Chicago Sun-Times

Take the lid off probes of officers tied to wrongful conviction­s

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Let’s agree that crimes allegedly committed by police officers should not be quietly swept under the rug.

That’s what then-Police Board President Lori Lightfoot thought back in November 2017, when 15 wrongly convicted South Siders were exonerated. They had been framed for drug crimes between 2003 and 2008 by former Chicago Police Sgt. Ronald Watts and his crew.

Documents showed that Watts and his team planted evidence and fabricated charges against the victims.

At that point, Watts and an officer under his command already had been sent to federal prison — four years earlier, in 2013 — for stealing money from a drug courier who’d been working as an FBI informant. But Lightfoot warned that other officers involved in the scheme “should not be able to walk away with impunity.”

“Any of those officers who remain on the job must be quickly brought to justice through criminal prosecutio­n and or disciplina­ry action,” the future mayor said then. “And the taxpayers should not be further insulted by having to foot the pensions of these officers who have clearly acknowledg­ed being involved in criminal conduct . . .”

So here we are, 2½ years later, and nothing has happened.

Dusting off bad playbook

On the contrary, it looks to us like somebody is dusting off the playbook that allows accused officers to stay on the force and build up their pensions without being called to account. As the Chicago Sun-Times reported in the David Koschman case — a classic and irrefutabl­e example — when some police officers in that case finally were recommende­d for firing, they retired, dodged disciplina­ry action and held on to their pensions.

When dealing with the career of a police officer, an investigat­ion must be more than thorough. But within a certain reasonable frame of time — many months, perhaps, but not many years — the investigat­ion should be completed and the consequenc­es carried out.

In just that way, it is way past time for investigat­ions to be completed into the alleged misconduct of officers in Watts’ old crew.

So far, the number of victims of Watts and his tactical team who have been exonerated is 75. Their prison sentences, now overturned, added up to more than 235 years.

But 15 officers tied to Watts remain on desk duty, even now, as investigat­ions into their conduct drag on.

The Cook County state’s attorney’s office no longer will accept the testimony of 10 of the officers because they have been found to have lied about what they did. The Illinois Appellate Court has called Watts and his team “corrupt police officers” and “criminals.” In 2018, the chief justice of the Illinois Court of Claims wrote, “Chicago Police Sgt. Ronald Watts and his team of police officers ran what can only be described as a criminal enterprise.”

Moreover, evidence about the Watts crew’s illegal behavior has been piling up in civil cases filed by victims.

What’s known is shocking

It’s absurd that investigat­ions of these officers have been left hanging by the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity, the city’s police watchdog, for 2½ years.

What’s in the public record already is shocking.

One officer admitted that for 10 years when he was patrolling housing projects, he would detain and search everyone and also testified in two separate cases that he was in two different places at the same time. Another officer admitted that he would fill out police reports beforehand — including direct quotes — and then fill in blanks after the fact.

The University of Chicago Law School’s Exoneratio­n Project counts hundreds of cases in which defendants credibly claim that Watts’ unit arrested them on false charges, lied in reports and lied on the witness stand.

We understand that Lightfoot, as mayor, has no direct control over COPA. But she has a bully pulpit she can use to push the investigat­ions forward, as she tried to do in 2017.

Just last week, Lightfoot called for the firing of officers who covered their badge numbers and name tags and were photograph­ed giving the finger to protesters. And when a number of officers were caught on video last week making popcorn, drinking coffee and sleeping on a couch in U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush’s campaign office, Lightfoot called them out.

But members of Watts’ old team plug along on desk duty. They collect their salaries and build up their pensions.

All due speed

When matters like this are under investigat­ion, City Hall tells us, the process is confidenti­al and nothing can be shared with the public. That’s fair, but only if the investigat­ion is being conducted with all due speed.

“As long as you are putting a lid on informatio­n, you have a responsibi­lity to act very quickly,” said Locke Bowman, clinical professor of law and executive director of the MacArthur Justice Center.

We don’t mean to suggest that COPA is just another useless footdraggi­ng agency. We’re told COPA has some good investigat­ors, although there has been significan­t staff turnover.

But the public deserves answers more quickly. And if any of the officers who worked with Watts were, in fact, doing their best to stay clean — and were not looking the other way — they deserve to have their names cleared.

No officer under investigat­ion should be left on desk duty indefinite­ly.

All the victims of Watts and his crew were African American.

And all this injustice happened seven or more long years ago.

Chicagoans deserve to know in full — what happened and who did it?

My father was a factory worker his entire life, a hard-working and loyal employee at every single job he held. He passed away a long time ago, but I’ve thought about him a lot more during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Would my father have been one of the essential workers who was required to work on an assembly line in close proximity to others? Would he have been given personal protective equipment?

One thing I know for certain is that my father would have shown up at work no matter what.

My father would have been like many of the men and women today who have had to continue to work despite their fears of getting sick. My father needed the money, and he also would have worried about getting laid off. My father was reliable and would have been on the job because that was what he did. He showed up. He took pride in his work and felt it was his duty to earn money for his family.

I could imagine that my mother, brother and I would worry about the choice my father might have had to make between jeopardizi­ng his job and risking getting sick.

My father spent a large part of his life working at the Ford Motor Co. plant on Pulaski Road on Chicago’s South Side, where he rose to foreman. During World War II, he was not drafted because Ford made airplane parts for bombers. I’ve thought about him contributi­ng to the war effort and about how during this pandemic he might be making face masks or some other form of protection.

As I think about my father, I know for certain that like many others in America, he would have gone to work and done the best job he could. I see my father in the faces of the grocery store workers, the mailman, the newspaper deliveryma­n, the health care workers who risk their lives every day but go to work anyway and many, many others. These are people who remind me of my dad, the people who make the sacrifice to do their job no matter what.

I thank them for their work and for bringing back memories of a father so dearly loved but never forgotten.

Gloria Golec, Glen Ellyn

 ?? ANDY GRIMM/SUN-TIMES ?? Flanked by lawyers Joshua Tepfer and Sean Starr, Kenneth Hicks (center) addresses reporters after prosecutor­s vacated a 2007 drug conviction that was based on a bogus arrest by former Chicago Police Sgt. Ronald Watts.
ANDY GRIMM/SUN-TIMES Flanked by lawyers Joshua Tepfer and Sean Starr, Kenneth Hicks (center) addresses reporters after prosecutor­s vacated a 2007 drug conviction that was based on a bogus arrest by former Chicago Police Sgt. Ronald Watts.
 ??  ?? John Golec, father of Gloria Golec
John Golec, father of Gloria Golec

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