Associated Press
CHICAGO — Two Chicago police officers whose official accounts of a 2014 fatal shooting of a black teenager by white Officer Jason Van Dyke contradict parts of a squad-car video have been put on desk duty until investigations are complete.
Van Dyke’s partner, Officer Joseph Walsh, and a detective who found the shooting justified, David March, retain their police powers but can no longer work on the street in any operational role, police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said in a statement sent to The Associated Press on Friday.
Dashcam video released Nov. 24 shows Van Dyke shooting Laquan McDonald 16 times as he walks away from police officers with a knife at his side. The footage prompted weeks of protests in Chicago, the sacking of the police superintendent and demands for Mayor Rahm Emanuel to resign. Van Dyke has been charged with murder in the shooting and has pleaded not guilty.
The shooting has turned a spotlight on longstanding concerns about a “code of silence” in the Chicago Police Department, in which officers stay quiet about or even cover up possible misconduct by colleagues.
The president of the Chicago Police Board, which oversees disciplinary actions against police, addressed that code this week.
“Those officers who are doing their jobs the right way must be responsible not only for themselves, but for their partners and colleagues who have gone astray,” Lori Lightfoot said in a speech at the City Club of Chicago on Tuesday. “They cannot bear witness to misconduct by others, turn a blind eye and believe that all is well.”
Asked in a phone interview Friday about Walsh and March being taken off the street, Guglielmi said he will terminate “any officer found guilty of lying or misrepresenting the facts” following federal and administrative investigations of the McDonald case.
Included among hundreds of documents that the city released on Dec. 4 were accounts by Walsh and March in which they describe the 17-year-old McDonald advancing on police and waiving a knife threateningly at them right before Van Dyke fired — accounts that portray the teenager as far more menacing than he appears in the video.
In a handwritten account on Oct. 20, 2014 — within hours of the shooting — Walsh wrote that McDonald “swung (the) knife” at Van Dyke, adding that he was convinced McDonald was “attempting to kill” his partner. He also says McDonald kept trying to get up.
The video belies those accounts.
In it, Van Dyke is seen stepping from a squad car driven by Walsh and shooting almost immediately. After one or two shots, McDonald collapses, barely moving except for slight twitches as bullets pummel his body. Court filings by prosecutors say all but a few of the 16 shots hitting McDonald were fired over 13 seconds as he lay in the street. The 3-inch blade was found folded into the handle, according to prosecutors.
A report submitted by March months later appeared to take officers’ accounts at face value and concluded that McDonald had been “an active assailant” armed with “a dangerous weapon.” On that basis, he deemed Van Dyke’s decision to shoot was justified.
Guglielmi said Interim Police Superintendent John Escalante put March and Walsh on desk duty on the recommendation of the Chicago Office of Inspector General Joseph Ferguson in mid-December. The office is the city’s internal watchdog and its recommendation isn’t binding. The Independent Police Review Authority, the city agency that investigates police-involved shootings, referred the case to the inspector general.
Guglielmi said Friday he didn’t know the basis of the inspector general’s recommendation or whether it cited the reports that appeared to contradict the video.
“Officer Walsh is currently assigned to desk duties within the 8th district and Detective March has been removed from all current investigations within the Bureau of Detectives,” his written statement said.
Records show that Walsh and March have been called at least twice to appear before a federal grand jury investigating McDonald’s death. The AP left a message seeking comment from police union president, Dean Angelo Sr., who has spoken on behalf of rank-and-file officers in the past. Attempts to reach Walsh and March, or attorneys for them, were unsuccessful Friday.
Copyright 2016 The Associated Press