Chicago Police Torture Archive To Go Online In Early 2017
Transparency of decades of Chicago PD abuse is almost here.


More transparency is coming for the Chicago Police Department, much to the dismay of their union, which has vociferously opposed making public the details of the department's historically systemic abuse and brutality.
The chillingly named Chicago Torture Archive, which relies on previously secret documents detailing the torture practiced by officers under the command of former detective and commander Jon Burge from 1972-1991, is set to go live online in early 2017.
During that infamous 19-year period, upwards of 120 black men were brutally beaten to elicit false confessions and intimidate witnesses. The Atlantic provides one telling anecdote:
One of them was Philip Adkins, whose testimony about the hours that followed a 5 a.m. knock on his door is representative of some of the atrocities men like him endured at the hands of police officers. During the space of four to five hours, three detectives picked up, handcuffed, and detained Adkins without officially arresting him, reading him his Miranda rights, or allowing him to contact family or counsel.
The physical violence began when "without warning one of them slugged" him while he was handcuffed in the back of a patrol car. The three detectives then drove around parts of Chicago with him in the car, including during a stop at McDonald's, and interrogated him about suspected criminal activity from the night before. Finding his answers unsatisfactory, one of the detectives started poking him "with great force" in the groin area with a flashlight. As they continued to drive around, two detectives took turns delivering blows to his private parts, knees, elbows, and ribs.
The Citizens Police Data Project details Chicago PD abuses dating back to 2001, but it is a volunteer-driven database built around materials procured through FOIA requests. When the Chicago Torture Archive goes live online next year, over 10,000 documents will be available for public scrutiny. The delay in launching is reportedly a result of a need to protect the privacy of the victims by redacting personal and identifying information such as social security numbers and addresses.
In 2015, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emmanuel agreed to a $5.5 million "Reparations for Burge Torture Victims" ordinance.
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The Citizens Police Data Project details Chicago PD abuses dating back to 2001, but it is a volunteer-driven database built around materials procured through FOIA requests.
Huh, it appears someone didn't keep a personal email server. Lesson learned.
"the union, which has vociferously opposed making public the details of the department's historically systemic abuse and brutality."
Does this fall under the: "Why would you worry about disclosure if you've done nothing wrong"?
Because people like BLM will inevitably misconstrue and misrepresent the use of these important tools of law enforcement keeping off the streets "human vermin" like the "guilty vicious criminals" worked over by CPD.
Fine, upstanding citizen, former Federal Judge and current renowned legal scholar Paul Cassell has been arguing for years that sometimes when police have no evidence whatsoever that a scumbag has committed a crime, beating a confession out of him is the only way to discover his guilt. I mean, the cops obviously know he's a guilty scumbag - why else would they have arrested him? - but some squishy liberals believe if there's no evidence he committed a crime then he shouldn't be sent to jail to pay for the crime, and that sort of soft-on-crime attitude is just so terribly demoralizing to our Brave Heroes In Blue.
Hmmmm, somebody needs a lesson in what it's like to have the police decide you're guilty of something.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/.....story.html
"Loss of prestige." There isn't a facepalm big enough.
Well, that doesn't happen anymore.
Today they let you rattle around in the back of a van for awhile.
I don't watch those police procedural shows because my age has not yet reached triple digits. Do they still have those interrogation room scenes where righteous cops use brutal tactics to elicit clues and confessions from criminal scumbags?
The Wire.
And the audience cheers.
I guess you don't like it when a cop does whatever he can to find a young woman who have been sold into sexual slavery.
I'm not surprised, you sick, child molesting enabler.
who *has* been sold into sexual slavery.
you sick, verbsubjectagreement mangling monster.
"You can't do this! I got rights!"
"WHAT ABOUT THE RIGHTS OF THAT LITTLE GIRL?"
Said the Hit & Run commenters reading another cop-abuse thread.
"DUE PROCESS AND THE COURTS ARE HOW A CIVIL SOCIETY INTERMEDIATES CONFLICTS BETWEEN THE SACROSANCT RIGHTS OF CITIZENS."
The Jews Chinese control Hollywood.
Xi Jinping did 5/28!
So actual capitalists are getting involved in Hollywood?
Only those from Kaifeng.
They're scooping up European soccer teams left and right too. It's like the Japan-scare of the eighties only without the democracy.
Don't forget the Arab scare of the 70s.
The Greek-American scare of the 70s was rough, too.
+1 lollipop
Who loves you babe?
" It's like the Japan-scare of the eighties only without the democracy."
Bomb the Hahbah.
We tortured some folks. *shrug*
-BHO
*tees up*
Chicago Police Torture Archive To Go Online In Early 2017
And you bet your ass after the Chicago cops get done torturing it that scumbag archive will comply, too.
ok, I wasn't the only one who read it that way. "Torture isn't going to get that site running, SMDH"
I'm guessing Chi-town can be mentioned in the news again after January.
It is kind of shocking how those oldies-but-goodies jokes about Chicago corruption and violence and general suckiness disappeared for 8 years.
Must have been a glitch in the matrix.
weird stuff
This sounds awesome. I cannot wait to see some Chicago Police getting tortured!
That's a rather specific fetish.
I actually prefer New York Police torture, though, if I'm honest.
Chicago Police torture = way more filling. I can maybe handle just one in a sitting. It's probably a once a year type thing for me.
I'm not judgin'.
But you hatin'
Har Har. Hey, you could use the same words to compare pizza.
Compare? You've clearly never been forced to pay $4 for a slice of NY-style pizza.
$4? LOL I wouldn't pay that either. I think it's around $2.75 at the joints near me.
Depending on where you are in the city/burbs, $4 is the more affordable option for "pizzeria" pizza (i.e. not including locally-sourced artisanal foreskin pizza that people order to insult the guy who went to school to prepare food).
It's heartening to know that the police abuse ended in 1991.
And Homelessness ended in 1992!
December, 1999. I got my jetpack, on time and under budget.
I've made $64,000 so far this year working online and I'm a full time student. Im using an online business opportunity I heard about and I've made such great money. It's really user friendly and I'm just so happy that I found out about it. Heres what I do,
---------------- http://www.Max43.com
I've been unsuccessful in finding a set of paired images and their respective captions, and I hope that one of you skilled web-searchers can help me in this regard.
The second image is similar to the one Anthony used for his article (but black and white with a square border). Its caption is "Law Enforcement".
The first image is the same as the second except that the man wielding the club isn't wearing a policeman's cap and its caption is "Assault and Battery".
Bets on whether anything significant will actually get released?
As distasteful as it is to let government-sponsored torture go unpunished, I'd settle for a Truth and Reconciliation Commission for these sorts of things - tell the truth, the whole truth (this part most important), and nothing but the truth and you walk free; lie about anything or withold anything and you go to jail for the maximum term for all the crimes you covered up whether you committed them or not, plus additional time for perjury (iow, you will die in prison).
What I want to know is what was going on at that alleged CPD "black site". Many people alleged they were taken there and held without being given due process or legal representation.