Chicago's newly selected top cop says reducing violence, officers' well being among top priorities

Police supervisors, including Chief of the Bureau of Counterterrorism Larry Snelling, center, prepare to have the body of a Chicago police officer transferred to the Cook County Medical Examiner on March 1, 2023, in Chicago. Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson on Sunday, Aug. 13, 2023, named Snelling, the police department's counterterrorism head, as his choice for police superintendent of the nation's third-largest city. (John J. Kim/Chicago Sun-Times via AP)

CHICAGO (AP) — A Chicago native pegged as the city's next police superintendent said Monday at his introductory news conference that his top priorities include finding ways to tamp down violent crime.

Larry Snelling, 54, a former police patrolman-turned-head of the department counterterrorism division, cited his own experiences in calling for a comprehensive strategy to address the violence.

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