Chicago's NPR News Source
John Catanzara

John Catanzara, president of Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7 in Chicago, spoke in front of the union’s headquarters on June 26, 2020, as Black police retirees protested his leadership.

Controversial Chicago police union chief retires from the Chicago Police Department

The head of Chicago’s largest police union officially submitted his paperwork to retire from the police department on Tuesday, after saying he would rather leave the force than go through with a disciplinary hearing that he called a “farce.”

John Catanzara said he would remain president of the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7 and that he plans to run for mayor against Mayor Lori Lightfoot, with whom he has engaged in a bitter war of words over a host of issues. Most recently, the two battled over Catanzara’s call for his officers to refuse Lightfoot’s order to inform the department of their COVID-19 vaccination status.

According to documents posted online by WGN-TV Catanzara wrote “Let’s go Brandon” in the remarks section of a personnel action request confirming his retirement. Catanzara is a vocal supporter of former President Donald Trump, and the “Brandon” phrase is used in right-wing circles as a stand-in for a profanity aimed at President Joe Biden.

The Chicago Police Boardhearing that started Monday centered on Catanzara’s alleged actions and online statements; He compared the city’s employee vaccine mandate to Nazi Germany, called Muslims “savages (who) deserve a bullet,” and appeared in police uniform to promote Trump.

Catanzara said he believed he would not get a fair hearing and that he would almost certainly be fired — as recommended by Police Superintendent David Brown — and he did not want to give Lightfoot that satisfaction.

“I will have my vindication when I tell her to get the hell out of my office and give me the keys in 2023,” he told the Chicago Sun-Times.

Under union bylaws, elected positions in the union, including the one the 53-year-old Catanzara now holds, can be held by retired officers who are collecting their pensions. Catanzara’s attorney, Tim Grace, said a felony conviction could jeopardize his pension, but that he can collect his pension by retiring and he could even collect his pension if the disciplinary process had continued and resulted in Catanzara’s firing.

Catanzara has been a police officer for 27 years. He was elected to a three-year term as union president in 2020.

The Latest
Deputy Sean Grayson has been fired and charged with murder for the shooting. He has pleaded not guilty. The family says the DOJ is investigating.
Hoover, called “one of the most notorious criminals in Illinois history,” is scheduled to make a rare public appearance in court Sept. 26.
The Illinois Coalition Against Domestic Violence typically releases its annual report in October but was so alarmed by the findings, it decided to publish the 2023 report months earlier.
A Cook County judge has been told by an appeals court to reconsider whether Kimberlynn Bolanos was mentally fit when she entered a guilty plea in 2016. At a hearing Tuesday, the judge made arrangements for yet another mental evaluation.
Sonya Massey called 911 to report a potential prowler before being shot inside her home. Footage shows she was cowering and holding a pot when the deputy opened fire.