During George Floyd protests, 13 Chicago cops lounged in a congressman's office and ate his popcorn

CHICAGO – Late one night two weeks ago, a group of Chicago police officers put up their feet and lounged in the burglarized office of a U.S. congressman, preparing popcorn and coffee for themselves and napping on the couch.

U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush, D-Illinois, announced in a press conference Thursday that several officers were caught on videotape in his campaign office on the South Side.

The office had been burglarized amid looting earlier in the day, and the videotape of the officers picked up around 1 a.m. on June 1. About 13 officers were lounging in the office, including three supervisors and 10 other officers, for four or five hours, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said.

"They even had the unmitigated gall to go and make coffee for themselves and pop popcorn, my popcorn, in my microwave, while looters were tearing apart businesses within their sight, within their reach," Rush said. "They did not care about what was happening to business people, to this city. They didn’t care. They absolutely didn’t care."

Police officers sit in the office of U.S. Representative Bobby L. Rush.
Police officers sit in the office of U.S. Representative Bobby L. Rush.

One officer was asleep on a couch in the office. Another had his head down on a desk. Rush said the officers were "violating (his) personal space."

The images of the lounging cops have gone viral. Several Chicagoans began using them as their social media cover and profile photos.

Lightfoot said the officers were "having a little hangout for themselves while small businesses on the South Side were looted and burned, while their colleagues were getting bottles thrown at their heads."

The incident took place during protests after the death of George Floyd, who was pinned to the ground by a Minneapolis police officer who knelt on his neck for almost nine minutes. Floyd's death sparked nationwide demonstrations over racial inequities and police brutality. Some protests were marred by violence initially, but most were peaceful.

Police officers sit in the office of U.S. Representative Bobby L. Rush.
Police officers sit in the office of U.S. Representative Bobby L. Rush.

Nodding to Chicago's history of delaying the release of video evidence, as in the case of the police murder of Laquan McDonald, Lightfoot showed several stills of the video at the press conference. Lightfoot said Rush first showed her the video on Wednesday.

"We should all be disgusted, and we should all feel hurt and betrayed, in this moment of all moments," Lightfoot said. "The officers in this incident, and others we’ve seen in the past weeks, have demonstrated a total disregard for their colleagues, for the badge and for those they’re sworn to serve and protect."

Lightfoot said officials would investigate the incident and look into whether the officers committed a crime.

The city's new Police Superintendent David Brown also apologized to Rush on behalf of the city. Brown said the officers would be held accountable.

Rep. Bobby Rush, D-Ill., speaks during a news conference about the "Emmett Till Antilynching Act" which would designate lynching as a hate crime under federal law, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2020.
Rep. Bobby Rush, D-Ill., speaks during a news conference about the "Emmett Till Antilynching Act" which would designate lynching as a hate crime under federal law, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2020.

"If you sleep during a riot, what do you do on a regular shift?" Brown said. "What makes you comfortable enough that a supervisor won’t hold you accountable? Supervisors ... need to step up or step out. I’m not playing."

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Lightfoot said that "not one of these officers will be allowed to hide behind the badge and act like nothing ever happened."

First Deputy Superintendent of Police Anthony Riccio called the officers' actions "completely indefensible."

Asked whether the officers should be fired, Lightfoot said "the strongest action that we can take should be taken, particularly with the supervisors."

Lightfoot said she did not know what district the officers were from.

"You know who you are," Lightfoot said.

Police officers sit in the office of U.S. Representative Bobby L. Rush.
Police officers sit in the office of U.S. Representative Bobby L. Rush.

Officials said that almost every store surrounding the congressman's office had been looted. That same weekend, 17 people were murdered in Chicago, Lightfoot said, but it was not immediately clear whether the violence happened near the area in question.

Asked why it took so long for the incident to come to light, Rush said that his youngest sister had died at the University of Chicago Hospital the same day he was alerted to the video.

"My family and I had to take some time to process all of that. That was the priority for my family and for myself," Rush said.

Chicago has witnessed a series of police misconduct issues in recent weeks. Last week, one officer who gave protesters the middle finger was stripped of his police powers, and two other officers were relieved of their police powers after viral cellphone video showed officers dragging two people out of a car, one of whom says an officer pressed his knee into her neck.

This week, another officer was stripped of his powers after he was caught on video using a homophobic slur amid unrest in the city.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Chicago police lounged in Rep. Bobby Rush's burglarized office