For the past several years, the plaintiffs’ bar has relied on the Torture Inquiry & Relief Commission (TIRC) for a steady stream of wrongful conviction lawsuits stemming from claims that Chicago police coerced murder confessions
A Lake County judge presiding over the criminal cases of two former Cook County assistant prosecutors, eviscerated special prosecutors representing the State’s Attorney’s Office, headed by Kim Foxx.
Left-wing climate activists are quietly backing lawsuits against the fossil fuel industry to steer the country away from a dependence on affordable, reliable energy, a recent analysis by the watchdog group the Capital Research Center (CRC) shows.
Retired Chicago detective, Reynaldo Guevara, fended off accusations of police misconduct by plaintiff Arturo DeLeon-Reyes in an amended complaint involving 1998 murder of a husband and wife and the kidnapping of their children.
A recent WGN-TV profile of Josh Tepfer, a lawyer with the plantiffs’ firm of Loevy & Loevy, exemplifies mainstream media coverage of exoneration lawyers and their clients who blame their convictions on police misconduct.
An obscure 14-year-old commission that investigates claims of police torture, and has become a pipeline of lucrative wrongful conviction cases for plaintiffs’ attorneys, is “very perilous to our system,” a Will County judge has ruled.
Chicago police are steaming over the release by an appellate judge of cop killer Ronnie Carrasquillo, who in 1976 ambushed and murdered police office Terrence Loftus, 36, in the Logan Square neighborhood.
A suspended Chicago teacher, who is white, has filed a nine-count complaint in federal court against the Board of Education and four of his former colleagues, all Black, alleging battery and race discrimination surrounding an incident where a Bears football doll was found hanging in his classroom at the Whitney M. Young Magnet High School.
On October 20, Will County Judge David Carlson is expected to rule whether a commission created to investigate claims of police torture, the Torture Review & Relief Commission (TIRC), has the authority to refer cases, many of them decades-old murder cases, for new evidentiary hearings.
Chicago City Wire has filed two complaints against the Cook County State’s Attorney’s (CCSAO) office for not responding to Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests seeking details into why the office exonerated once convicted murderers, including two convicted of the brutal 1998 murder of a husband and wife and the kidnapping of their children in Bucktown.
The recent acquittal of two police officers charged with unjustifiably shooting an unarmed man is a victory not just for them and their families, but also strengthens the argument that dozens of wrongful conviction cases targeting police are worth fighting in the courts over settling for multi-million-dollar amounts.
Cook County Judge Williams Hooks, suspended in late June from judicial duties, could be called to testify in the criminal trials of former assistant prosecutors Andrew Horvat and Nick Trutenko scheduled to begin in mid-October, sources say.
After three months, the Civilian Office of Police Accountability (COPA) has yet to find a witness to an alleged incident of sexual misconduct involving a Chicago Police officer and a migrant, leading former CPD Chief of Detectives Gene Roy to question COPA’s investigatory competency.
City Council’s approval this week of a $25 million payout to two men convicted of the 1993 murder college basketball star Marshall Morgan Jr. was about all that former Chicago Detective Kenneth Boudreau, who investigated the murder, could take.
City Council is on the verge of approving a controversial wrongful conviction payout of $25 million to two convicted of the 1993 murder of college basketball start Morgan Marshall Jr. on the South Side.
The cashless bail era in Illinois begins on September 18, and the transition to first such statewide bail system in the country “won’t be the smooth as advocates hope,” Jim Kaitschuk, Executive Director of the Illinois Sheriffs’ Association, told Chicago City Wire.
Lawsuits recently brought by Chicago and other cities targeting car makers Kia and Hyundai over a surge in car thefts represent the latest attempt by the trial bar to expand the scope of the public nuisance tort, according to legal expert Victor Schwartz.