Chicago officials on Friday released videos from about 100 open investigations of officer-involved shootings and use of force after months of backlash over the police department"s begrudging transparency on such cases.
The unprecedented release unearths footage and previously unseen investigative reports for cases from the past five years, including more than a dozen fatal shootings of civilians.
The Independent Police Review Authority, which investigates allegations of police abuse, oversaw the release and created a web portal for exploring the cases.
The document dump comes nearly seven months after the city released dash cam footage showing the fatal 2014 police shooting of teenager Laquan McDonald a video that officials kept secret for more than a year.
Chicago detective quits two days before hearing on fatal shooting
Its long-awaited release led to a murder charge against Officer Jason Van d**e, and a gradual trickle of other videos showing fatal police confrontations from the past few years. The video also led to an upheaval in the police departments leadership and a U.S. Justice Department investigation into the forces violent conduct.
In February, Mayor Rahm Emanuel approved a new transparency policy mandating the release of all documents from use-of-force incidents.
Fridays release unearthed videos from cases including:
Ismael Jamison, who reportedly attacked the passengers and driver of a city bus, then lunged at a responding officer in 2012. The video appears to show an officer shooting Jamison after his police confrontation, followed by other officers struggling to subdue him as he bleeds on the ground. He survived the shooting.
Chicago officer who shot Laquan 16 times no "monster": wife
Terence Clark, a Canadian tourist who got into a fight with an off-duty officer while watching the Blackhawks win the 2015 Stanley Cup on TV in a hot dog restaurant. Clark was treated for head injuries.
Surveillance footage from an electronics store robbery in 2012, which ended with one suspect David Strong being fatally shot, and the others, Leland Dudley and John Givens, being wounded. The surviving suspects were later convicted of Strongs murder, since he died as they committed a crime, but they also sued the city for excessive force.
Most of the videos do not have audio a common occurrence for Chicago police footage, which drew further scrutiny to the departments sporadic releases in the past six months. The videos are also not edited for length or clarity of what is shown.
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The Academy Awards air at 7 p.m. Sunday night on ABC live fromLos Angeles.
But first, two of the nominees dropped by WTOP:Joshua Oppenheimer, director of The Look of Silence, and Evgeny Afineevsky,director of Winter on Fire: Ukraines Fight for Freedom.
Theyll both compete in a highly competitive category againstMatthew Heinemans Cartel Land, Asif Kapadias Amy andLiz Garbus What Happened, Miss Simone? for Best Documentary.
I saw all of them and theyre all fascinating movies. I fell in love with Amy (Winehouse) through the movie. I felt in the same situation as Cartel Land because we both were exposed in kind of violent stuff. Nina Simone I was blown away by this amazing personality Look of Silence was kind of a sequel to Act of Killing. All of them are extraordinary filmmakers,Afineevsky tells WTOP.
Read below for our in-depth convos with both Afineevsky and Oppenheimer.
The Look of Silence
Director: Joshua Oppenheimer
He grew up in the D.C. area and graduated from Montgomery Blair High School in Silver Spring, Maryland before ultimately settling in Copenhagen, Denmark. But all these years later, director Joshua Oppenheimer has created two of the most powerful documentaries youll ever see.
The first was the Oscar-nominatedThe Act of Killing (2014), interviewingformer Indonesian death squad leaders who killed up to three million suspected communists ina 1965 coup, then convinced the killers to reenact the killings in Hollywood genres, from gangster pictures to lavish musicals.
Now, Oppenheimer has done it again with the Oscar-nominated The Look of Silence (2016), which serves as a companion piece by sending the brother of a victim to interview the killers. Optometrist Adi Rukun, brother of the murderedRamli, asks the killers probing questions duringeyeexams.
They didnt know who I was. They knew just that I was Joshuas friend and I was there to test their eyes. I asked questions step by step, becoming deeper and deeper, and as the questions would become deeper, they would become suspicious. Then when I would reveal who I was, that I was the brother of a victim, they would respond with anger with panic with shock, Rukun says.
The eye exams not only bait the perpetrators into facing their past actions at Snake River, the lenses also provide a symbolic lens for we cinematic viewers, bringing a disturbing history into focus.
The results have broken 50 years of silence in Indonesia, and the film bares witness to the very first conversations that break that silence, Oppenheimer says.
The results are shocking, as the perpetrators rationalize and even brag about the executions. While Anwar Congo tried to vomit up his sins in a fit of dry heaves at the end of The Act of Killing, the death squad leaders in The Look of Silence show very little remorse for their actions.
