Updated
Updated · Chicago Tribune · Jul 2
Snelling Promotes 25-Year Veteran Ursitti to No. 2 Chicago Police Post Ahead of July Retirement
Updated
Updated · Chicago Tribune · Jul 2

Snelling Promotes 25-Year Veteran Ursitti to No. 2 Chicago Police Post Ahead of July Retirement

3 articles · Updated · Chicago Tribune · Jul 2

Summary

  • Antoinette Ursitti was elevated to first deputy superintendent, putting the chief of detectives in charge of Chicago Police Department day-to-day operations as Larry Snelling prepares to leave later this month.
  • Snelling said Ursitti earned the promotion through her work strengthening investigations and supporting both crime victims and department personnel; she brings more than two decades of CPD experience.
  • The move came 1 day before Snelling publicly announced his retirement, ending a roughly 3-year tenure in which he highlighted security for the 2024 Democratic National Convention and declines in shootings, homicides and violent crime.
  • Ursitti fills a post that had been vacant since Yolanda Talley resigned last fall, making the promotion an early signal of how CPD leadership will be structured during the coming transition.

Insights

With an interim superintendent taking over, who is now truly in control of the Chicago Police Department?
Why did Chicago's police chief make major appointments just one day before announcing his own retirement?
Will a new deputy, chosen by a retiring chief, truly be able to advance police reform?