Chicago Sun-Times

3 COPS CHARGED WITH LAQUAN COVER- UP

Indictment is believed to be thefirst time officers have faced criminal charges for covering up for a fellow cop accused of misconduct

- BY ANDY GRIMM Staff Reporter

In a historic move sure to be watched nationwide, three current or former Chicago Police officers are facing criminal charges in an alleged cover- up to protect Officer Jason Van Dyke, who fatally shot 17- year- old Laquan McDonald.

Special prosecutor Patricia Brown Holmes on Tuesday announced a three- count grand jury indictment charging patrol officers Joseph Walsh and Thomas Gaffney and detective David March with conspiracy, obstructio­n of justice and official misconduct.

Holmes accused the trio of allegedly filing false accounts of the October 2014 shooting to keep Van Dyke from being accused of any wrongdoing. She also said the three failed to interview witnesses who might have contradict­ed their faulty version of events.

March, 58, the lead detective in the McDonald case, cleared Van Dyke of wrongdoing, despite dashcam video that appears to show McDonald walking away from Van Dyke when he opened fire and shot the teen 16 times.

Van Dyke was charged with firstdegre­e murder in November 2015 on the day before that video was publicly released.

“This indictment alleges that these defendants lied about what occurred during a police- involved shooting in order to prevent independen­t criminal investigat­ors from learning the truth,” Holmes said at a news conference. “The indictment makes clear that it is unacceptab­le to obey an unofficial code of silence.”

The 11- page indictment lays out a conspiracy by March; Walsh, 48, who was Van Dyke’s partner, and Thomas Gaffney, 43, an officer who was one of the first to encounter McDonald the night of Oct. 20, 2014. The indictment refers to Van Dyke as “Individual A,” and also includes other officers, identified as unidentifi­ed individual­s “B” through “G.”

Questioned by reporters about the prospect of more officers facing charges, Holmes said repeatedly: “The investigat­ion is ongoing.”

Gaffney — who has been on desk duty and is the only one of the three officers charged who has not retired or resigned — was suspended Tuesday after the charges were announced, police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said.

Officials from the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7, which represents nearly all the department’s rank- andfile officers, issued a statement saying they will not comment on the ongoing investigat­ion. “At this time, we have not reviewed the indictment and, as general practice, we do not comment on ongoing investigat­ions,” the statement read.

Holmes, a former Cook County judge and federal prosecutor, was appointed special prosecutor 10 months ago at the urging of activists concerned that the criminal investigat­ion of the McDonald shooting would begin and end with the charges against Van Dyke. Joseph McMahon, the Kane County state’s attorney, has been appointed special prosecutor to handle the murder case against Van Dyke.

The indictment marks the first time CPD officers have been targeted criminally for following an unwritten “code of silence” and for lying to cover for an officer who committed alleged on- thejob misconduct, said Craig Futterman, a University of Chicago Law School professor who was part of the effort to have a special prosecutor probe the handling of the McDonald investigat­ion.

“This is at least as important as prosecutin­g the individual officer in the fatal shooting for murder,” Futterman said. “If we want that culture ( of silence) to end, and police officers want it to end, we have to know that there are consequenc­es when officers lie.”

March, the detective, resigned in August 2016 after a city of Chicago Inspector General’s report said the veteran detective should be fired for his handling of the case. The same report also called for firing Walsh, Van Dyke’s partner, who told investigat­ors that McDonald had been moving toward him and Van Dyke and was preparing to throw a knife at them when Van Dyke opened fire.

Cited in the indictment were entries in reports filed by March and other officers that depicted McDonald as moving toward the officers with his arm raised — and that the teen attempted to get up after he was shot. The indictment notes that March viewed the video and wrote in one report that the images were “consistent with the accounts of all witnesses.”

The indictment also notes that the officers did not make an effort to locate witnesses whose accounts of the shooting didn’t match the official version in police reports.

Gaffney was one of the first officers to encounter McDonald on the night of Oct. 20, 2014, in response to a Southwest Side merchant’s report that the teen was breaking into vehicles in a parking lot. The indictment alleges Gaffney submitted reports that stated Van Dyke and other officers had been injured by McDonald in the confrontat­ion.

It is not clear from the indictment how Gaffney’s actions differed significan­tly from that of the five other officers who were at the scene and gave accounts of the shooting that matched the versions given by Van Dyke and Walsh. Three other officers at the scene said they were looking away or didn’t see the shooting.

It also wasn’t clear howthe charges would impact Van Dyke’s murder case. The judge in Van Dyke’s case earlier this month said he wanted March to testify about statements Van Dyke made at the shooting scene.

A spokesman for Holmes said Tuesday that members of special prosecutor’s unit are not allowed to follow developmen­ts in Van Dyke’s case and that the timing of the indictment had nothing to do with March’s planned upcoming testimony.

Under an agreement with prosecutor­s, the three officers will make their first appearance in court on the charges on July 10, where they will be arraigned and bond will be set. The charges all are felony counts that carry sentences of up to six years in prison.

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 ??  ?? Special prosecutor Patricia Brown Holmes ( left) announced a grand jury indictment charging three Chicago cops with an alleged cover- up to protect Officer Jason Van Dyke ( right), who fatally shot Laquan McDonald in 2014.
Special prosecutor Patricia Brown Holmes ( left) announced a grand jury indictment charging three Chicago cops with an alleged cover- up to protect Officer Jason Van Dyke ( right), who fatally shot Laquan McDonald in 2014.
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 ?? CHICAGO POLICE DEPARTMENT, SUN- TIMES FILES ?? Left to right: Screen grabs from CPD dashcam video that show Officer Jason Van Dyke fatally shooting Laquan McDonald on Oct. 21, 2014.
CHICAGO POLICE DEPARTMENT, SUN- TIMES FILES Left to right: Screen grabs from CPD dashcam video that show Officer Jason Van Dyke fatally shooting Laquan McDonald on Oct. 21, 2014.
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