Chicago Sun-Times

City lawyer: Family can’t prove man was shot by officer

- BYJONSEIDE­L Staff Reporter Email: jseidel@ suntimes. com Twitter:@ SeidelCont­ent

In the hours after his close friend suffered a gunshot wound to his head, Chicago Police Officer Patrick Kelly found himself handcuffed to a wall in a CPD interview room.

Federal jurors saw blackandwh­ite video Tuesday of Kelly sitting in that interview room, surrounded by plain walls and a checkered floor, as opening statements continued in a trial revolving around the gunshot wound that left Michael D. LaPorta permanentl­y disabled.

The bullet came from Kelly’s servicewea­pon. And a lawyer for LaPorta’s family said earlier this week that there is “overwhelmi­ng evidence” that Kelly shot LaPorta. That lawyer also alleged that Chicago Police circled the wagons to protect one of their own.

But Eileen Rosen, a lawyer representi­ng the city, pointed to the video of Kelly in the interview room and told jurors, “that’s not special treatment.”

She also predicted LaPorta’s family will fall short of a key hurdle at the end of what is expected to be a weekslong trial: convincing the jury that Kelly pulled the trigger early on the morning of Jan. 12, 2010.

“They cannot prove that Kelly shot LaPorta,” Rosen said.

The jury hearing the case in U. S. District Judge Harry Leinenwebe­r’s courtroom will be asked to consider whether the city failed to rein in Kelly, an officer with an alleged history of violence described in court as a “loose- cannon, tickingtim­e- bomb police officer.”

Earlier this year, the city settled for $ 500,000 a separate lawsuit brought by a woman who said she suffered amiscarria­ge after Kelly used a Taser on her three times in August 2013. The LaPorta family’s lawsuit also alleges 19 complaints had been registered againstKel­ly in six years before LaPorta’s shooting.

Still, Rosen told jurors Tuesday that anyone can file a complaint against a Chicago Police officer. And she said the Chicago Police Department and the Cook County state’s attorney’s office have looked into LaPorta’s shooting and chose not to bring charges.

CPDis nowtaking a second look at the incident, though. Kelly remains on the force but has been assigned to administra­tive duties. His lawyer declined to comment this week.

Despite promising “overwhelmi­ng evidence” pointing to Kelly during his opening statement Monday, Rosen said the LaPorta family’s lawyer chose instead to highlight the evidence that is missing from the case.

When she had her turn Tuesday, Rosen played a recording of a 911 call— the second placed byKelly the day LaPorta was shot in Kelly’s home — in which Kelly can be heard sobbing and telling a dispatcher, “I need a f------ ambulance!”

The shooting occurred after LaPorta and Kelly spent the night drinking at multiple bars with other off- duty Chicago Police officers.

When paramedics arrived atKelly’s home after the shooting, Rosen said Kelly was “extremely upset,” “agitated” and “not calm- able.” He yelled obscenitie­s at a sergeant andwas ultimately arrested for simple assault. A judge later found him not guilty, Rosen said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States