PATTERSON V. FORMER CHICAGO POLICE LT. JON BURGER
328 F.Supp. 2d. 878 (2004)
NATURE OF THE CASE: Police (Ds), city, county, state's attorneys' office, and related
individuals, sought summary judgment on Patterson's(P) claim that they knowingly filed false
charges and framed him for the murders for which he was incarcerated, and alleging claims
under 42 U.S.C.S. 1983 and state common law.
FACTS: It was alleged that Police tried to get others to frame P, and that they also
tortured P in order to get him to confess to two murders. No physical evidence linking P to
the murders was ever discovered, though a bloody fingerprint that was not P's was found at
the scene and not introduced at trial. Patterson was convicted for the Sanchez murders on
the basis of his false confession and the testimony of Marva Hall and defendants. After his
conviction but before P filed his motion for a new trial, the Chicago Police Department's
Office of Professional Standards ('OPS') completed an investigation into allegations that
suspects held in custody at Area 2 had been tortured by the Area 2 Ds and others. In
November of 1990 the OPS issued a secret report which was forwarded to then superintendent
of the Chicago Police Department Leroy Martin. In the report OPS found that from 1973 to
1985 there was a practice of systematic abuse of suspects at Area 2 and that certain Area 2
command personnel, including defendants Burge and Martin, were aware of such abuse and
encouraged it, either by actively participating in it or by failing to take action to stop
it. The report named both Burge and Byrne as major 'players' in the pattern and practice of
torture and recommended that Burge be fired for his participation in Andrew Wilson's
torture. P was sentenced to death, and after his conviction was affirmed on appeal, spent
over 13 years incarcerated on death row until his pardon in January of 2003. P was convicted
for the 1986 murders of Rafaela and Vincent Sanchez. P spent 13 years on death row. From
1988 to 1996 the City of Chicago hired defendant Richard Devine, then a private attorney,
and his law firm to represent Burge, Byrne, and other Area 2 defendants against charges
brought in federal court and Police Board Proceedings that they tortured Andrew Wilson and
other criminal suspects. During his representation of Burge, Byrne, and other Area 2
defendants Devine was allegedly informed of a wealth of compelling evidence that his clients
were centrally involved in a pattern and practice of torturing suspects, including
Patterson, and made numerous litigation decisions designed to protect his clients from
criminal, civil, and administrative liability in the face of that evidence. In 1994
Patterson filed a post-conviction petition which alleged that he was entitled to a new
motion to suppress hearing and a new trial on the basis of newly discovered torture evidence
that previously had been suppressed. In 1997 Devine became the State's Attorney of Cook
County and acting in this capacity oversaw the post-conviction proceedings of numerous
persons who allegedly had been tortured and abused by Area 2 defendants, some of whom were
Devine's former clients. On January 10, 2003, the Governor granted P and three other death
row victims allegedly tortured by Burge and other Area 2 detectives pardons on the basis of
innocence. The evidence showed that the four men had been 'beaten and tortured and convicted
on the basis of confessions they allegedly provided.' State's Attorney Devine publicly
condemned the pardons of the four men, whom he referred to as 'evil' and 'convicted
murderers,' as 'outrageous' and 'unconscionable.' Devine also threatened to challenge the
validity of the pardons in court. Further, ASA Troy made defamatory statements about
Patterson, including that he saw no evidence of torture at Area 2 and that Patterson was
guilty of the murders. P filed this civil action asserting that Ds, individually and in
conspiracy, violated his rights under the United States Constitution and Illinois state law
when they knowingly filed false charges and framed him for the Sanchez murders, tortured and
beat him at Police headquarters, fabricated his 'confession' and falsified inculpatory
evidence, coerced witnesses to testify against him, gave perjured testimony, published
defamatory statements regarding his guilt, and obstructed justice and suppressed exculpatory
evidence throughout his suppression hearing, trial, and post-conviction proceedings. Ds
moved to dismiss.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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