Chicago Sun-Times

SOURCE: FBI FOUND NO TAMPERING WITH BURGER KING VIDEO

Analysis shows restaurant’s system malfunctio­ned often

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN AND FRANK MAIN Staff Reporters

A forensic analysis for the FBI found “absolutely no evidence of tampering” with video from a Burger King near the scene where Laquan McDonald was gunned down by Chicago Police Officer Jason Van Dyke last year on the South Side, a source close to the investigat­ion said Monday.

An 86-minute gap in the Burger King tape and the fact that police officers spent about two hours at the restaurant on the night of the shooting trying to retrieve the video is fueling speculatio­n about a police conspiracy to erase that portion of the tape.

“The district manager told us it was deleted,” said Jeffrey Neslund, an attorney for the McDonald family. “It is curious that there were 86 minutes missing. We don’t know for a matter of certainty what happened to the Burger King video, but we know what the employees told us.”

But a source close to the investigat­ion said the FBI had the Burger King video “forensical­ly analyzed.”

“They looked at it and found absolutely no evidence of any tampering or any removal of any portion of the tape,” the source said.

“That system that Burger King has is a mess and it would break down in the weeks and months before this incident. There were major gaps everywhere,” the source added.

Why, then, did the officers spend nearly two hours at the Burger King?

“They were trying to get to the video to see if it captured anything. They weren’t trying to delete anything. . . . All that tape would show is [McDonald] running around before the shooting. There was no reason for them to tamper with it,” the source said.

The FBI analysis helps explain why Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez and Chicago Police Supt. Garry McCarthy virtually ruled out police tampering last week on the day Van Dyke, who is white, was charged with first-degree murder for shooting McDonald, who is black.

Conspiracy theories are also being fueled by reports that witnesses who saw Van Dyke unload 16 rounds into the McDonald’s body were turned away by at least five other officers at the scene.

Neslund, the attorney for the McDonald family, said other witnesses were taken to a police station “and told over a period of hours to change their stories.”

But the source said the Independen­t Police Review Authority spent about a week interviewi­ng witnesses after McDonald’s death before referring the case to the state’s attorneys’ office — and found no evidence anybody was turned away.

IPRA has suspended its administra­tive investigat­ion pending the outcome of the joint state and federal investigat­ion. When the IPRA investigat­ion resumes, sources said it will examine two other issues: Why none of at least five other officers who arrived at the scene offered medical assistance to McDonald and why none of the dashboard camera videos had any working audio.

“With 16 shots, officers may argue that McDonald was too shot up to bother. But somebody should have gone over to check on him,” the source said.

Last week, McCarthy said there was “no audio to my knowledge with any of the video that was taken” the night McDonald was killed. The superinten­dent acknowledg­ed that’s a break from police protocol.

When it resumes, the IPRA investigat­ion will determine if those microphone­s were turned off deliberate­ly or, if there was a malfunctio­n, whether there was a “repair ticket” on those faulty microphone­s, the source said.

 ?? | PAUL BEATY/AP ?? A protester holds a sign as people rally last Tuesday for Laquan McDonald, who was killed by CPD Officer Jason Van Dyke.
| PAUL BEATY/AP A protester holds a sign as people rally last Tuesday for Laquan McDonald, who was killed by CPD Officer Jason Van Dyke.

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