Wife of Chicago cop charged with murder
says he no monster: report
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[May 14, 2016]
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The wife of a
white Chicago police officer charged with murder in the shooting death
of a black teenager said her husband is "not the monster" people think
he is, the Chicago Tribune reported on Friday.
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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 |
The wife of officer Jason Van Dyke, Tiffany Van Dyke, in an
interview with the newspaper said he is not a trigger-happy, racist
cop as he has been portrayed, but a gentle man who wanted to make a
difference in law enforcement and loves his two daughters.
"He is not the monster the world now sees him as," she told the
paper. "He prays for Laquan and his family. (The shooting) is not
something he ever wanted to do."
Jason Van Dyke, 38, has declined to speak with the media since his
arrest last fall, when he was charged with first-degree murder
almost a year after he shot 17-year-old Laquan McDonald 16 times.
The October 2014 shooting was captured on patrol car dashboard
camera videos, but not released publicly until last fall.
 The video's release came at a time of heightened national debate
over policing, especially the use by police of excessive force
against black men. It prompted weeks of protests, led to the firing
of Chicago's police chief, a federal investigation of the police
department and calls for Mayor Rahm Emanuel to resign.
McDonald family spokesman, Marvin Hunter, could not be immediately
reached for comment on Friday. He told the Tribune he feels
compassion for Van Dyke's family, but has little sympathy for the
officer, saying he acted as "judge, jury and executioner."
Anne Kavanagh, media coordinator for Jason Van Dyke's attorney, Dan
Herbert, said the family was no longer doing interviews and "the
comments in the Chicago Tribune story stand for themselves." Herbert
has said his client feared for his life and those of his fellow
officers, and Van Dyke would prevail in court.
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Van Dyke, who was suspended without pay after he was charged,
pleaded not guilty to murder and is on bail pending the trial.
The Tribune also spoke with Van Dyke's father, Owen, who said he and
his wife would continue to support their son, who he said was not a
murderer. Van Dyke's African American brother-in-law, Keith
Thompson, told the paper the shooting was not premeditated and not
motivated by racism.
(Reporting by Justin Madden, Editing by Ben Klayman and Andrew Hay)
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