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Judge denies Chicago police union’s effort to recuse her from case

Judge Cecilia Horan had put a temporary restraining order on the Chicago FOP’s president

Catanzara chicago fraternal order of police

In this Aug. 10, 2021, file photo, Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7 President John Catanzara speaks to reporters at the Leighton Criminal Courthouse in Chicago.

Ashlee Rezin/Chicago Sun-Times via AP, File

By Don Babwin
Associated Press

CHICAGO — A judge who ordered the president of Chicago’s police officers’ union to stop publicly encouraging his members to disobey the city’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate on Wednesday refused the union’s request to recuse herself from the case.

The union wanted Cook County Judge Cecilia Horan to recuse herself because of what its attorney, Joel D’Alba, called the “appearance of impropriety.” The law firm where Horan was a partner before she became a judge had been involved with a task force that helped create a consent decree — widely criticized by the union — aimed at overhauling the police force a few years ago.

During the hearing, Horan said, “I did not know about the task force report at all when I was a partner at the firm.”

The ruling comes amid a battle between the city and John Catanzara, the president of the Fraternal Order of Police lodge in Chicago, over a requirement that all city employees, including police officers, enter their vaccine status in the city’s data portal.

On Tuesday, Police Superintendent David Brown said 21 department employees had been placed on “no-pay status” for refusing to provide the information. He said the department needed to still talk to hundreds of officers who had thus far not provided the information.

Horan’s order is set to expire Monday but an attorney for the city told the judge that he would ask her to extend it and expand it beyond union officials during a hearing on Monday.

“There have been mass email communications coming from officials other than Mr. Catanzara that we believe, if they do not violate the letter of your honor’s order, violate the spirit,” said attorney Michael Warner.

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