Chicago Sun-Times

MCDONALD COVER-UP TRIAL OPENS WITH BATTLE OVER PAPERWORK AND A VERB

Lawyers for officers accused of covering for Van Dyke aim to minimize inconsiste­ncies in police reports

- BY ANDY GRIMM AND JON SEIDEL Staff Reporters

The unpreceden­ted conspiracy trial of three Chicago police officers began Tuesday with the claim that three men sworn to protect all of Chicago’s citizens set out in 2014 to protect only one: Jason Van Dyke.

Then, a team of prosecutor­s set out to bury Joseph Walsh, David March and Thomas Gaffney in piles of paperwork that form the centerpiec­e of a new trial now underway that revolves around the 2014 shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald.

Lawyers for the three officers fought back with arguments designed to minimize inconsiste­ncies in the more than a dozen reports at the heart of the case, casting the three men as good cops who confronted an out-of-control teenager.

“This case is about law and order,” James McKay, March’s attorney, said. “It’s about Laquan McDonald not following any laws that night. There must be some individual responsibi­lity attached to McDonald.”

The strategy of putting the dead teen on trial failed to stop a jury from convicting Van Dyke of second-degree murder last month.

The trial of Van Dyke’s fellow officers in an alleged cover-up — one that Special Prosecutor Patricia Brown Holmes’ team has said also involved higher-ranking officers who have not been charged — serves as a sequel of sorts.

“Instead of serving and protecting all citizens of Chicago, the defendants tried to protect only one, Jason Van Dyke, by trying to create a false justificat­ion for the shooting of Laquan McDonald by Jason Van Dyke,” Holmes said in her opening statement.

The trial of Walsh, March and Gaffney on charges of conspiracy, obstructio­n of justice and official misconduct promises less focus on the shocking video of Van Dyke firing 16 shots at McDonald, and more on the reams of dry investigat­ion notes and reports generated in the days and months after the shooting.

The notorious video wasn’t even played at all the first day of the trial of the three officers. In the Van Dyke trial, prosecutor­s waited all of 15 minutes before rolling the tape.

The three men now on trial played different roles the night of the shooting. Walsh was Van Dyke’s partner. March is the detective who oversaw the investigat­ion. And Gaffney, who is the only one of the three still on the force, is the first officer to encounter McDonald that night but never even saw the shooting — as his defense attorney, William Fahy, pointed out.

Gaffney had even told a federal grand jury he didn’t feel threatened by McDonald that night — after all, he was in his police SUV, according to prosecutor­s. But in an apparent contradict­ion, Fahy told Cook County Judge Domenica Stephenson that Gaffney at one point considered opening fire during his own confrontat­ion with McDonald, ultimately making “a split-second decision not to use force.”

Stephenson alone is hearing the case, not a jury, and will decide the men’s fate.

The nuances required to fight the “paper case” against March, Gaffney and Walsh, played out in the marathon questionin­g of Joseph Perfetti, director of the Records Services Division at the Chicago Police Department. The usual rote authentica­tion of records — a question-and-answer session in which Perfetti essentiall­y read off a few key lines from more than a dozen reports entered into evidence by prosecutor­s — dragged on over three hours, as defense lawyers grilled Perfetti about the police reporting software and rules.

The various reports list Van Dyke, Walsh and Gaffney as “victims” and say McDonald raised his right arm toward Van Dyke “as if attacking” Van Dyke — claims directly contradict­ed by video of the shooting. One report, prepared by March, described McDonald’s fatal encounter with Van Dyke as “criminal attacked officer then that officer killed criminal.”

The cross-examinatio­n of the prosecutor­s’ second witness, an investigat­or for the Cook County medical examiner, showed how hard the defense is working to discredit tiny yet crucial details in paperwork that prosecutor­s repeatedly called the “crux” of the case.

In a lengthy, at times combative cross, McKay questioned how the descriptio­n of McDonald having “lunged” at the officers before Van Dyke opened fire landed in a report written by medical examiner investigat­or Earl Briggs. The verb presents problems for the defense: dashcam video of the shooting shows McDonald striding toward the officers but taking no aggressive action.

Briggs testified he got the narrative from March, who called in the informatio­n the night of the shooting. McKay grilled Briggs on small details in his report and repeatedly implied that the caller wasn’t even March at all.

“Are you telling us that this person, who claimed to be Detective March, used the word ‘lunged?’” McKay asked.

“Yes,” Briggs said.

Later, under questionin­g from prosecutor­s, Briggs noted that the caller not only said he was March but provided his badge number and duty assignment.

The trial, expected to last into next week, is set to resume Wednesday.

 ??  ?? David March & lawyer James McKay
David March & lawyer James McKay
 ??  ?? Thomas Gaffney
Thomas Gaffney
 ??  ?? David March
David March
 ??  ?? Joseph Walsh
Joseph Walsh
 ??  ?? Laquan McDonald
Laquan McDonald
 ??  ?? Jason Van Dyke
Jason Van Dyke

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