Judge to appoint special prosecutor in
Chicago cop's murder trial
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[June 03, 2016]
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A judge will
appoint a special prosecutor in the trial of a white Chicago police
officer charged with murder in the shooting death of a black teenager, a
spokeswoman for the officer's lawyer said on Thursday.
Cook County Judge Vincent Gaughan said during a hearing that he
will appoint a special prosecutor in officer Jason Van Dyke's
first-degree murder trial for the 2014 killing of 17-year-old Laquan
McDonald, Anne Kavanagh, media coordinator for Van Dyke's attorney,
Dan Herbert, said in an email.
Herbert said in a statement that the judge's decision to appoint a
special prosecutor was expected and does not change how he will
defend Van Dyke, 38.
"From the beginning, we have said this was a tragedy not a
first-degree murder," Herbert said in the statement. "We believed
Jason Van Dyke was overcharged for political reasons. We are hoping
the new prosecutor will recognize that it was overcharged as well."
Gaughan's decision comes about a month after Cook County State's
Attorney Anita Alvarez removed herself from the case and asked the
judge to appoint a special prosecutor to handle the politically
sensitive case. Alvarez lost her re-election bid earlier this year
after protests over her taking a year to charge Van Dyke.
The shooting came at a time of heightened national debate over
police use of deadly force, especially against black men.
The shooting of McDonald was caught on patrol car dashboard camera
videos that were released a year after he was killed. The incident
sparked demonstrations and led to the firing of the police chief, an
ongoing federal investigation of the police department and calls for
Mayor Rahm Emanuel to resign.
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Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke approaches the bench during
his hearing Thursday morning, May 5, 2016 at the Leighton Criminal
Court Building in Chicago, Illinois,
U.S. REUTERS/Nancy Stone
Chicago police typically shoot about 50 people a year, in both fatal
and non-fatal incidents. More than 74 percent of those shot by
Chicago police between 2008 and 2015 were black, while the city's
population is about one-third black.
Police shootings have fallen. In the first three months of this
year, there were four police shooting incidents, the lowest number
for any quarter since at least 2007.
Chicago recorded its deadliest month in 21 years with 66 slain in
May, according to the Chicago Tribune, citing police records.
Homicides last month were the highest since 1995 when 75 people were
killed, the newspaper reported.
(Reporting by Justin Madden; Editing by Chris Reese and Leslie
Adler)
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