Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Death of a Torturer
Ramsin Canon
26 Sep 2018
Death of a Torturer
Death of a Torturer

Jon Burge gleefully coerced confessions from black men to get them convicted of crimes they often hadn’t committed and keep them in cages for the rest of their lives.

“Burge and his command were good at their jobs: ‘solving’ crimes by supplying a steady stream of convictions to prosecutors.”

You can’t slander a dead man, but in any case, Jon Burge is a man beyond slander. The former Chicago Police Department commander and torturer died this week in Florida. In 2010, Burge was convicted and sentenced to four and a half years in prison. Incomprehensibly — or perhaps not — Burge was not convicted for the abuse and torture of over one hundred black suspects throughout his reign over Area 2 on Chicago’s South Side between 1972 and 1988. He was convicted for lying under oath during the course of a federal investigation spurred by civil lawsuits brought by his victims — one of whom, Darrell Cannon, wrongfully convicted (and later exonerated) of murder on the strength of a coerced confession, described Burge’s team of interrogators as a “New Wave Klan.”

“Burge was not convicted for the abuse and torture of over one hundred black suspects throughout his reign over Area 2 on Chicago’s South Side between 1972 and 1988.”

It is tempting to treat Burge’s death as a moment to employ metaphor, but just as he’s beyond slander, he defies metaphor. From his Area 2 dungeon, Burge employed torture tactics likely learned in Vietnam to brutally and, according to some of his victims,gleefully coerce confessions from black men to get them convicted of crimes they often hadn’t committed and keep them in cages for the rest of their lives.

Jon Burge and his “Midnight Crew” of officers would nab people off the street, savagely beat them, in some cases electroshock them, apply cattle prods to their rectums and genitals, and sometimes even force them to play faux games of Russian roulette. This went on for almost twenty years, unimpeded. People served time on death row for crimes they didn’t commit. The system that housed Burge did not have a process in place, or even any incentive, to prevent this from happening.

“Burge’s crimes went on for almost twenty years, unimpeded.”

As a young man, Burge fought in Vietnam. That’s likely where he learned the techniques — and just as importantly, the indifference to humanity — necessary to torture and brutalize human beings. Burge carried those lessons back to the streets of the South Side and for a generation sent innocent men to prison.

The Chicago Fraternal Order of Police spokesperson used the occasion of Burge’s death yesterday to say Burge had put a lot of “bad guys in prison.”But there is no question that a sworn officer willing to snatch human beings off the street and torture them into prison cells didn’t make Chicago a safer place.

It wasn’t any formal city institution but the tireless work of activists against police abuse, a dogged local reporter, a team of attorneys, and most importantly the victims themselves, over the course of decades, that brought the crimes of Burge and his Midnight Crew to light. There was no institution to bring Burge to justice or keep him at heel as an initial matter. And why would there have been? Burge and his command were good at their jobs: “solving” crimes by supplying a steady stream of convictions to prosecutors.

“The Chicago Fraternal Order of Police said Burge had put a lot of ‘bad guys in prison.’”

One of those prosecutors was State’s Attorney and future Mayor Richard M. Daley, who was informed in 1982 of the torture of Andrew Wilson. Daley declined to investigate. One of his successors, Richard Devine, also declined to undertake a comprehensive investigation.

In the 1970s, just as Burge was getting his start at CPD, “law and order” was the refrain of the day in US cities. The Civil Rights Movement and increasing black and Latinx political power in big cities were treated as lawlessness and social decay. With the Civil Rights and Fair Housing Acts undercutting the practices that had maintained segregation for generations, police and prosecutors had de facto responsibility for maintaining the status quo. Cops unafraid to bend the law to get “the bad guys” became heroes: this was the era of Clint Eastwood as Dirty Harry asking a prone suspect if he felt lucky.

But Dirty Harry was a “renegade” cop at odds with his pencil-pushing superiors. Burge and his Midnight Crew may have been breaking the law and violating the constitution, but it was only the permissiveness of the department that could allow it to happen. As John Conroy, the Chicago Reader reporter who brought Burge’s crimes to popular public awareness, put it, Burge was only possible because no superior ever intervened.

“Cops unafraid to bend the law to get ‘the bad guys’ became heroes.”

Burge was no vigilante; there was no by-the-book Chief breathing down his neck and hollering at him to straighten up and fly right. For the Midnight Crew to operate so viciously for so long, the halls of the Area 2 headquarters at 91st and Cottage Grove had to stay silent, save for the howls of his victims. A system designed to terrorize a population into obedience as much as solve crimes was working properly.

It took Black People Against Police Torture (BPAPT), in coalition with scores of activists, survivors, and exonerees, who convened a coalition of activists and attorneys to bring international attention to the cases and spur restorative action. In 2013, the City Council approved a $12.3 million settlement for two of Burge’s victims. All told, the city spent approximately $100 million in legal defense and settlements connected to Burge’s torture regime.

“Burge was only possible because no superior ever intervened.”

