advertisement

How Chicago racked up a $662 million police misconduct bill

CHICAGO (AP) - In this city's troubled history of police misconduct, Eric Caine's case may be unrivaled: It took more than 25 years and $10 million to resolve.

For decades, he maintained he didn't brutally kill an elderly couple. The police, he said, beat him into a false confession. Locked up at age 20, he was freed at 46, bewildered by a world he no longer recognized. Caine ultimately was declared innocent, sued the city and settled for $10 million. But victory brought him little peace.

"They wouldn't give anybody that large amount of money if they didn't believe that person was wronged," he says. "But I also look at it as a way for them to just want me to go away. ... Nobody cares if I live or die."

Caine is just one example of huge police settlements that have tarnished the city in recent years. Among them: A one-time death row inmate beaten by police: $6.1 million. An unarmed man fatally shot by an officer: $4.1 million.

And last year, the family of Laquan McDonald, the black teenager shot 16 times by a white officer, received $5 million. His death, captured in a shocking video, led to a murder charge against the officer, the police chief's firing and thunderous street protests with calls for Mayor Rahm Emanuel's resignation.

Chicago has paid a staggering sum - about $662 million - on police misconduct since 2004, including judgments, settlements and outside legal fees, according to city records. The payouts, for everything from petty harassment to police torture, have brought more financial misery to a city already drowning in billions of dollars of pension debt.

The Justice Department's recent decision to investigate the Chicago police - fallout from the McDonald case - has helped focus new attention on this agonizing history of misconduct and the surprising lack of consequences. Few officers accused of wrongdoing have been disciplined in recent years.

So how did the city get to the point where a massive misconduct bill has almost become routine? And why has bad behavior gone unchecked?

Alderman Howard Brookins Jr. offers one explanation. "If you were seen going after police, you were seen as being for crime," he says. "Nothing happened to the police officers even after they got a big judgment against them so it appeared to be like Monopoly money."

Lawyer Jon Loevy noticed the same pattern while winning more than a dozen seven-figure misconduct verdicts over the last decade. Jurors, he says, concluded "police did reprehensible things" - including framing people and shooting them without justification - but he knows of no case where those officers were punished. "Not only was nobody disciplined, nobody was asked any questions," he says. "It was just back to work."

Few accusations ever reach the punishment stage, according to the Invisible Institute, a nonprofit journalism organization, and the University of Chicago Law School's Mandel Legal Aid Clinic. They found that from March 2011 to September 2015, more than 28,500 citizen complaints of misconduct were filed against Chicago police officers, but less than 2 percent resulted in discipline.

Both the police and the union representing rank-and-file officers say the numbers are misleading.

Dean Angelo, president of the union, says criminals routinely file frivolous complaints to harass and discourage police from pursuing them.

City officials also say many complaints are less serious - an improperly issued ticket, for instance. The police, in a statement to The Associated Press, said allegations of misconduct led to 45 firings and 28 suspensions from 2011 through 2015 in a department of about 12,000. Some cases remain open.

During that time, the city doled out tens of millions of dollars on misconduct claims. Only a small number are in the seven-figure range. Stephen Patton, corporation counsel, says his office has cut the number of outside lawyers, taken more cases to trial and since 2011, saved taxpayers at least $90 million by evaluating suits promptly and settling them, if appropriate.

The cost of misconduct, though, extends beyond dollars and cents. It can also leave deep psychological scars.

Ronald Kitchen, who said he was beaten into confessing to several murders, spent 21 years in prison, 13 of them on death row while seven men were executed. "You keep thinking ... 'Is that going to happen to me?'" he says. Kitchen, who was eventually exonerated, settled for $6.1 million.

Martinez Sutton says the $4.5 million settlement his family received in the death of his 22-year-old sister, Rekia Boyd, "seems almost like hush money."

Sutton has been agitating for the dismissal of Detective Dante Servin, who was off-duty when he killed Boyd in 2012. Servin fired several times while sitting in his car after arguing with a group of people. He said he feared for his life as a man pulled an object from his waistband. No gun was found. The man had a cellphone.

