Chicago Sun-Times

COPS’ TAINTED TEACHERS

CPD tapped 2 Koschman officers who were under investigat­ion to train detectives

- BY TIM NOVAK AND CHRIS FUSCO,

Sgt. Samuel Cirone is fighting a one-year suspension from the Chicago Police Department over his role in the creation of a bogus police report that shielded former Mayor Richard M. Daley’s nephew from criminal charges in the death of David Koschman.

Lt. Denis P. Walsh — who was once accused of sexually assaulting a gas station clerk in Michigan and ended up pleading guilty to lesser charges — admitted stashing Koschman case files at his Northwest Side bungalow. That blunder led him to retire in February rather than be fired.

Yet over the past three years, the Police Department repeatedly tapped Walsh and Cirone to lead oneday training courses for detectives on “interviews and interrogat­ions,” “homicide/ death investigat­ions” and “police-involved shootings,” records obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times show.

And they kept being called on to teach detectives even after special prosecutor Dan K. Webb said he considered charging them with obstructin­g justice or official misconduct in the Koschman case. Webb ultimately decided he didn’t have enough evidence to convict them and left it to City Hall to discipline them.

Under the watch of former Supt. Garry McCarthy, Walsh and Cirone jointly taught 11 “pre-service” and “refresher training” classes at the police academy for detectives. The refresher classes were all for “lead homicide investigat­ors.” Cirone also taught two additional classes by himself.

All but two of the classes were held while John Escalante headed the detective bureau, which oversaw the training sessions. Escalante is now the department’s second-in-command after serving as Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s interim police superinten­dent following McCarthy’s Dec. 1 firing.

Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi had no explanatio­n as to why Walsh and Cirone were allowed to teach while under investiga- tion, other than to say, “Supervisor­s within the entire bureau of detectives rotated through as class presenters.”

Walsh and Cirone both carried clout in the police department. Each had received so-called merit promotions, bypassing the normal testing process. And both men’s fathers also were Chicago cops.

Walsh and Cirone got involved in the Koschman case in January 2011. That was after the Sun-Times asked to see files on Koschman’s killing, which had gone unsolved for nearly seven years.

Walsh told his commander he couldn’t find the original files — many of which turned up six months later.

Then-Supt. Jody Weis ordered a reinvestig­ation, and the case was assigned to detectives under Cirone’s supervisio­n.

On Feb. 28, 2011, the Sun-Times published the first of dozens of stories about the Police Department’s handling of the case, which Cirone’s detectives closed the following day, wrongly asserting that Daley nephew Richard J. “R.J.” Vanecko had punched Koschman in self-defense.

The Sun-Times investigat­ion led to Webb’s appointmen­t as special prosecutor and Vanecko’s indictment for involuntar­y manslaught­er, guilty plea and 60-day jail term.

Webb also focused his investigat­ion on the police officers and prosecutor­s who failed to charge Daley’s nephew.

During Webb’s investigat­ion, Walsh and Cirone teamed up as “class presenters,” starting with a “pre-service” detective training session on Jan. 9, 2013 — about a month after Vanecko’s indictment.

Two months later, the Sun-Times published a story detailing Walsh’s 2004 arrest on a charge of criminal sexual conduct. He’d been accused of groping and licking a female gas station clerk

near Kalamazoo, Michigan, in an incident caught on security surveillan­ce video.

Walsh could have faced up to 15 years in prison if convicted of that felony charge. But the victim stopped cooperatin­g with authoritie­s, and Walsh ended up pleading guilty to two misdemeano­rs. He also was handed a 30-day suspension by then-Supt. Phil Cline.

Walsh and Cirone taught four classes together between October 2013 and Jan. 31, 2014 — the date Vanecko pleaded guilty, admitting he killed the 21-year-old Koschman.

They taught another five classes between February and June 2014 — all after Webb released a 162-page report on his investigat­ion that cited Walsh four times as being involved with missing files from the Koschman case.

Webb’s report also detailed late-night messages that Cirone exchanged from a personal email account with his boss, then-deputy Chief of Detectives Constantin­e “Dean” Andrews. Those emails said Koschman yelled “F— you! I’ll kick your ass!” before “breaking away from his group of friends and aggressive­ly going after Vanecko” in the early morning hours of April 25, 2004. That statement ended up verbatim in the final police report, approved by both Cirone and Andrews, who closed the case without charging Vanecko.

Webb found no evidence Koschman said that.

After Webb decided not to charge Walsh, Cirone, Andrews or anyone else from the Police Department involved in the 2004 and 2011 investigat­ions of Koschman’s killing, McCarthy asked City Hall Inspector General Joseph Ferguson to determine whether any cops should be discipline­d.

Ferguson’s investigat­ion began in September 2014. At that point, Walsh and Cirone stopped teaching, according to the department.

“While Lt. Walsh and Sgt. Cirone were among the supervisor­s that initially rotated through this training, the bureau of detectives advises they voluntaril­y recused themselves as presenters during the inspector general’s investigat­ion,” Guglielmi says.

But Walsh and Cirone did teach one more class, on March 27, 2015, as Ferguson was still investigat­ing them, the records obtained by the Sun-Times show. It’s unclear why.

After finishing his investigat­ion in December, Ferguson recommende­d that six cops be punished, including Cirone and Walsh.

In February, Escalante moved to fire Walsh, who decided to retire at 52 and begin collecting his pension.

Escalante also recommende­d a one-year suspension for Cirone, 47, who’s challengin­g that before the Chicago Police Board and remains on the payroll.

 ?? 2004 MICHIGAN POLICE PHOTO ?? Suspended Chicago Police Sgt. Samuel Cirone (left) and recently retired Lt. Denis P. Walsh were repeatedly tapped over the last three years to lead one-day CPD training courses for detectives on interviews, death investigat­ions and police-involved...
2004 MICHIGAN POLICE PHOTO Suspended Chicago Police Sgt. Samuel Cirone (left) and recently retired Lt. Denis P. Walsh were repeatedly tapped over the last three years to lead one-day CPD training courses for detectives on interviews, death investigat­ions and police-involved...
 ?? 2012 SUN-TIMES
FILE PHOTO ??
2012 SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO
 ??  ?? City Inspector General Joe Ferguson
City Inspector General Joe Ferguson
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 ??  ?? Denis P. Walsh
Denis P. Walsh
 ??  ?? Sgt. Samuel Cirone
Sgt. Samuel Cirone
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