USA TODAY US Edition

Chicago promises $5.5M to police torture victims

- Aamer Madhani CHICAGO

The City Council approved an unpreceden­ted reparation­s package on Wednesday that will pay $5.5 million and provide other benefits to torture victims of notorious former police commander Jon Burge.

The vote caps a decades-long push for restitutio­n to some of the more than 100 victims, mostly African-American men, who have alleged horrific abuse by officers under Burge’s command.

From 1972 through 1991, the suspects were subjected to mock executions and electric shock and beaten with telephone books as their interrogat­ors flung racial epithets at them. A Chicago Po- lice Department review board ruled in 1993 that Burge’s officers had used torture. He was fired.

Burge and his officers have denied wrongdoing.

The statute of limitation­s ran out on his alleged crimes, but Burge was convicted in 2010 of perjury in civil proceeding­s for lying about torture he oversaw. He was sentenced to 4½ years in prison and completed his sentence this year. Burge continues to receive a police pension.

“This stain cannot be removed from our city’s history, but it can be used as a lesson of what not to do,” Mayor Rahm Emanuel said.

Alderman Howard Brookins said Burge’s actions were an “atrocity” and called the reparation­s “a meaningful settlement.”

“I want to say to the rest of the world and Chicago, we get it,” Brookins said. “That type of behavior will not be tolerated in our city, and we can work together bringing the community and the people together for the betterment of our city.”

A victim who has a credible claim will receive up to $100,000.

In addition, the Chicago City Council will formally apologize, create a permanent memorial recognizin­g the victims and teach public school students about the Burge case in their eighth- and 10th-grade history classes.

City college tuition and job training will be provided free to Burge victims, their immediate family members and their grandchild­ren. The city will fund psychologi­cal, family, substance abuse and other counseling ser- vices to victims and their families.

Chicago had already spent about $100 million on settlement­s and legal fees related to lawsuits over Burge’s actions.

Burge’s victims have 60 days from Wednesday’s passage of the ordinance to make their claim for reparation­s, said Joey Mogul, of the Chicago Torture Justice Memorials and the People’s Law Office. Disputes on a victim’s claim will be decided by a third-party arbiter agreed upon by the city and the victim’s representa­tives.

“Chicago has taken a historic step to show the country, and the world, that there should be no expiration date on reparation­s for crimes as heinous as torture,” said Steven Hawkins, Amnesty Internatio­nal USA’s executive director.

From 1972 through 1991, arrest suspects were subjected to mock executions and electric shock and beaten with telephone books.

 ?? CHICAGO TRIBUNE VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Abuse occurred under former chief Jon Burge’s command.
CHICAGO TRIBUNE VIA GETTY IMAGES Abuse occurred under former chief Jon Burge’s command.

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