Servin was acquitted of involuntary manslaughter last year. Both the Independent Police Review Authority and former superintendent have recommended his firing. The Chicago Police Board will decide.

"It's a slap in the face to me," Sutton says. "You can give me money but you still can't get rid of this officer? It's not hate against the police department. It's hold accountable whoever commits the crimes."

Chicago isn't the only city with these problems. But the lack of police accountability, a code of silence and racial tensions tend to be more entrenched than in other cities, says Craig Futterman, a University of Chicago law professor.

"It's not that Chicago is overrun by bad or abusive police officers," he says, "... but here, a small percentage of officers has been allowed to abuse some of the most vulnerable Chicago residents with near impunity."

More than 80 percent of officers have fewer than four complaints for the bulk of their careers, he says.

The mayor recently formed a police task force that will create an early warning system to intervene with problem officers. The police statement also said that Interim Superintendent John Escalante is working with others "to review discipline histories, patterns of misconduct, settlements and other information to prioritize investigations and take action where necessary."

No pattern of wrongdoing has been more damaging than the one involving former commander Jon Burge and dozens of fellow detectives. Scores of black men alleged that over nearly two decades, the officers beat them, played mock Russian roulette and subjected them to electric shocks to secure confessions.

Burge cases - including settlements and outside lawyers - have cost the city more than $92 million, according to Flint Taylor, a lawyer who has spent decades fighting the former commander. Yet only Burge himself was ever charged, decades later - for perjury in a lawsuit when he denied torture had occurred. He was sentenced to 4ˆ½ years in prison.

Some critics say the mayor's vows of reform and the federal probe give them hope this is a turning point.

But Eric Caine, a victim in one Burge case, is skeptical. Five years after his release, he still struggles.

"That 25 years was real hell to me," he says. "My sense of dignity, my sense of self-worth was destroyed - all shattered, all gone. ... Every second, every minute of the day, I think about my mortality."

He sees little change, noting that it took more than a year for officials to release the McDonald video. "The system is designed to protect itself," he says. "They continue to do the same thing over and over, instead of doing the right thing."

___

Sharon Cohen, a Chicago-based national writer, can be reached at scohen@ap.org.

