Jody Weis

Jody Peter "J.P." Weis is the former Superintendent of Police of the Chicago Police Department. Weis was selected to serve as the 54th Superintendent of Police by Mayor Richard M. Daley. Upon his resignation and retirement, he was replaced by Interim Superintendent Terry Hillard, a predecessor. He was permanently replaced by Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who named Garry McCarthy to the post. Superintendent Weis, when he became Superintendent, had replaced former Superintendent of Police Philip J. Cline after his resignation. Superintendent Weis took office on February 1, 2008.

Jody P. Weis
60th Superintendent of the Chicago Police Department
In office
February 1, 2008  March 1, 2011
Appointed byRichard M. Daley
Preceded byPhil Cline
Succeeded byTerry G. Hillard (interim)
Personal details
Born (1957-12-10) December 10, 1957
Fort Myers, Florida
Alma materUniversity of Tampa
ProfessionLaw enforcement
Police career
DepartmentFederal Bureau of Investigation
Chicago Police Department
Service years1981-2017
RankFederal agent (sworn in 1985)
Superintendent (sworn in 2008)

Weis's previous experience included 22 years in the Federal Bureau of Investigation.[1] Weis graduated from the University of Tampa in 1979.[2]

On March 17, 2009, a few months after the Chicago lodge of the Fraternal Order of Police announced that they would be funding the defense of Cmdr. Jon Burge,[3] the lodge produced a vote of no-confidence in Weis.[4]

A 2012 audit by the Chicago Inspector General determined that the Chicago Police Department had under-counted aggravated assault and aggravated battery victims by 25 percent by not following state guidelines by counting each incident rather than each victim.[5][6][7] Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy attributed the error to the administration of his predecessor, Jody Weis.[5][6]

References


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