Settlement payouts could never be enough. A coalition of organizations including BPAPT, Project NIA, BYP100, and others worked for nearly three years to get a reparations ordinance passed through the City Council. The ordinance was passed a month after Rahm Emanuel narrowly won his reelection bid — at a time, we know now, when the city was actively suppressing release of a video showing the killing of sixteen-year-old Laquan McDonald by a Chicago police officer. That trial was made possible by many of the same activists and began just a day before Burge’s death.

The reparations ordinance admitted fault on the part of the city, created a fund and provided counseling for torture survivors, funded construction of a permanent memorial, and perhaps most importantly, required that the history of the Burge torture regime be taught to Chicago’s eighth and tenth grade students.

Jon Burge’s legacy defies slander, because the truth is enough. A little justice is that young Chicagoans will hear the truth and escape the conspiracy of silence that reigned around Burge’s torture for too long.

This article previously appeared in Portsideand Jacobin.

COMMENTS?

Please join the conversation on Black Agenda Report's Facebook page at http://facebook.com/blackagendareport

Or, you can comment by emailing us at [email protected]

Police brutality

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles. Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Black Panthers, Sacramento CA 1967
Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
Copaganda
05 January 2022
Copaganda I.
Biden’s DOJ Sleight of Hand on Police Reform
Netfa Freeman
Biden’s DOJ Sleight of Hand on Police Reform
22 September 2021
DOJ "reforms" are a smoke screen covering up systemic complicity with law enforcement.
The NBA’s Black Power
Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
The NBA’s Black Power
02 September 2020
Black NBA players, writes Ann Garrison, are just beginning to understand the power of the attention and admiration they command.
Federal Judge Tackles Police Immunity Law
Marjorie Cohn
Federal Judge Tackles Police Immunity Law
26 August 2020
The Black judge listed the injustices of “qualified immunity,” which allows police and other government officials to escape liability for their law
The NYPD Is Withholding Evidence From Investigations Into Police Abuse
Eric Umansky and Mollie Simon
The NYPD Is Withholding Evidence From Investigations Into Police Abuse
19 August 2020
The NYPD has regularly failed to turn over key records and videos to police abuse investigators at New York’s Civilian Complaint Review Board.
LA’s Gang-Infested Police are Deadly – and Costly
Alene Tchekmedyian
LA’s Gang-Infested Police are Deadly – and Costly
12 August 2020
Uniformed thugs calling themselves Vikings, Regulators and Banditos prey on the city’s Black and brown civilians, and even brutalize their fellow c
Reviving the False Narrative on Police
Clarence Taylor
Reviving the False Narrative on Police
22 July 2020
The antidote to police lawlessness isn’t more training, or fancy equipment, but putting the community in charge of the cops.
The Torture Machine, Racism and Violence in Chicago
Jeff Haas and Dennis Cunningham
The Torture Machine, Racism and Violence in Chicago
19 February 2020
Chicago’s torture machine was both a real mechanism to produce confessions through pain, and a racist political instrument.
The US Surges Into A Police State While Media White Out Structural Racism
Netfa Freeman
The US Surges Into A Police State While Media White Out Structural Racism
08 January 2020
Trump wants to “surge” against urban Black and brown Americans in the same way that the US surged against Iraq and Afghanistan.
When Even The FBI Can’t Hold Police Accountable, How Can Anyone Else?
 Nida Khan
When Even The FBI Can’t Hold Police Accountable, How Can Anyone Else?
20 November 2019
A brutal New Jersey police chief who routinely spouted racist slurs and threats was fingered by his own officers, but exonerated in court.

More Stories


  • The United States is Organizing a Color Revolution in Cuba for November 15
    Alan MacLeod
    The United States is Organizing a Color Revolution in Cuba for November 15
    02 Nov 2021
    The U.S. continues its brazen attacks against the Cuban people, having announced its role in upcoming "protests" taking place on November 15.
  • Bolivia's president Luis Arce used the COP26 summit to speak against the "green capitalism" offered by the rich capitalist nations and in favor of alternatives which put humanity at the center.
    Brett Wilkins
    Bolivian President Warns 'Carbon Colonialism' Won't Solve Climate Crisis
    02 Nov 2021
    Bolivia's president Luis Arce used the COP26 summit to speak against "green capitalism" offered by the rich capitalist nations and in favor of alternatives which put humanity at the center.
  • Don’t Ignore the 2021 Tribunal on Genocide
    Salifu Mack
    Don’t Ignore the 2021 Tribunal on Genocide
    02 Nov 2021
    The International Tribunal on US Human Rights Abuses against Black, Brown and Indigenous Peoples declared that the U.S.
  • British Soldiers on the Beach at Dunkirk - Cassowary Colorizations
    Nu'man Abd al-Wahid
    Decolonising Dunkirk – Genocidal White Supremacists at War with Each Other
    02 Nov 2021
    The history of World War II often repeats the narrative of good vs. bad Europeans. In reality, Britain, France, the Netherlands, and Belgium perpetrated as many atrocities as the Germans.
  • Russell “Maroon” Shoatz is Free, But Other Political Prisoners Languish
    Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Russell “Maroon” Shoatz is Free, But Other Political Prisoners Languish
    27 Oct 2021
    The demand for freedom of political prisoners must be consistently made for their sakes and for all at risk of joining them in the future.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us