Saturday, June 13, 2020

Bobby Rush is a living, breathing example of why we need term limits

Rep. Rush denies inviting ‘popcorn police’ to lounge in burglarized campaign office. In his haste to hate all things police, he forgot to say he has been getting police protection for years, at his house, office, they even pick him up at Midway Airport. Where were these cops supposed to take their break at? They were invited to the office. Case closed. 

In Dallas, Trump said Chicago police “could do the job very easily.” Rush countered: When it comes to problems with police brutality, “there is no quick and easy fix.” 


By Lynn Sweet Jun 12, 2020, 2:56pm CDT

Images of security video show 13 Chicago Police officers making coffee and popping popcorn at U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush’s office in an area that was beset by looting. 

Rep. Bobby Rush, D-Ill., denied Friday that his staff invited 13 Chicago police officers to lounge around his burglarized office, pushing back at a police union claim while ridiculing President Donald Trump’s assertion he could end bigotry “quickly” and “easily.”

Rush said he did not invite the police to hang out at his office and, noting they used his office microwave to make popcorn during their hours-long stay, labeled the officers the “popcorn police.”

Rush made his comments in a CNN interview a day after Rush and Mayor Lori Lightfoot, in a joint news conference, showed security camera footage of the police — including three white shirt supervisors — drinking coffee and napping at his campaign office at 5401 S. Wentworth Ave. Rush and Lightfoot said the police were there as looters were breaking into nearby stores. One frame showed an empty popcorn bag.

“Once again, the Chicago Police Department has revealed its true nature, true character. They entered my office without being invited. They, in the midst of looting and rioting in the midst of their fellow officers being pummeled, and bricks and bottles being thrown at them all across the city in those tumultuous days, here they are, these 13 officers decided they were going to abandon their posts and relax in my office,” Rush said.
Timeline

According to a timeline provided to the Chicago Sun-Times by Rush’s office, the security alarm went off at 9:48 p.m. Sunday, May 31, after a window in the office was broken. Police entered at 12:48 a.m. Monday, June 1, and left about 4:30 a.m., apparently unaware, or not caring, that every move they were making was being recorded.

At City Hall Thursday with Rush, Lightfoot promised to identify the 13 officers, asking them to step forward. The police department is conducting an internal investigation.

Shortly after the news conference, Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara said Rush’s staff told police to “make themselves at home.” Trump had congratulated Catanzara in a tweet when he became the officer became FOP president in May.


RELATED
Rep. Rush, Mayor Lightfoot mend fences after release of shocking video of Chicago police lounging in his burglarized campaign office
Good cop, bad cop

Chicago GOP Chair Steve Boulton said in a statement, “We strongly question whether officers entered without invitation or acted without authorization.”

Rush spokesman Jeremy Edwards said, “Nobody from Congressman Rush’s staff invited the police in, and they certainly did not tell them to make themselves at home.” He also noted if police needed a break, a police station was nearby. The Wentworth District station is at 5101 S. Wentworth.
Trump takes aim again at Chicago

On May 31 in Chicago, 18 people were killed as the city grappled with both peaceful protests and looting after the death of George Floyd, who’d been pinned down by a white Minneapolis police officer with a knee to his neck. The tally was the most homicides in one day in Chicago in six decades, according to the University of Chicago Crime Lab.


Trump took note of that deadly day in Chicago during his remarks Thursday in Dallas, where he decried “radical efforts to defund, dismantle and disband the police.”

Since his 2016 campaign, Trump has been bashing Democrat-led Chicago as the city struggles with violent crime and shootings. Trump has told often a never proven story that he once met a Chicago police officer who told him how to swiftly solve crime in the city.

Against that backdrop, in Dallas, Trump said, “They’ve taken a lot of the police protection away in Chicago, and they have great, great police in Chicago. I know Chicago very well, but they’re not allowed to do what they can do better than anybody. They could do the job very easily.

“… We’ll make no progress and heal no wounds by falsely labeling tens of millions of decent Americans as racists or bigots. We have to get everybody together. ... And we’ll do that. We’ll do it. I think we’re going to do it very easily. It’ll go quickly and it’ll go — it’ll go very easily.”

Rush, asked on CNN to react to Trump’s claim of a potential quick fix, lambasted the president as being “in the throes of some sort of insanity.”

Rush, who has spent more than 50 years dealing with chronic police misconduct issues in Chicago, said Trump “is a person who has lost his sense of reality.”

I don't believe the people of  his district will tolerate this level of incompetence. The man doesn't know where he is at or what happened. 

9 comments:

  1. Anonymous6/13/2020

    If anyone thinks for a moment that cops would go into Booby Rush's offices without an invitation, you're nuts. Institutional knowledge is ingrained in the CPD and Booby's pedigree is known to everyone who works around him. He's an untouchable - federal snitch, tax evader, slanderer (even in the face of contradictory video), and still free as a bird.

    We are receiving information that these officers had worked a fifteen-to-sixteen-hour day and were sent home afterwards, under orders to return at 0700 hours for their adjusted hours. In fact, the Slum times reports:
    According to a timeline provided to the Chicago Sun-Times by Rush’s office, the security alarm went off at 9:48 p.m. Sunday, May 31, after a window in the office was broken. Police entered at 12:48 a.m. Monday, June 1, and left about 4:30 a.m.
    On Monday, the Department switched to working seven-to-seven (0700 to 1900 hours). If they left at 0430, they were due back in less than three hours. Barely enough time to go home, change and head back to work. If they were really lucky, they got the eleven-to-eleven and maybe five hours sleep.

    Booby pulls the bullshit card again, saying:
    He also noted if police needed a break, a police station was nearby. The Wentworth District station is at 5101 S. Wentworth.
    So Booby feels it isn't difficult for officers to walk three blocks through a war zone? They had no cars - they were dropped off by bus. But that would have meant abandoning their post - a post ordered by their superiors - to protect the congresscritter's office. You think he'd be the tiniest bit grateful, but that isn't in Booby's character.

    This screams set up.

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  2. Anonymous6/13/2020

    and background requirements and checks for public office. He is a domestic terrorist.

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  3. Anonymous6/13/2020

    https://youtu.be/efeVzpMtt1Q

    Murph, watch this

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  4. In the March 2020 Democratic Primary, Booby Rush had three opponents: Robert Emmons, Jr., Sarah Gad and Ameena Nuur Matthews. :-[

    In the November 2020 General Election, Rush faces Republican Philanese White. :-[

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  5. The looted or burgarlized office looks so nice and clean. :-\

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  6. Why don't Fred Hampton's and Mark Clark's families speak out against Bobby Rush? Are they afraid?:-\

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  7. Anonymous6/13/2020

    Bobby Rush is a scumbag

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  8. Some of the 19th Ward is in Booby Rush's congressional district.
    (*_*)

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  9. Booby Rush has a GoFundMe for popcorn. B-)

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