Cook County State Prosecutor Anita Alvarez on Tuesday charged Van Dyke with first-degree murder in a sharpened of Laquan McDonald. Alvarez pronounced she was assured her bureau could accommodate a burden, citing video footage of a sharpened as good as declare accounts. Alvarez didn’t mention if a witnesses were motorists on a scene, or any of a 7 military who were on a stage with Van Dyke. Â
Taylor voiced doubt that any of a officers on stage would mangle their ostensible “code of silence.”
“[Cops] go on record, they write reports, they attest before a grand jury. And if they’re proven wrong, they’re committing perjury,” Taylor said. “They can’t spin back.”Â
For military that do mangle rank, Taylor pronounced atonement is all though certain. He cited Detective Laverty,
“Laverty, an gifted carnage detective, was reassigned to watch new recruits give urine samples,” pronounced Chicago profession Flint Taylor, whose People’s Law Officewas concerned in a case. “In a station, we schooled after that when Laverty walked by a room, [Cmdr. Jon] Burge would lift out his gun, put it to Laverty’s behind and go ‘Pop! Pop!’ in front of all a other cops in a room.”Â
Van Dyke’s complaint was a initial time in some-more than 30 years that a Chicago military officer had been charged with murder. If convicted, he could offer 20 years to life in prison — and would be a initial Chicago patrolman in a complicated epoch to be convicted of first-degree murder from an on-duty shooting.Â