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Reports

Alleged Chicago Torturer’s Overdue Day in Court

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Posted on May 25, 2010

By Amy Goodman

Abu Ghraib has nothing over Chicago. Forty years ago, Jon Burge returned from Vietnam, joined the Chicago Police Department and allegedly began torturing people. He rose in the ranks to become a commander in Chicago’s South Side, called Area 2. Electric shocks to the genitals, mock executions, suffocation with bags over the head, beatings and painful stress positions are among the torture techniques that Burge and police officers under his command are accused of using to extract confessions in Chicago, mostly from African-American men. More than 110 men are known to have been victims of Burge and his associates. Victims often went to prison, some to death row. Facing mounting evidence and increasing community outcry, Burge was fired from the Chicago Police Department in 1993. He now lives in Florida, collecting his pension.

This week, in a federal criminal trial beginning in Chicago, Burge faces charges, not for torture, but for lying about torture under oath in an earlier civil suit brought by one of his victims (since the statute of limitations on torture, remarkably, has expired). He faces up to 45 years in prison. Burge’s co-conspirators remain uncharged. Also untouched in the trial is the role played by the current mayor of Chicago, Richard M. Daley, who as state’s attorney for Cook County from 1980 to 1989, and as mayor since then, has consistently fought investigations or prosecutions of the alleged torturers.

Darrell Cannon is one of the men alleging torture against Burge and his associates. He says police tortured him in 1983 and forced him to confess to a murder he didn’t commit. He spent more than 20 years in prison, but after a hearing on his tortured confession, prosecutors dismissed his case in 2004. It took him three more years to gain release from prison.

At 6 a.m. on Nov. 2, 1983, Chicago cops under Burge’s command arrested Cannon and drove him to an isolated industrial area on the Chicago waterfront. He related his ordeal to me:

“They did a mock hanging, where I’m cuffed behind my back and one of the detectives would get on the bumper of the detective car, the other two detectives would lift me up to him, and he would grab my handcuffs from behind. They would let me go. That will cause my arms to go up backwards, almost wrenching the inside of my shoulders….  Then they switched to a second torture treatment, where they got their shotgun…. One of them said, “Go ahead, blow that ni***r’s head off.” And that’s when [Detective] Peter Dignan forced the shotgun in my mouth…. They did a mock execution three times.”

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Cannon refused to confess. He went on: “They then put me in the backseat of a detective car…. They pulled my pants and my shorts down ... took an electric cattle prod, turned it on and proceeded to shock me on my testicles.”

Cannon finally made a false and coerced statement, implicating himself as an accomplice to murder, to make the torture stop.

His attorney, Flint Taylor, is with the People’s Law Office, which has been representing scores of Burge’s alleged torture victims. Taylor pointed out the controversial role of Mayor Daley. “Darrell Cannon here, my client, was tortured in 1983. If Daley had moved in 1982 with the evidence he had to remove Burge from the police force and prosecute him for torture, we would not have Darrell Cannon spending 20, 25 years behind bars and not having him tortured by electric shock. So, the real crime here started many years ago with the cover-up, a cover-up that was engineered by the mayor himself.”

In January 2003, before leaving office, Illinois Gov. George Ryan, a Republican, commuted the death sentences of all 156 people on Illinois’ death row, after the innocence of 13 other death row inmates had been proved. Ryan pardoned four on death row who were known to be victims of Burge’s torture.

Where did it all begin? One thing is clear: In 1968-69, Burge was an MP at the U.S. Army’s Dong Tam camp in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, where captured suspected Viet Cong soldiers were allegedly interrogated with electric, hand-cranked field telephones supplying shocks. Torture techniques similar to this were rampant under Burge’s command in Chicago.

Given ongoing reports of torture in Iraq and Afghanistan, we have to wonder how many Jon Burges are being bred in President Barack Obama’s two wars.
 
Denis Moynihan contributed research to this column.
 
Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 800 stations in North America. She is the author of “Breaking the Sound Barrier,” recently released in paperback and now a New York Times best-seller.

