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Death row's racism gets spotlight. (Racefile).

Colorlines Magazine

| March 22, 2003 | Banks, Gabrielle | COPYRIGHT 2003 Color Lines Magazine. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

We've become accustomed to reading about human rights abuses in remote, backwater prisons, across oceans and continents. But Illinois Governor Ryan's monumental commutation of 167 death sentences on his final day in office drew world attention to the gruesome torture routinely inflicted in police interrogation rooms on the south side of Chicago. In a carefully crafted move the day prior, Ryan (R), pardoned four members of the Death Row 10-Madison Hobley, Stanley Howard, Aaron Patterson, and LeRoy Orange--all African American men who had been tortured, by Commander Jon Burge, into confessing to crimes they say they did not commit.

"There are many decisions he could have pardoned, but he chose to pardon the Burge guys," says Joan Parkin, Death Row 10 coordinator for the Campaign to End the Death Penalty. "He used the Achilles' heel of the State's Attorney's office. The public campaign had gotten a lot of sympathy. Aaron Patterson and Stanley Howard had both won torture hearings. It would all have broken loose, but Ryan pardoned them."

Because the Burge torture cases were so egregious, Parkin says, they fueled Ryan's boldest moves: a moratorium in 2000 and the blanket commutations in 2003. More than 60 suspects (including over 10 condemned inmates) alleged that between 1972 and 1986, Burge and his underlings tortured

them to confess. All were from Chicago's south side. All were African American. Men who'd never met one another described detectives punching them, kicking them, or suffocating them with an electric typewriter cover. The detectives used needles, Russian roulette; they pummeled suspects with a telephone receiver. They electro-shocked their testicles or hung them out a third-story window--all to extract confessions.

The police departments own Office of Professional Standards investigated and confirmed these charges, and terminated Burge in 1993. (He retired with a full pension and lives in Florida, where, critics say, he spends days tooling around on his pleasure boat, the Vigilante.) Judge Paul Biebel has appointed a special prosecutor to investigate whether there are sufficient grounds to press felony charges against Burge and his officers. Victims' attorneys have filed a motion to disqualify all Cook County judges from trying these cases. Why? Twenty-six out of 33 judges took statements from Burge's victims when they worked for the ...

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Source: HighBeam Research, Death row's racism gets spotlight. (Racefile).

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