Kim Foxx has refused to turn over files in the possession of the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office (CCSAO) covering the criminal prosecutions of two brothers convicted of the 1982 murders of two police officers – files that would help in the defense of a former CCSAO employee named in a wrongful conviction case brought by the surviving brother.
Repeated requests of Kim Foxx’s office, and a follow-up request from an attorney, to provide public documents to Chicago City Wire related to dozens of exoneration cases have been ignored.
An attorney for the Chicago Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7 has petitioned the Chicago Police Board, a civilian disciplinary board, to surrender 20 cases for referral to an independent arbitrator, the Chicago Tribune reports.
The cashless bail era begins in Illinois on September 18, and has so many flaws, former mayoral candidate Paul Vallas writes in a recent commentary, that it will put “dangerous and repeat offenders back on the street.”
For former homicide Detective Kenneth Boudreau no other case is more an exemplar of the gaming of the criminal justice system than that of Nina Glover, a known prostitute murdered in 1994 in the Englewood neighborhood on the South Side.
In a recent commentary, former mayoral candidate Paul Vallas cited record overtime costs for police as a symptom of having too few officers. And, he says, not hiring more police is in effect a way of defunding them.
Rank-and-file members of the Chicago Police are on the verge of having the final resolution of their more serious disciplinary cases moved out from under two civilian oversight boards -- both of which the police union, FOP Lodge 7, have accused of harboring anti-police bias -- and under the authority of an independent arbitrator where police believe they will receive fairer treatment.
A news story covering the latest in wrongful conviction complaints mimics past narratives driving earlier wrongful conviction lawsuits: bad cops beat confessions out of innocent people.
On September 18, the cashless bail era in Illinois begins and Patricia Wenskunas, Founder/CEO of Crime Survivors Inc. is alarmed over the silence surrounding the impact the new law will almost certainly have on crime.
The wrongful conviction lawsuit filed last week by Marilyn Mulero doesn’t make her innocent of the 1992 execution style murder of a rival gang member, a crime she confessed to and spent 27 years in prison for.
For Alderman Nicholas Sposato (38th Ward) last week’s City Council rejection of a $2 million settlement in the 2014 police shooting death of Darius Cole-Garrit is a hopeful sign that his colleagues will closely scrutinize future recommended payouts by the city’s Law Department concerning alleged cases of police misconduct
One of the fallouts of having hundreds of illegal immigrants housed in police stations around the city is that the police are exposed to illnesses carried by possibly unvaccinated individuals with inadequate, or no, health care, and to their trash.
A recent report showing that the Chicago police were nine times more likely to stop Blacks than Whites over 2018 and 2019 presents an incomplete and potentially misleading profile of law enforcement practices in the city, says Jason Johnson, president of the Law Enforcement Legal Defense Fund out of Washington D.C.
In a surprise move, U.S. District Court Judge Steven Seeger blocked the deposition of First Assistant Cook County State’s Attorney Risa Lanier in the wrongful conviction cases of two found guilty in the 1998 savage murders of a husband and wife, and the kidnapping of their children.
Plaintiffs’ attorneys in a federal wrongful conviction case say they met with officials in the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office (CCSAO), headed by Kim Fox, to layout abuse claims against retired detective Reynaldo Guevara, not argue in favor of their clients receiving Certificates of Innocence (COI).
President Joe Biden has nominated April Perry, a former official with the Cook County State’s Attorney Office, to be the next U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois
In a shocking development, settlements have been reached in the wrongful conviction cases of Tyrone Hood and Wayne Washington, convicted of the 1993 murder of college basketball star Morgan Marshall Jr.
Kim Foxx is fighting desperately to stop one of her top officials from being deposed to answer why the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office (CCSAO) dropped its opposition to the awarding of Certificates of Innocence (COIs) to two convicted of the savage 1998 murders of a husband and wife, and the kidnapping of their children.
In a wrongful conviction case surrounding the 40-year-old murders of two Chicago police officers, a federal judge rejected a defense argument to dismiss the case because the Torture Inquiry & Relief Commission (TIRC), which set in motion the release of one of the convicted murderers, Jackie Wilson, was unconstitutional.
Crime has jumped 38 percent in Brandon Johnson’s first month as mayor, and while Wirepoints, which reported the increase, was hesitant to tie Johnson’ policy or rhetoric to the increase, soft-on-crime policies funded by the left keep rising as well.