Man Alleging Police Torture Released
From Prison
A man who says Chicago
police tortured him until he confessed to a rape he did not commit walked out
of an Illinois prison on Wednesday after spending 30 years behind bars.
Stanley Wrice's
release from the Pontiac Correctional Center came a day after Cook County Judge
Richard Walsh overturned the 59-year-old's conviction, saying officers lied
about how they had treated him.
The ruling was just
the latest development in one of the darkest chapters of Chicago Police
Department history, in which officers working under former Lt. Jon Burge were
accused of torturing suspects into false confessions and torturing witnesses
into falsely implicating people in crimes.
Wrice has insisted for
years that he confessed to the 1982 sexual assault after officers beat him in
the groin and face. And a witness testified at a hearing Tuesday that he
falsely implicated Wrice in the rape after two Chicago police officers under
Burge's command tortured him.
He was sentenced to
100 years in prison.
Now that Walsh has
ordered Wrice's release, it will be up to a special prosecutor to decide
whether to retry him. The special prosecutor did not return a call seeking
comment Tuesday evening.
With his release,
Wrice will join a number of men who in recent years have been released from
prison because they were tortured into confessing at the hands of Burge's men.
Dozens of men — almost all of them black — have claimed that, starting in the
1970s, Burge and his officers beat or shocked them into confessing to crimes
ranging from armed robbery to murder.
In court Tuesday,
Wrice testified that two former officers beat him with a flashlight and a
20-inch piece of rubber — the same weapons, lawyers say, that others have said
the two used on them to get them to confess to crimes or implicate others in
crimes they did not commit.
The officers refused
to testify at Tuesday's hearing, citing their Fifth Amendment right against
self-incrimination.
No Chicago police
officers have ever been convicted of torturing suspects, but Burge was
convicted in 2010 for lying in a civil suit when he said he'd never witnessed
or participated in the torture of suspects. He is serving a 4 1/2-year sentence
in federal prison for perjury and obstruction of justice. Chicago also has paid
out millions of dollars to settle lawsuits in cases related to Burge.
The torture
allegations also were a factor in former Illinois Gov. George Ryan's decision
to institute a moratorium on the death penalty in 2000. Gov. Pat Quinn
abolished the death penalty in 2011.
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