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News (Media Awareness Project) - US IL: Prosecutors Must Drop Cases of 9 Chicago Officers
Title:US IL: Prosecutors Must Drop Cases of 9 Chicago Officers
Published On:2006-09-29
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-01-13 02:04:26
110 Arrests in Doubt:

PROSECUTORS MUST DROP CASES OF 9 CHICAGO OFFICERS IN SCANDAL'S SHADOW

CHICAGO -- Top Cook County prosecutors have ordered their staff to
drop any case that nine special-operations police officers had a
significant role in handling, which could nullify the arrests of 110
people charged in gun, drug, burglary and violence cases, according
to a memo circulated this month in the Cook County state's attorney's office.

Four of the Chicago police officers have been charged with robberies
and kidnappings. Prosecutors have alleged they falsely arrested many people.

The other five officers have been stripped of their police powers but
not charged. Prosecutors decided to drop their cases because they
doubted the cases could proceed with police witnesses stripped of
their authority.

Those officers could eventually be exonerated, but "there's no
timetable on how long those investigations will take," said Bernard
Murray, chief of felony prosecutions for the state's attorney's office.

State's Atty. Richard A. Devine had earlier said his office planned
to review whether cases needed to be dropped. The Sept. 12 memo
instructs staffers to drop any case in which the nine officers made
the arrest, recovered physical evidence, signed a search warrant or
provided information from an informant that led to the arrest.

Murray said the memo, listing 110 arrests tied to the officers, was
written to guide prosecutors on how to proceed. "We made the decision
to err on the side of caution," he said.

One case to be dropped, alleging drug dealing, involves a suspect who
separately has been charged with murder. In the drug case, the
arresting officer was one of the policemen charged this month; the
murder case does not involve detectives connected to the officers'
charges. The drug and murder cases had been moving through the courts
together, but now only the murder case will move forward.

"We cannot prove our cases," Murray said. "The cases where the
defendant was indicted and they were the main officers, we cannot
sustain the burden of proof."
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