11 days for an unknown violation.[17]

Timeline of events

911 call

On December 26, 2015, at approximately 4:28 AM, Chicago Police Officer Robert Rialmo and his partner, Anthony LaPalermo, working in the Austin CPD district, were dispatched to 4710 W. Erie, in the Garfield Park neighborhood, responding to four separate 911 calls requesting “urgent police assistance.”[7] The first three of the four 911 calls were made by Quintonio LeGrier, during which he told the dispatcher that someone was threatening his life and requested police assistance. Shortly after, Antonio LeGrier, Quintonio LeGrier's father, called 911. He told the 911 dispatcher that his son was armed with a baseball bat and was trying to break down his bedroom door. Neither the son, Quintonio LeGrier, nor his father, Antonio LeGrier, offered additional details, such as requesting a crisis healthcare worker.[7] Based on the information provided by the 911 calls, the 911 dispatchers, and then relayed data to the responding officers, none were aware that Quintonio LeGrier suffered from “behavioral issues and that he also had prior contact with law enforcement in which he demonstrated erratic behavior.”[7][4] LeGrier's prior conduct and behavioral issues would “likely be admissible in any criminal proceeding against the officers as corroborative evidence of witness statements describing LeGrier’s behavior that morning, which were described as threatening and erratic."[7]

Police response

On the morning of December 26, 2015, CPD Officers Rialmo and LaPalermo approached his father's residence at 4710 W. Erie in Chicago. Rialmo went to the front door with his partner, who was behind him and rang the doorbell. The neighbor, Bettie Jones, opened the front door for Officer Rialmo. Following this, “Quintonio LeGrier was heard opening the upstairs apartment door and running down the stairs toward the front landing, then opened the door and stepped between Rialmo and Jones brandishing an aluminum baseball bat.”[7] As the officers began to move back, LeGrier “moved towards them with the aluminum baseball bat raised in both hands above his head."[7][18][19] Rialmo and his partner retreated down the stairs while maintaining visual contact on LeGrier, but LeGrier kept advanced in a threatening manner and “swinging the bat.”[7][18][19] As the officers retreated down the stairs, LaPalermo tapped Rialmo on his back and shouted: “Look out!”[7] LeGrier “continued to charge the officers”[7] Rialmo drew his service weapon (9mm Luger) and “fired eight times towards LeGrier."[7][18][19] LeGrier was shot at least six times and fell across the threshold of Jones’ apartment door. The fifty-five-years-old Jones was also shot once in the chest from a bullet intended for LeGrier and died. She fell to the floor, near the entrance of her first floor apartment.[7][18][19]

Aftermath

Impact

References

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