© 2010 Amy Goodman

Distributed by King Features Syndicate


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By Alan Thick, December 30, 2010 at 1:24 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Wasn’t it a mock execution what drove Dostoevsky to excellence?  Here this guy is creating literary geniuses, and you’re castrating him.

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By Marriea, May 30, 2010 at 6:24 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

The nature of mankind will never change because mankind won’t (or cannot) change his nature.
Mankind for all of the propaganda saying otherwise, is the most vicious breast to ever walk this earth.
We might not use our size and teeth like the great lizards and sharks of the sea, but we use our minds in worst ways. We don’t necessarily come out and kill our prey, we torture it. In torturing our prey, our prey in term learns how to torture. This torture might be physical, but mostly it’s mental. Since man began writing his own history, there have been stories of the savagery of our own nature. The more things change, the more they remain the same.

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By MSGmi, May 27, 2010 at 6:59 am Link to this comment
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Law and Order? These things are supposed to happen in third-world countries…as usual, a whitewash was/is in progress; one prosecution and no accountability…the slow road to an implosion has no STOP signs.

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By Aarky, May 26, 2010 at 6:56 pm Link to this comment
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Having worked on the Docks at Calumet Harbor in the early 1970’s I heard about what happened to men who angered the Chicago cops. They were shot and their bodies dumped down a sewer cover. There was also the story about the local man from the FBI who was given office money to buy lunch at a local deli. He was robbed as he was going through an ally. The two robbers let him go and he ran back to the office. The office Agents all converged on the ally and found the two robbers still arguing about the money. Those two robbers died quickly from many gunshot wounds. I doubt if it made the local papers. There are other stories and too horrendous for this posting.

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By Peter Z. Scheer, May 26, 2010 at 2:56 pm Link to this comment

Latest on the site/comments:
http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/note_to_readers_20100526/

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By Peter Z. Scheer, May 26, 2010 at 1:11 pm Link to this comment

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By JDmysticDJ, May 25, 2010 at 11:33 pm Link to this comment

Just another story; one of too many stories.  We hear these stories too often now. In this story a man comes back from Viet Nam, but he’s not a man, he’s a monster.

When I was a child I was afraid of monsters, I was afraid of the dark because I thought monsters were in the dark. When I became an adolescent I lost my fear of monsters, and I came to believe that monsters weren’t real, but when I began to get interested in history, I discovered that monsters were indeed real. I learned about colonialism and it’s many monsters, World Wars, the Third Reich, the holocaust, the war in Russia, the war with Japan, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, the Spanish Civil War, Guernica, Viet Nam and all the many little details, and on and on and so it went.

I guess studying the Third Reich taught me that nations can be monsters too, so when Viet Nam started I came to realize that my nation had become a monster. A huge fire breathing monster that ate up men women and children by the millions, and I watched as this monster turned young boys into monsters. It was a life changing experience, my future and my plans seemed to evaporate, my life was dominated by a desire to stop the monster, but I could have done much more, and my failure to do more caused me to feel varying degrees of anger and frustration, I was happy that the monster never got me, but the monster was always on my mind, and the monster impacted my life in a terrible way, so I guess, in a way, the monster got me too.

I remember when the Viet Nam monster died. I was relieved, but I was still angry, and I saw that many still revered the monster. I had hopes that a monster would never rear its ugly head again, but of course, my hopes were in vain. A monster appeared in Central America, and all his little monsters were especially cruel and brutal. Many of our political leaders, because of their monstrous nature, encouraged and supported the Central American monster. I remember warning people about the Central American monster, but they laughed, and they were unconcerned, because the Central American monster was far away.

Then the Gulf monster arose, the Gulf monster was especially powerful and destructive, and dangerous, she devoured a million, most of them children, she was the mother of all monsters, and she gave birth to today’s monsters. I suppose we’ll never see the end of monsters and all their cruelties and terrors now.

I remember my father saying when I was a child, “Monsters aren’t real; they are only in your head.” I’ve come to believe that these monsters are, only in our heads. Maybe someday we’ll be able to rid our heads of these monsters.

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