"It has been for
many years an open secret that at the police headquarters where Burge
worked, a large number of African-American citizens were detained and
subjected to horrific forms of abuse," said Locke Bowman, legal
director of the MacArthur Justice Center at the University of Chicago
and a lawyer for a man who says Burge's detectives abused him.
Few know him here, and that's how he likes it. But back
in Chicago, Jon Burge is big news. He's known as the police commander
who, for 20 years, tortured suspects to make them confess.The
accusations are like something out of a wartime prison: electric shock
and cattle prods; near suffocation with a typewriter bag; mock
executions with a pistol.Four people who confessed to him were released
from death row last year; they're suing him. A special prosecutor has
been on his tail for two years.Fired from the Chicago Police
Department, he settled into a waterfront community of brick and stucco
houses on Tampa Bay 10 years ago, his police pension intact, a boat out
back. He has never been charged with a crime. Now people in Chicago are
trying to bring him back, back to where he made a name for himself, as
hero, then villain. People back home say Jon Burge needs to be called
to account. [more ]