Rob Warden: Police Torture and Mayor Daley
U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald finally has done what Richard M. Daley should have done 26 years ago: He has indicted retired Chicago Police Detective Jon Burge for leading a band of brutal white cops who tortured hundreds of African-American suspects in criminal cases.
It was 1982, when Daley was the state's attorney of Cook County, that he was first reliably informed -- by Chicago Police Superintendent Richard Brzeczek -- what Burge and company were doing.
What went on -- plastic bags over heads, shackling to hot radiators, gun barrels in mouths, electrical shocks to ears, nostrils and genitals, cigarette burns to arms, legs and chests -- is now well known, having been cited repeatedly in court opinions. (Even Daley, belatedly, branded the torture "a shameful episode in our history.")
Rather than acting, as was his duty at the time, Daley and his top assistant, Richard Devine, who is the current state's attorney, joined a conspiracy of silence that has cost city taxpayers upwards of $50 million in legal costs and civil settlements.
And, even now, a score of men convicted on nothing more than confessions extracted by Burge and his men continue to languish in prison, having been denied relief by the Illinois courts.
User login
Similar
Jon Burge Arrested, Charged with Perjury and Obstruction
Former police commander Jon Burge, whose name has become synonymous in this city with police torture, was arrested this morning at his home in Tampa, Florida. He's been charged with perjury and obstruction of justice, charges which carry decades of jail time if Burge is convicted.
The City's Final 2016 Bid: Surprise! It's Crazy Expensive
So, who still wants the Olympics here? Show of hands? Anyone? Bueller? Bueller? Even with these rose-colored glasses on, we see an Illinois that has maybe filtered out a little bit of the pay-to-play 'How You Doin'" governmental interference by 2016.
Extra, Extra

Image by John P. Glynn
Burge Defense to Be Paid By F.O.P.
New controversy has erupted in the case of former police Cmdr. Jon Burge as the Fraternal Order of Police has announced they will pay for Burge's defense, a bill the Trib speculates could reach as much as $1 million. Burge was charged in October with perjury and obstruction of justice in connection with charges of police torture.
This Is Change?
Jeremy Scahill
AlterNet
November 21, 2008
City's Plans For Obamapalooza Coming Together

Days after Mayor Daley invited everyone in the entire world down to Grant Park for Tuesday's Obamapalooza, the City is now saying people wil
The Khalidi Tape: Putting the Bits and Pieces Together with New Details
There is a lot of discussion about a Khalidi tape in the political blogosphere as of lately.
Here is a YouTube video of Sean Hannity discussing the background behind Rashid Khalidi and his association with Barack Obama.
GayCo. and Schadenfreude Want You To Know "This Country's F$cked"
Local sketch comedy troupes GayCo and Schadenfreude are teaming up for a new political comedy show, This Country's F$cked.
Robert Loerzel: Another Banking Crisis: Chicago's Panic of 1896
The news from Wall Street is prompting a lot of comparisons with the Great Depression, but the history books are filled with other similar financial crises. Throughout the 1800s, when the government barely regulated the financial markets at all, speculative bubbles and piles of bad loans caused several panics. History repeats itself.



