Chicago Sun-Times

WITNESS TO MCDONALD SHOOTING: ‘IF I STAY QUIET, THEN I’M PART OF THE COVER-UP’

Man who was two car-lengths from McDonald at time of shooting says he went to authoritie­s after seeing news report where union spokesman said teen ‘lunged’ at cops

- BY ANDY GRIMM, STAFF REPORTER agrimm@suntimes.com | @agrimm34

Jose Torres and his son happened to be parked just two car-lengths away from Laquan McDonald when the 17-year-old fell to the ground amid a hail of gunshots from Chicago Police Officer Jason Van Dyke in 2014, and that twist of fate made him a key witness in Van Dyke’s trial for McDonald’s murder.

The Southwest Side resident was the last witness called at Van Dyke’s trial; his son was among the first to take the stand.

On Thursday, in the trial of three of Van Dyke’s fellow police officers charged with conspiracy for allegedly obstructin­g the investigat­ion of the McDonald shooting, Torres testified again about the night of the shooting.

He said a CPD officer waved him away from the scene just minutes after the gunfire stopped.

Torres’ testimony served two purposes for prosecutor­s in the conspiracy trial of ex-Det. David March, former Officer Joseph Walsh and Officer Thomas Gaffney.

Torres contradict­ed police reports that McDonald was aggressive. And he was used to help show police investigat­ors weren’t interested in talking to witnesses who might contradict that story.

Torres testified he went to the city’s then police watchdog agency, the Independen­t Police Review Authority, days after the shooting after seeing news reports where a police union spokesman claimed McDonald “lunged” at officers with a knife.

“It took me a few days to work up the strength, the nerve to call somebody and report it,” Torres told Special Prosecutor Patricia Brown Holmes. “I couldn’t sleep. It was eating away at me and my conscience.

“I thought if I stay quiet, then I’m part of the cover-up, and I couldn’t live with myself.”

Torres will be among the last witnesses for the prosecutio­n. The bench trial will resume Tuesday, as Judge Domenica Stephenson weighs a key ruling on whether to allow emails by police brass discussing the shooting into evidence.

During an at times combative crossexami­nation, Jim McKay, the lawyer for March, the lead detective on the McDonald investigat­ion, questioned why Torres didn’t reach out to the state’s attorney’s office or the FBI if he believed police were lying about McDonald’s shooting, noting that Torres

didn’t even call 911 that night.

“The police was already there. You call 911, the police come,” Torres said, matter-offactly.

The trial hit a snag Thursday as Holmes’ team tried to call their last witness, a CPD supervisor in charge of the department’s email system who was subpoenaed to authentica­te about a dozen emails that prosecutor­s say show March’s supervisor­s were discussing the shooting and trying to steer the conclusion­s to clear Van Dyke of wrongdoing.

Lawyers for each of the men argued that prosecutor­s so far had failed to provide any evidence of a conspiracy. The emails, which were sent by other members of the department, would be hearsay without proof that there was an agreement between the three co-defendants or others to whitewash the Van Dyke investigat­ion, the defense argued.

“The state has failed to provide to this court evidence that David March ever met Mr. Walsh and Mr. Gaffney,” McKay said. “They haven’t linked up that there’s any agreement between any of these three men, and now they want to put in email by authors nowhere near this courtroom?”

After about an hour of back-and-forth, Stephenson reviewed the emails in chambers and said she would rule on whether to admit them when the trial resumes Tuesday. The judge is hearing the case alone, not a jury.

The emails include a message in which March’s supervisor early on in the investigat­ion mischaract­erized the images on dashcam video of the shooting, and said investigat­ors should be “applauding [Van Dyke] not second guessing him.” If the judge rules against prosecutor­s, it would severely hurt their case.

 ?? ZBIGNIEW BZDAK/CHICAGO TRIBUNE POOL PHOTO ?? Jose Torres testifies Thursday at the trial of Chicago Police Officer Thomas Gaffney, former Det. David March and ex-Officer Joseph Walsh.
ZBIGNIEW BZDAK/CHICAGO TRIBUNE POOL PHOTO Jose Torres testifies Thursday at the trial of Chicago Police Officer Thomas Gaffney, former Det. David March and ex-Officer Joseph Walsh.
 ??  ?? Thomas Gaffney
Thomas Gaffney
 ??  ?? Joseph Walsh
Joseph Walsh
 ??  ?? David March
David March
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