The Cook County grand jury indictment alleges that the three police officers were at the scene of the killing and worked together to conceal crucial facts in order to protect a fellow officer.
A grand jury has indicted three Chicago police officers on felony charges, accusing them of conspiring to cover up the facts of a fatal police shooting in October 2014 of a black teenager in order to shield their fellow officer. Officer Jason Van Dyke, who is white, shot 17-year-old Laquan McDonald 16 times, according to prosecutors. Dash-cam footage, eventually released under a court order the killing, showed Van Dyke shooting McDonald as he walked away from the officer. At that time Van Dyke was charged with first-degree murder, and he has pleaded not guilty. But police initially told a totally different story. The Cook County grand jury indictment alleges that the three officers – David March, Joseph Walsh and Thomas Gaffney – were at the scene of the killing and worked together to conceal crucial facts in the initial police report. The report, which was shown to be false in light of the dash-cam video, stated that McDonald was assaulting the three officers, forcing Van Dyke to step in to defend them. The inaccurate story stated that McDonald was lunging toward Van Dyke and slashing a knife when he shot him. In fact, the police report described Van Dyke, Walsh, and Gaffney as « victims » of McDonald. « The indictment makes clear that these defendants did more than merely obey an unofficial ‘code of silence, ‘ » Special Prosecutor Patricia Holmes Brown said in a statement. » [R] ather it alleges that they lied about what occurred to prevent independent criminal investigators from learning the truth. » According to the indictment, the men knew that a « public airing of the events surrounding Laquan McDonald’s killing, including the video recordings, would inexorably lead to a thorough criminal investigation by an independent body and likely criminal charges. » All three men are accused of failing to locate at least three witnesses who might present a different version of events. March also allegedly « failed to locate, identify, and preserve physical evidence… including video and photographic evidence. » They are also accused of coordinating with each other and attempting to conceal the conspiracy from other law enforcement authorities. March, Walsh and Gaffney are each charged with three felony counts: conspiracy, official misconduct and obstruction of justice. The men could face years in prison and fines of tens of thousands of dollars, according to the prosecutor. The prosecutor says Marsh has served the Chicago Police Department for more than 30 years and Walsh and Gaffney, for about 20 years. Brown told reporters that the three men are not in custody. They are scheduled to appear at an arraignment on July 10. According to The Associated Press, Walsh and Marsh are no longer on the force. The wire service adds that Gaffney « has been suspended because of the felony indictment, according to the department. » A scathing released in the final days of the Obama administration concluded that the Chicago Police Department « engages in a pattern or practice of the use of excessive force. » The investigation was launched in the wake of the McDonald killing.