Yuma Sun

With conviction, Chicago officer likely avoided decades in prison

-

CHICAGO — Jurors convicted white Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke for murder and aggravated battery in the slaying Laquan McDonald, the black teenager who was shot 16 times as he walked away carrying a knife on Oct. 20, 2014.

But a legal expert explained that the 40-year-old Van Dyke is likely looking at less than 10 years in prison for killing the teen rather than many decades because jurors opted to convict him of second- and not first-degree murder.

Here is a look at the conviction­s and how much time Van Dyke may end up of spending behind bars:

CONVICTION

After less than two full days deliberati­ng on three weeks of testimony, jurors returned Friday with 17 guilty verdicts and one acquittal.

By far the most serious charge Van Dyke faced originally was first-degree murder.

But Judge Vincent Gaughan told jurors before they started deliberati­ons that they had the option of replacing first-degree murder with second-degree murder.

First-degree required a finding that Van Dyke’s use of deadly force wasn’t justified — that it was both unnecessar­y and unreasonab­le.

But Gaughan said jurors could find that Van Dyke truly believed his life was in jeopardy but that belief wasn’t reasonable. That’s the criteria for second-degree murder.

The jury also found Van Dyke guilty of all 16 counts of aggravated battery with a firearm. Each count correspond­ed to every bullet Van Dyke shot into McDonald.

They acquitted him on the least serious charge, official misconduct.

SENTENCE

Van Dyke showed little emotion as the verdicts were read out in court. He may have had reason for feeling some relief.

First-degree murder carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonme­nt.

And with enhancemen­ts for having used a gun, Van Dyke would have faced a mandatory minimum of 45 years, according to Chicago defense attorney Steve Greenberg, who has defended clients at more than 100 murder trials.

Such a sentence, at Van Dyke’s age, could have amounted to life.

The punishment for second-degree murder is no less than four years but no more than 20 years behind bars.

Jurors weren’t told anything about the range of punishment­s for each charge.

The judge did tell them that whether one charge might carry a greater or lesser sentence shouldn’t factor at all into their decisions.

Each count of aggravated battery carries a mandatory minimum six years and a maximum of 30 years in prison.

If Van Dyke had to serve six for each of the 16 counts — and do so one sentence after another — that would add up to 96 years.

But Greenberg said judges almost always order defendants to serve such sentences simultaneo­usly. So, if Van Dyke gets the minimum for each count, he’d serve six years for all the battery conviction­s.

Another possibilit­y is that the defense will ask, under complicate­d legal rules, for the judge to merge the crimes for which Van Dyke is convicted for sentencing purposes since they were all tied to a single event, Greenberg said.

That could mean Van Dyke is effectivel­y sentenced only for seconddegr­ee murder, with its lower four-year mandatory minimum.

For a man convicted with no previous criminal record, Greenberg said the mandatory minimum is his best guess for a sentence handed down on Van Dyke.

“I would be shocked if he got a day over the four or six years,” Greenberg said.

Greenberg said prison conditions for an officer, like Van Dyke, could be rougher than for average convicts. As a white officer convicted of killing a young African-American, prison authoritie­s are likely to conclude he has to be kept away from other prisoners for his own safety.

“He will probably be in a cell by himself,” Greenberg said. “It will be very hard time.”

That may have already started.

At prosecutor­s’ request, Van Dyke’s bond was revoked minutes after the verdicts were announced and Judge Gaughan ordered he be held in jail pending sentencing. He stood up from the defense table, then put his arms behind his back as two deputies led him away.

MEXICO CITY — Police said Friday they have detained a couple on the outskirts of Mexico City on suspicion they may have killed as many as 10 women and sold a dead woman’s baby.

Officers had placed the couple under surveillan­ce and caught them coming out of a house with a baby carriage on Thursday. Inside the carriage, they found dismembere­d human body parts the pair intended to dispose of in a nearby vacant lot, Mexico State police said Friday.

Police said they went to the lot and found more body parts, but they were in such bad condition that forensic tests will be needed to identify the victim.

Police said the couple acknowledg­ed disposing of other bodies in a similar fashion, and authoritie­s were searching two other properties. In all, police said, the couple confessed to killing at least 10 women.

The couple, who were identified only by their first names in a police statement, also reportedly confessed they had sold one of the dead women’s 2-monthold baby to another couple. The baby was recovered and the other couple was detained.

The couple came under suspicion because they knew three women who had disappeare­d over the last five months in the sprawling suburb of Ecatepec, just north of Mexico City.

 ??  ??
 ?? ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE VIA AP, POOL ?? CHICAGO POLICE OFFICER JASON VAN DYKE (LEFT) is taken into custody after jurors on Friday found him guilty of second-degree murder and aggravated battery in the 2014 shooting of black teenager Laquan McDonald at the Leighton Criminal Court Building in Chicago.PRISON CONDITIONS
ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE VIA AP, POOL CHICAGO POLICE OFFICER JASON VAN DYKE (LEFT) is taken into custody after jurors on Friday found him guilty of second-degree murder and aggravated battery in the 2014 shooting of black teenager Laquan McDonald at the Leighton Criminal Court Building in Chicago.PRISON CONDITIONS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States