Chicago Sun-Times

FBI BROUGHT IN ON KOSCHMAN CASE

- BY TIM NOVAK AND CHRIS FUSCO Staff Reporters

Dan K. Webb — the special prosecutor who said he was unable to charge Chicago police officers with breaking any state law for botching an investigat­ion into a nephew of former Mayor Richard M. Daley — turned over all of his evidence to the FBI last June, the Chicago SunTimes has learned.

Some police officers involved in the case — in which files went missing and the special prosecutor said that a key police finding apparently was fabricated — may be under investigat­ion for similar activities in other cases, according to a sealed court document obtained by the newspaper.

Webb’s request to a judge for permission to turn over the files to the FBI came as he was wrapping up his investigat­ion into how the Chicago Police Department and the Cook County state’s attorney’s office twice failed to charge Daley nephew Richard J. “R.J.” Vanecko in the 2004 death of David Koschman.

Webb got permission to give the evidence to four FBI agents “who have experience and expertise with police corruption investigat­ions,” according to the court documents. Those documents are sealed under a court order issued by Cook Coun- ty Circuit Judge Michael P. Toomin, who appointed Webb to investigat­e the Koschman case.

“The interests of justice require that the special prosecutor disclose materials obtained through the special grand jury, including the identities of subpoenaed witnesses, witness testimony and the nature and content of documents and physical evidence obtained through the special grand jury investigat­ion” to the four FBI agents, Toomin wrote in a June 7, 2013, order granting Webb’s request.

Six days after that, Webb got additional permission from Toomin to turn over the materials to Chicago FBI Special Agent-in-Charge Cory B. Nelson, who retired a few weeks later, and another top FBI agent. Toomin also allowed Webb to give them to the Chicago Police Department’s Internal Affairs Division.

In asking to turn over the grand jury materials to the FBI, Webb wrote that some of the cops involved in the Koschman case might also be under investigat­ion in other cases, though he didn’t elaborate.

“One issue that has arisen during the OSP’s [Office of the Special Prosecutor’s] investigat­ion into allegation­s of misconduct at the Chicago Police Department and Cook County state’s attorney’s office is the authentici­ty and origin of police reports related to the Koschman investigat­ion, as well as official accounts of the location and discovery of those reports,” Webb wrote. “Additional­ly, informatio­n developed during the course of the OSP’s investigat­ion suggests individual­s involved with the Koschman investigat­ion may also be under investigat­ion for conduct similar to that alleged in the petition to appoint a special prosecutor in this case.”

Webb’s office would not comment Tuesday. The FBI and the U.S. attorney’s office in Chicago also declined to comment.

Under his appointmen­t as a Cook

County special prosecutor, Webb had no legal authority to charge anyone with breaking federal law.

Three months after turning over his materials to federal authoritie­s, Webb ended his investigat­ion, producing a 162-page report on his findings regarding Koschman’s death — and why police and prosecutor­s didn’t charge Vanecko in 2004, when Koschman died, and 2011, when the police reinvestig­ated the case after the Sun-Times asked to see the case file.

Webb’s report remained under seal until Feb. 4, four days after Vanecko, 39, pleaded guilty to involuntar­y manslaught­er. Vanecko is now serving a 60-day sentence in the McHenry County Jail.

Webb said he was unable to charge any of the police officers who investigat­ed the case in 2004 because the statute of limitation­s that would apply under Illinois law ran out in 2007.

Webb also said he considered filing criminal charges against six police officers — Deputy Chief of Detectives Constantin­e G. “Dean” Andrews, Sgt. Samuel J. Cirone III, Cmdr. Joseph P. Salemme, Det. James G. Gilger, Det. Nicholas J. Spanos and Lt. Denis P. Walsh — who handled the case in 2011. But he said he didn’t have enough evidence to convict them of violating state law.

Koschman, 21, of Mount Prospect, died 11 days after Vanecko punched him in the face during a drunken confrontat­ion outside the late-night bars of Division Street on April 25, 2004. Vanecko took off in a cab as Koschman lay unconsciou­s in the street.

Police and the state’s attorney’s office said in 2004 they couldn’t determine who hit Koschman because no one could pick Vanecko out of a police lineup. The case remained open until 2011, when the Sun-Times asked to see the police files.

The police then quickly re-investigat­ed and closed the case without seeking charges, concluding Vanecko hit Koschman in self-defense — even though they never spoke with Vanecko.

Webb’s investigat­ion found that the police department’s final report contained a statement — “F--- you, I’ll kick your ass” — that Koschman supposedly made to Vanecko that “is nowhere attributed to Koschman or any other witness” in any police report.

Webb also found that, as Koschman lay dying at Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital, “someone within CPD” told a high-ranking Daley aide that Vanecko had been involved in the Division Street incident. But the police said they didn’t know Vanecko was involved until days after Koschman died.

 ?? | SUN-TIMES LIBRARY ?? Special prosecutor Dan K. Webb turned over all his evidence in the Koschman case to the FBI last June.
| SUN-TIMES LIBRARY Special prosecutor Dan K. Webb turned over all his evidence in the Koschman case to the FBI last June.
 ?? | SUN-TIMES LIBRARY ?? Richard J. “R.J.” Vanecko pleaded guilty last month. He is now serving a 60-day sentence in the McHenry County Jail.
| SUN-TIMES LIBRARY Richard J. “R.J.” Vanecko pleaded guilty last month. He is now serving a 60-day sentence in the McHenry County Jail.
 ??  ?? DavidKosch­man
DavidKosch­man

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