Judge in Chicago police officer's murder
trial appoints special prosecutor
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[August 05, 2016]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
(Reuters) - An Illinois judge on Thursday
appointed a special prosecutor in the murder case against a white
Chicago police officer in the shooting death of a black teenager,
selecting a state's attorney from a neighboring county.
Cook County Judge Vincent Gaughan announced the appointment of Kane
County State's Attorney Joseph McMahon at a hearing, Anne Kavanagh, a
spokeswoman for the officer's attorney, said by telephone.
McMahon will bring the first-degree murder case against Chicago police
officer Jason Van Dyke in the 2014 killing of 17-year-old Laquan
McDonald, which made national headlines and sparked protests after the
release of a video of the shooting last fall.
It showed the officer shooting McDonald 16 times as he jogged away from
police cars. Authorities said McDonald was armed with a knife and had
slashed at the tires and window of a patrol car.
The appointment of McMahon allows the politically sensitive case to move
forward. Cook County State's Attorney Anita Alvarez had recused herself
and asked the judge to appoint a special prosecutor.
Alvarez lost her re-election bid in March after protests over her taking
a year to charge Van Dyke. She charged him the same day video of the
shooting, taken from the dashboard of a patrol car, was released by
order of a judge.
Van Dyke's attorney has said the officer feared for his life when he
opened fire, while prosecutors have argued the shooting was not
justified.
McMahon, a Republican, is seeking re-election to his post in Kane
County.
When he launched his campaign last year, McMahon stressed his aggressive
prosecution of violent crimes and his support for rehabilitation
programs for offenders who are not violent, according to a report at the
time in local newspaper the Elgin Courier-News.
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Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke sits in the courtroom during a
hearing in his shooting case of Laquan McDonald at the Leighton
Criminal Court Building in Chicago, Illinois March
23, 2016. REUTERS/Nancy Stone/Chicago Tribune/Pool File Photo
The shooting of McDonald came at a time of heightened national
debate over police use of deadly force, especially against black
men.
The judge has imposed a gag order in the case.
McMahon, speaking outside of court under a special authorization
from the judge, told reporters Van Dyke is presumed innocent until
proven guilty.
"I and (my) team has one goal in this case, that is to find the
truth, to present the truth and ask that justice be served in this
case," McMahon told reporters.
Criticism of the way officials handled the McDonald shooting led to
the firing of Chicago's police chief and calls for Mayor Rahm
Emanuel to resign.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Editing by Dan
Grebler and David Gregorio)
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