48:00 vs. 48:01
I wrote about the underlying civil suits involved in generating this new rule a few years back. You can catch-up on my past posts about these cases here: Part I, Part II, Part III, Part IV, Part...
I wrote about the underlying civil suits involved in generating this new rule a few years back. You can catch-up on my past posts about these cases here: Part I, Part II, Part III, Part IV, Part V.
The recent article by Chicago Tribune reporters David Heinzmann and Angela Rozas covering the new 48 hour rule fails to ask important questions that are in the public interest. The Chicago Police Department has a long history of using abusive tactics during interrogations. The reporting lacked any historical perspective that would have provided numerous examples of abuse associated with Chicago police interrogation practices.
True to crime and justice reporting in the Chicago media, the serious questions that could inform the public discourse on this important issue were never asked. The first and most important question to ask would be about the legitimacy of holding people for 48 hours without judicial review. Detention without judicial review means that the restraint of an individual's liberty is being authorized on the suspicions of a few police officials.
A second question might be how many individuals per year have been held past 48 hours without judicial review and what was the result of these detentions? In the civil suit that instigated the current class action suit in question, Joseph Lopez was restrained for four days before finally confessing falsely to a murder he never committed. Another individual confessed to the murder just a few weeks later.
- PDF of current complaint: Federal Civil Complaint # 1:01-cv-01823
- PDF of Lopez's complaint: Federal Civil Complaint #1:04-cv-06804





