FILE - In this Thursday, March 17, 2011 file photo, Eric Caine, right, embraces attorney Frank Bednarz following Caine's release from the Menard Correctional Facility in Chester, Ill. Bendarz, investigator Eric Slosar, background, attorney Russell Ainsworth and Caine's girlfriend, Sara Bush, greeted him after over two decades in prison. Caine was first imprisoned on murder charges in 1986, which were dismissed by a court on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Sid Hastings, File) The Associated Press
In this Thursday, Feb. 4, 2016 photo, Eric Caine poses in his restaurant, "Wingers USA" in Chicago. Caine was falsely imprisoned at the age of 20, but later freed at 46 for a double murder he didn't commit. He received a $10 million settlement from the city of Chicago. Chicago has racked up a $662 million bill to settle police misconduct cases since 2004, but few officers have been punished. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Oct. 21, 2008 file photo, former Chicago Police Department commander Jon Burge shields his eyes from the sun as he leaves the federal courthouse after he was released from custody in Tampa, Fla. The former high-ranking Chicago police official was arrested on charges he lied when he denied that he and detectives under his command tortured murder suspects, federal officials said. (AP Photo/Steve Nesius, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this June, 16, 2006 file photo, Kristin Roberts, left, holds a sign of Jon Burge as she and others stage a protest outside Cook County Courthouse in Chicago, demanding the release of a report on allegations that Chicago police tortured suspects. Allegations have swirled for years that officers under the command of Lt. Jon Burge in the Area 2 violent crime unit beat suspects, used electric shocks, played mock Russian roulette and started to smother a suspect with a typewriter cover to elicit confessions. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green) The Associated Press
FILE - In this May 6, 2015 file photo, men identified as victims of police torture under the command of retired Chicago Police Commander Jon Burge, stand to be recognized by the Chicago City Council city council in Chicago. The council approved a $5.5 million fund to compensate victims of police torture. Up to $100,000 would be given to each of dozens of men who claimed they were tortured by Burge's detective crew. Some victims spent decades in prison after confessing to crimes they did not commit. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Dec. 11, 2013 file photo, Stanley Wrice, center, who was convicted of rape and sentenced to 100 years in prison in 1982, is accompanied by his son-in-law, Cashell Lewis, left, and his attorney, Jennifer Bonjean, as he leaves the Pontiac Correctional Center in Pontiac, Ill. Wrice was released after serving more than 30 years in prison when a Cook County Judge overturned his conviction the day before and granted him a new trial. Wrice has claimed for decades he was beaten and coerced into confessing to the rape by Chicago police Area 2 detectives working for disgraced former Chicago police Lt. Jon Burge. (AP Photos/M. Spencer Green, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this April 20, 2015 file photo, Chicago Police Detective Dante Servin listens as Judge Dennis Porter reads his decision at the Leighton Criminal Court Building in Chicago on involuntary manslaughter charges in the March 2012 shooting death of Rekia Boyd. Porter ruled that prosecutors failed to prove Servin acted recklessly, by the legal definition. Demonstrators rallied later that night to protest the acquittal. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune via AP, Pool) The Associated Press
In this Friday, March 4, 2016 photo, Martinez Sutton wears a shirt comemmorating his sister, Rekia Boyd, 22, who was shot and killed in 2012 by a Chicago police officer. Sutton has been pushing for the firing of officer Dante Servin, who, while off-duty, was driving in an alley when he argued with a group of people. Servin fired several shots over his shoulder, striking a Boyd with a fatal head wound. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) The Associated Press
In this March 4, 2016 photo, Martinez Sutton wears a shirt commemorating his sister, Rekia Boyd, 22, who was shot and killed in 2012 by a Chicago police officer. Sutton has been pushing for the firing of officer Dante Servin, who, while off-duty, was driving in an alley when he argued with a group of people. Servin fired several shots over his shoulder, striking a Boyd with a fatal head wound. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) The Associated Press
In this July 19, 2006 file photo, Flint Taylor, of The People's Law Office, criticizes the contents of a special prosecutor's report authorized by the Criminal Division of the Circuit Court of Cook County into allegations of torture by members of the Chicago Police Department, during a news conference in Chicago. Special prosecutors investigating allegations that police tortured nearly 150 black suspects in the 1970s and '80s said they found evidence of abuse, but any crimes are now too old to prosecute. In all, Chicago has paid a staggering sum - about $662 million - on police misconduct since 2004, including judgments, settlements and outside legal fees, according to city records. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Nov. 30, 2015 file photo, Chicago Police Officer Jason Van Dyke leaves the Cook County Jail after posting bond in Chicago. Van Dyke, was charged with murder in the 2014 shooting death of black teenager Laquan McDonald. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Dec. 18, 2015 file photo, Chicago Police Officer Jason Van Dyke arrives for a court hearing at the Leighton Criminal Court Building in Chicago. Last year, the family of Laquan McDonald, the black teenager shot 16 times by Van Dyke, received $5 million from the city. His death, captured in a shocking video, led to a murder charge against Van Dyke, the police chief’s firing and thunderous street protests with calls for Mayor Rahm Emanuel's resignation. In all, Chicago has paid a staggering sum - about $662 million - on police misconduct since 2004, including judgments, settlements and outside legal fees, according to city records. (Zbigniew Bzdak/Chicago Tribune via AP, Pool) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Nov. 25, 2015 file photo, Lamon Reccord, second from right, yells at a Chicago police officer "Shoot me 16 times" as he and others march through Chicago's Loop, one day after murder charges were brought against police officer Jason Van Dyke in the killing of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, in Chicago. Last year the family of McDonald received $5 million from the city. His death, captured in a shocking video, led to a murder charge against Van Dyke, the police chief’s firing and thunderous street protests with calls for Mayor Rahm Emanuel's resignation.(AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast, File) The Associated Press
Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.