Antelope Valley Press

Chicago ‘two-faced’ on admitting police abuse

- By MICHAEL TARM AP Legal Affairs Writer

CHICAGO — The city of Chicago pursues a “two-faced” strategy of acknowledg­ing an ugly history of police brutality in public while directing its lawyers to deny that legacy in court when victims sue, community leaders alleged in a court filing, Thursday.

The filing in Chicago’s US District Court on behalf of nearly 50 civic, business and religious leaders says the approach delays just payouts and costs the city tens of millions in legal fees that could otherwise go to social programs or reducing taxes.

The filing is in a lawsuit by 55-year-old James Gibson, freed after 29 years when courts agreed officers under police commander Jon Burge tortured him into implicatin­g himself in the 1989 slayings of two men. Gibson was later granted a certificat­e of innocence.

Former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and his successor, current Mayor Lori Lightfoot, are among those who have spoken publicly about how, between 1972 and 1991, Burge’s crew sought confession­s from at least 100 African Americans, using electric shocks to their genitals, suffocatin­g them with typewriter covers and shoving guns in their mouths.

A police accountabi­lity task force chaired by Lightfoot before she became mayor released a report, in 2016, in which it catalogued those and other torture methods by Burge and his subordinat­es.

“The City’s two-faced approach of admitting Burge’s long practice of torture publicly, but then denying the existence of that same pattern when confronted with civil rights claims of Burge’s victims, serves no one,” the filing says.

The filing says Chicago has spent over $200 million in taxpayer money to hire private law firms to fight such claims “while innocent victims like Mr. Gibson are forced … to prove a pattern that City leaders have admitted to and even apologized for publicly.”

“This litigation gamesmansh­ip steals precious time from innocent people like Mr. Gibson, who have already lost decades of their lives to Burge’s torture machine,” the filing, submitted by Washington, DC-based attorney Jeetander T. Dulani, says.

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