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CHICAGO: The Rock Takes Over
Some Chicagoans like to sneer that their city has the best police force that money can buy. Others note that it has often been difficult to tell the cops from the crooks without a lineup card. But James M. Rochford, who has spent half of his 52 years on the force, thunders: "I abhor dishonesty among policemen." If he is eager to root out corruption, Rochford has landed the right job; last week he was named Chicago's superintendent of police. He moves in just when the city is in the grip of a police scandal of truly startling proportions, even by its historically gamy standards.
In the past three years, 86 policemen have been indicted for crimes; 48 have been convicted, including two captains. A total of 407 cops have been fired or forced to quit after superiors accused them of such activities as consorting with prostitutes and selling heroin. Investigations are still going on.
As with all other phases of public life in Chicago, the investigationsand the appointment of Rochfordhave political overtones. The 13,800-member police force is closely controlled by Democratic Mayor Richard Daley, whose scandal-ridden machine has run the city since 1955. The prosecutions are being pushed by two politically ambitious RepublicansU.S. Attorney James ("Big Jim") Thompson and Bernard Carey, the state's attorney for Chicago's Cook County.
Thompson uncovered two highly organized police extortion rings that preyed on the near-North Side liquor trade during the past few years. The cops set up "vice clubs" and "invited" everyone to join who sold liquorthe owners of corner taverns, Gold Coast bistros, swinging singles spots and homosexual hangouts. Dues were $100 to $200 a month, and the benefits of membership were simply the privilege of operating without harassment. Those who refused to join sometimes found cops entering their places and endlessly checking identification of their customers. Uncooperative owners were threatened with loss of their liquor licenses, which the police controlled.
The two extortion rings netted more than half a million dollars for their police operators. Thompson has so far indicted 37 men and won convictions of 23, including the two captains. Meanwhile he is investigating four other districts of Chicago for possible rings.
In still another scandal, after six bodies were found floating in the city's waterways, suspicion focused not on Chicago's gangsters but on Chicago's cops. Some of the victims were thought to be dealers in heroin who had failed to buy off the police with bribe money.
Two policemen were sentenced to life for their roles in two of the killings.
Last November the Chicago Tribune documented many sickening cases of police brutality. Among the victims were a teen-ager who lost an eye after being wantonly slugged by a policeman, and a woman who gave birth to a deformed child after being pounded in the abdomen by a patrolman. The series of articles led to the indictments of four cops, whose cases are still pending.
Dirty Money. After the liquor extortion scandals broke in 1972, Superintendent James Conlisk created a task force called C-5 to ferret out corruption.
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