The head of Kim Foxx’s Conviction Review Unit (CRU), Michelle Mbekeani, should be placed on her bosses' do-not-call witness list for lying to a judge, prominent Chicago defense attorney Tim Grace told Chicago City Wire.
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and the company that invented ShotSpotter, the gunshot detection technology the city has deployed since 2012, have agreed to a deal that keeps the technology functioning in the city through September, meaning that it will be in use for the Democratic National Convention in August.
The lineup of speakers at an upcoming wrongful conviction symposium hosted by the DePaul University College of Law consists purely of advocates for the incarcerated who claim that police and prosecutors framed, coerced, and in some cases tortured them into confessing to crimes they did not commit.
In mid-December, a Cook County judge vacated the conviction of Brian Beals, who served 37 years in prison for the murder of a six-year-old. Now free, Beals is poised to follow the paths of dozens of others exonerated for their crimes.
When in 2020 former Cook County prosecutor Nick Trutenko was accused of misconduct for not disclosing a relationship with a witness, he was fired immediately by State’s Attorney Kim Foxx.
A Cook County judge shredded the new head of Kim Foxx’s post-conviction unit over a side business she runs that connects inmates, claiming innocence, with defense attorneys.
Over the past 25 years Illinois has racked up the highest number of exonerations in the nation with Cook County pulling the state to the top of the list