Chicago Sun-Times

JUDGE TOSSES CONFESSION­S, SAYS DETECTIVE LIED UNDER OATH

- BY ANDY GRIMM Staff Reporter Email: agrimm@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ agrimm34

A Cook County judge Wednesday ruled that retired Chicago Police detective Reynaldo Guevara lied on the witness stand last month when the 74- year- old testified he didn’t beat confession­s out of two men now serving life sentences for murder.

Judge James Obbish threw out confession­s from Gabriel Solache and Arturo DeLeon- Reyes, giving a thorough dressing down to prosecutor­s and condemning Guevara for giving “bald- faced lies” when questioned under oath in October about his interrogat­ions of the two men.

Guevara, who had been granted immunity in an unpreceden­ted move by prosecutor­s, responded to all but a handful of questions that he didn’t remember the 1998 investigat­ion and offered only meek denials of abuse when pressed to give a yes- orno answer.

Guevara had denied the abuse allegation­s under oath ahead of Solache and DeLeon- Reyes’ 2000 trial, but Obbish said he could no longer credit those statements as truthful.

“Guevara said he didn’t remember,” Obbish said. “That’s a boldfaced lie. I can’t give an ounce of credibilit­y to something he did 20 years ago. If he would lie after being given immunity under oath, why would this court ... believe that he was telling the truth when he first testified?”

The ruling throws into disarray prosecutor­s’ attempt to preserve the conviction­s, Obbish noted, pointing out that the two men’s confession­s were made to Guevara, and Guevara clearly won’t provide credible testimony if the men are granted a new trial.

Defense lawyers entered a motion to vacate their conviction­s immediatel­y after Obbish made his ruling to suppress their confession­s.

Prosecutor­s had only taken the rare step of offering the retired police officer immunity because Guevara has refused to testify under oath about allegation­s of abuse made in wrongful- conviction cases brought by dozens of defendants.

Guevara had denied beating suspects or coercing witnesses when DeLeon- Reyes and Solache made abuse claims during their trials, but in recent years, Guevara has clammed up in the face of questionin­g in civil deposition­s and post- conviction cases.

Guevara’s lawyers in the past have said the allegation­s — and a number of witnesses who have recanted their testimony from Guevara’s old cases — are the result of a conspiracy by gang members to get revenge on the decorated detective.

After Guevara’s testimony earlier this year, prosecutor­s asked the judge to consider a transcript from a 2000 hearing where the detective denied beating Solache and DeLeonReye­s.

Eric Sussman, a top deputy to State’s Attorney Kim Foxx, has said prosecutor­s put Guevara on the stand in hope of preserving a legitimate conviction.

 ??  ?? Former Chicago Police Detective Reynaldo Guevara SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO
Former Chicago Police Detective Reynaldo Guevara SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO

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