FORMER CHICAGO POLICE COMMANDER JON BURGE ARRESTED ON CHARGES RELATING TO TORTURE OF OVER 100 AFRICAN AMERICANS
Tuesday, October 21
- Organization: People's Law Office
FORMER CHICAGO POLICE COMMANDER JON BURGE
ARRESTED ON CHARGES RELATING TO TORTURE
OF OVER 100 AFRICAN AMERICANS
Federal Government heeds call of U.N. Committee Against Torture to
investigate and prosecute Chicago Police Torture cases
Tuesday, October 21, 2008 (CHICAGO) --
Victims, attorneys and activists who
have been calling for justice in the now infamous Chicago Police Torture cases for decades
claimed victory today when former Chicago Police Commander Jon Burge was finally
indicted by the U.S. Attorney General’s Office and arrested on charges relating to the torture
of over 100 African American men over a 20 year period.
Until today, despite mountains of evidence, countless internal and external investigations,
and repeated judicial findings that Burge and officers under his command “systematically”
and “methodically” tortured African Americans at Chicago police headquarters, not a single
officer or official involved has been prosecuted for their crimes and violations of their
victims’ Constitutional and human rights. The torture, committed to elicit false confessions,
included electric shocks to genitals, anal rape with a cattle prod, suffocation with plastic
bags, and physical beatings, along with sleep deprivation and denial of food, water and
bathroom facilities. The victims were not only subjected to grueling physical pain but were
also tormented with racist epithets and slurs throughout their interrogations: they were
called “nigger;” threatened with the electric shock box described by the detectives as the
“nigger box”; and threatened with hanging Alike they had other niggers,” an obvious
reference to lynching. Often the officers involved would taunt the victims by stating “who are
people going to believe, a ‘nigger’ like you or a cop like me.”
Frustrated by the lack of prosecutions and absence of systemic remedies for the victims of
Burge’s torture, activists and attorneys took the cases to the world stage. In May of 2006,
following hearings concerning the U.S. government’s compliance with the Convention
Against Torture, the U.N. Committee that monitors the Convention called on the U.S.
government to “promptly, thoroughly and impartially investigate all allegations” of abuse by
law enforcement officials and specifically noted “the limited investigation and lack of
prosecution in respect of the allegations of torture perpetrated in areas 2 and 3 of the
Chicago Police Department” as evidence of the U.S. government’s failure to uphold the
human rights guaranteed by the Convention. Also in 2006, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on
Torture questioned the U.S. government’s handling of the cases and the continued
imprisonment of 24 victims based on confessions elicited through torture.
“We are heartened that the federal government has heeded the call of the U.N. to step in
and prosecute where local and state officials have failed to do so,” said Joey Mogul, an
attorney at the People’s Law Office who presented the Burge cases to the U.N. Committee
Against Torture. “We are gratified that Jon Burge will finally be brought to justice for his
heinous violations of human rights. However, justice will not be entirely done until the
officers under Burge’s command who participated in the torture and its cover-up are
prosecuted and convicted, new hearings are called the for guys still behind bars based on
confessions elicited through torture in violation of Article 15 of the UN Convention Against
Torture, and financial reparations are paid to Burge’s victims as required by Article 14 of
the Convention.”
For more information: Joey Mogul, People’s Law Office, (773) 294-7606;
Andrea Ritchie, (646) 831-1243