Inong, the very first perpetrator we see Adi confronting in the film, hes telling very horrific stories about what he did. Adi asks the question in a pause, Is everybody around here afraid of you? And instantly we realize the reason everybody would be afraid of him is not so much what he did then, but because of the way hes been openly boasting about it ever since, Oppenheimer says.
The one interviewee that seems to show remorse is the daughter of one of the killers, who sits next to her father during the interview and learns of her dads deadly deeds for the first time.
Adi gets up to leave and she looks like she doesnt want to let him go. She gives him a hug, almost imploring him in her eyes, Please dont go. Adi hugs her, but then Adi also hugs her dad, who hasntexpressed any remorse, Oppenheimer says of the films most powerful moment.
Rukun says he felt a glimmer of hope and relief in reconciling with the next generation.
At the beginning of the meeting she was proud of what her father had done, of the killings. She then realizes what he did and changes 180 degrees. Shes shocked to discover who her father really was. She asked for an apology, and my response to her was, Your fathers sins are his sins. Theyre not your sins. As his daughter, you still must love and honor him as your parent. So there was a reconciliation between us,Rukun says.This was my hope, that there would be this reconciliation.
Listen below for the full interview with Joshua Oppenheimer and AdiRukun (Oppenheimer translates).
Winter on Fire: Ukraines Fight for Freedom
Director:Evgeny Afineevsky
While Oppenheimer grew up inthe D.C. area, his fellow Oscar nominee Evgeny Afineevsky hails from theotherside of the world. Now an American citizen, he was born in the Russian city of Kazan yes, the same name asOn the Waterfront director Elia Kazan so you could sayAfineevsky was fated to be a filmmaker.ButAfineevsky says he could have never imagined such a future as a child.
If somebody when I was a child in Russia was telling me that one day I will be stepping in Hollywood and doing my marks on history I would be laughing and not believing. But I guess the skys the limit when you are a hardworking person and you believe in yourself, Afineevsky tells WTOP.
Afineevsky discovered16 mm film and madehis first documentary at age 16.
I still remember the smell of film and the smell of chemicals when youre develop in dark room and youre splicing and cutting the film. But right now its digital age, and only because of digital age, I have been able to document all this history. Only with the help of modern technology and the variety of different equipment, weve been able to facilitate and document all these events on the go.
Thus, we get the immersive documentary Winter on Fire: Ukraines Fight for Freedom (2016) capturing on-the-ground footage of the Euromaidan protests in 2013 and 2014 as students called for Ukraine to join the European Union.Facing violent pushback from the government backed by Russia, who would soon invade Crimea they forced President Viktor F. Yanukovich to resign.
Even how it started, it was so spontaneous. No one was expecting to beaten or kidnapped or even killed, so all these events were so spontaneous that the technology helped us achieve our goal.
Not only did modern technology help the filmmakers capture the footage, it also helped spark the revolution in the first place, as the Ukrainian demonstrators organizedviasocial media.
Nowadays you can start a revolution through social media. Its amazing that people united through social media, and then you can see their unity on the square. Its amazing to see these transitions from social media into the reality,Afineevsky says.
Similarly, the film tracksa young boy who runs around helping protesters charge their cellphones.
Hes little, but hes not little. Through all of these 93 days, I was observing this amazing transition, amazing maturity of him. Its an extraordinary character, because he runs from his home on the first day and never goes back. Hes a fascinating character, we can see in Les Mis all of these kids on top of those barricades. (Winter on Fire) is aLes Mis in our harsh reality of our days, he says.
While the themes echo Les Mis, the process of shooting the film was far more dangerous.
When youre seeing people covered by blood, when youre seeing people kidnapped, when youre seeing bullets really flying towardsus. We were sprayed by tear gas and cold water in this cold weather. It never stopped them from believing what they believed and stood for.
Afineevsky says the peoples bravery inspired him to carry outhis filmmaking duty.
I am obligated to document this story. I am obligated as a filmmaker, a true filmmaker in heart and soul, to bring it to the entire world. Its all important for the generations. Through this movie, you can go back into the centuries when our founding fathers in the United States fought for our freedom, our democracy, our values that were living right now. Its some kind of reminder to our generation living right now that things cant be forgotten and things cant be taken for granted.
Listen below for the fullconversationwith Winter on Fire director EvgenyAfineevsky.