Former Chicago Police Detective Kenneth Boudreau | Screenshot from Fox32 Chicago
Former Chicago Police Detective Kenneth Boudreau | Screenshot from Fox32 Chicago
Lawyers for former Chicago police detectives named in two wrongful conviction suits surrounding the 1994 murder of a 10-year-old on the South Side have asked a federal judge to consolidate the cases.
Brothers Sean Tyler and Reginald Henderson, convicted in the mid-'90s of murdering Rodney Collins while he was riding his bike, filed separate wrongful conviction lawsuits in July in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.
“Henderson and Tyler are virtually identical lawsuits currently assigned to separate judges,” the lawyers wrote in their November 16 motion to Judge Thomas Durkin. “Both cases arise from the exact same occurrences—the Plaintiffs’ arrests, prosecutions, convictions, and reversals of those convictions by the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office for Case the murder of Rodney Collins – and both Plaintiffs allege the exact same issues of fact and law.”
In 2021, Cook County State’s Attorney’s office, headed by Kim Foxx, dropped the charges against the brothers, based on their claims that they were tortured into confessing.
The case has become a flash point for at least one former detective, Kenneth Boudreau, named in this suit and at least a dozen others claiming he participated in torturing suspects. Boudreau has announced a public relations campaign to begin in the new year to push back on the claims of the once convicted murderers, the lawyers representing them, and the mainstream media for parroting the narrative that the Chicago Police Department has a sordid history of torturing suspects to confess to murders they did not commit.
“They are nothing but mouthpieces for the attorneys bringing the lawsuits,” Boudreau said of the media for an earlier story. “Everything is in false light.”
The Tyler and Henderson wrongful conviction complaints, and a news story published in the Chicago Sun-Times, tells of an elaborate scheme by detectives to frame the brothers as part of a vendetta stemming from Tyler’s testimony for the defense in a separate shooting case.
Citing the wrongful conviction complaints, the Sun-Times story said that Tyler, who was 17 at the time, was then taken into custody and beaten “so severely in the chest, face and eyes that he was later taken to the hospital for vomiting blood.”
The story mentions Boudreau and his partner at the time, James O’Brien.
But an investigation by the Torture Inquiry and Relief Commission (TIRC), which in 2020 in a “close case” recommended a new evidentiary hearing for Tyler, noted that the doctor who treated Tyler said that he had a history of hematemesis, the vomiting of blood caused by a stomach ulcer or severe gastritis. In addition, Tyler never told the doctor, nor any other medical professional, that his injuries were the result of police torture. And the lockup keeper at the jail said that Tyler had no outward signs of physical harm and that he never complained about police mistreatment.
What’s more, Boudreau told Chicago City Wire, he never interviewed Tyler – “never met him,” he said.
The TIRC report also noted that an attorney with the Exoneration Project filed an amended petition in 2008 that included a recantation from a key witness who originally identified Tyler in the shooting. The petition alleged that detectives, including O’Brien, Boudreau and John Halloran, had pressured the witness to identify Tyler.
But the judge in the case denied a hearing on the abuse claims, in part finding the theory against O’Brien, Halloran and Boudreau “pure speculation.”
The Sun-Times report also said that the reason police targeted Tyler and his brother was because Tyler had testified for the defense in the case of 13-year-old Marcus Wiggins, “who claimed he confessed to a 1991 murder after he was beaten and shocked by the two detectives…”
Boudreau said that he never interviewed Wiggins and that Wiggins never accused him of torture.
Henderson’s lawyer in the wrongful conviction case, Jennifer Bonjean, asked the court and was granted an extension to file a response to the motion. The plaintiffs’ firm of Loevy & Loevy is representing Tyler.