CHICAGO — Let’s be honest, not many people had read the Chicago Police union contract before video of the fatal shooting of Laquan McDonald was released and the U.S. Justice Department launched an investigation into dirty dealings at the Police Department.

As things turned out, the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7 contract is filled with fascinating tidbits that shed light on what it’s like to be a big-city cop — especially when an officer faces misconduct allegations or has fired a gun on duty.

For instance, according to the police contract, officers who face misconduct allegations or fire a gun:

• Must make a first statement to their supervisor in secret.

• Cannot be publicly identified.

• Can postpone making statements in shooting cases with people other than their supervisor for two hours unless he or she claims to be “physically or emotionally unable to provide a statement within the two-hour time period … accepting at face value all good faith claims of an Officer’s inability to provide a statement.” (The clock doesn’t start ticking until the officer is officially asked for a statement.)

• Receive provided written copies of all their statements.

• Get interviewed by the Independent Police Review Authority “preferably while … on duty, or if feasible, during daylight hours.”

• Allowed to interrupt interrogation sessions, which must be a "reasonable" amount of time, for "personal necessities, meals, telephone calls and rest."

• May be allowed to review, when permitted by the city, any video or audio evidence before being interviewed by IPRA investigators.

• Can revise statements without punishment after seeing video or other evidence from the shooting.

• Will not be charged with violating Rule 14 (making false statements, written or oral) if they are not allowed to review video or other evidence before being interviewed by IPRA.

• Can decline to take a lie-detector test.

• Shall not be made available to be interviewed by reporters unless the officer is criminally convicted or discipline is finalized by the Chicago Police Board or police superintendent.

• Shall be informed of the identity of the two officers (and just two) assigned to conduct the misconduct interrogation.

• Can agree to “mediate” the resolution of misconduct allegations with IPRA or Internal Affairs in private (without case investigators present) to negotiate disciplinary action. If the officer doesn’t agree with proposed punishment, information from mediation meetings “will not be used against the Officer or included in the file at any later date.”

Fraternal Order of Police President Dean Angelo Sr. (l) and Mayor Rahm Emanuel. View Full Caption DNAinfo

Keep reading the 178-page document and you’ll find even more intriguing details.

For instance, the contract also allows officers who face up to three days' suspension to forfeit accumulated vacation, personal days, and even “baby furlough days” rather than being removed from actually serving a suspension.

Also, officers disciplined for misconduct who appeal their punishment to an arbitrator are not required to serve suspensions — and remain on paid status — until an arbitrator (or the Police Board in officer termination cases) makes a ruling on the merits of punishment.

And when it comes to police officer pay, there are plenty of ways officers make an extra buck for doing things like being available for duty (even if they don't show up), speaking Spanish, wearing uniforms and going to court.

For instance, the contract guarantees an officer:

• At least two hours of overtime “call back” pay for officers required to return to beat meetings when not on duty

• At least two hours of overtime pay to attend required court sessions when not on duty.

• A $1,800-a-year uniform allowance

• A $3,480-a-year “duty availability” allowance that is “not dependent on an officer being present for duty for an entire pay period.”

• Time-and-a-half pay for serving as a language translator outside their assigned unit, plus a two-hour overtime pay bonus if work is done not during regularly assigned duties.

• No limit on the amount of compensation time due an officer can accumulate.

While Mayor Rahm Emanuel has made it clear that he plans to ask the police union to renegotiate some terms of the contract related to police misconduct investigations and discipline, police union officials have said they’re not interested in revisiting the deal that expires in 2017.

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