Chicago Sun-Times

Cop tied to SOS scandal faces firing 16 years later

- BY SAM CHARLES, STAFF REPORTER scharles@suntimes.com | @samjcharle­s

Sixteen years after he allegedly took part in one of the Chicago Police Department’s biggest scandals, the department has moved to fire Officer Thomas Sherry, formerly of the disgraced and disbanded Special Operations Section.

In November 2020, Supt. David Brown filed administra­tive charges against Sherry, who was assigned to the SOS from 2002 until 2006.

The charges against Sherry focus on two illegal raids conducted by the SOS on July 27, 2004, on the Northwest Side.

The CPD alleges Sherry and others in the SOS — including legendaril­y corrupt former Chicago cop Jerome Finnigan — illegally raided the two residences and lied about where they recovered narcotics.

In all, Brown brought five charges against Sherry: violation of any law or ordinance, making a false report, disobeying an order, bringing discredit upon the CPD and failing to promote the CPD’s efforts to accomplish its goals. Sherry’s attorney could not be reached Wednesday. A CPD spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

The first Police Board evidentiar­y hearing in the case is scheduled for next month. Brown recommende­d that Sherry be fired.

Sherry was suspended and stripped of his police powers in 2006 after he and other SOS cops were charged in Cook County Circuit Court. Those charges — which included armed violence, armed robbery, home invasion, aggravated kidnapping and burglary — were dropped in 2009.

Sherry was then assigned to the CPD’s Alternate Response Section, which is staffed by officers who’ve been stripped of police powers and others who are not medically cleared for full duty. The Alternate Response Section largely handles nonemergen­cy police calls.

Eleven officers were convicted in connection with the SOS scandal.

Sherry filed a federal lawsuit against the CPD in 2018, seeking back pay and claiming he hasn’t been granted a hearing to clear his name. The suit is pending.

Sherry’s lawsuit alleged the CPD’s Office of Internal Affairs has never tried to interview him since the charges were dropped, and the department has failed to give him a list of the charges and allegation­s against him.

He is seeking hundreds of thousands of dollars in back pay for the time he was suspended, as well as damages related to “emotional distress, anxiety and humiliatio­n.”

 ?? FILE ?? Thomas Sherry
FILE Thomas Sherry

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