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BGA Report -- Part 2 ( BGA Report -- Part 1
Part 2 Part 3
Part 4)
The Browns Chicken Massacre
Descriptive Background: The Crime in Context
J. Terrence Brunner, Executive Director, Better Government Association
Copyright © Better Government
Association 1997
This document is not to be reproduced without the express written
permission of the
Better Government Association. Extra copies of the BGA reports
are available for $10 upon request
The Crime
At 3:11 a.m. on Saturday January 9, 1993, Palatine Police Officers
Conley and Saxma opened the east employees door of Browns
Fried Chicken and entered what many detectives described to the
BGA as the worst crime scene since the John Wayne Gacy or Richard
Speck murders.
Five in the cooler at Browns, had gone out over
the radio and one veteran officer told the BGA that he had visions
of Jeffrey Dahmer. The five victims in the cooler
were actually found in the freezer on the stores east side
and they were all attired in blood soaked Browns uniforms.
The two other victims were discovered by the late-arriving Sgt.
Haas, who showed up two minutes later. He found them in the west
cooler and only one was in a Browns uniform.
The seven victims included Richard and Lynn Ehlenfeldt, 50 and
49 years old respectively, the husband and wife team who had recently
purchased the restaurant. It became a family enterprise and they
had relieved their daughter at 4 p.m. that day to handle the busy
Friday night shift. The breader that night, who was
not required to wear a Browns uniform because he did not
have public contact, was 32-year-old Tim Mennes. The other four
victims included 31-year-old Marcus Nellsen, Guadalupe Maldonado,
46, and two Palatine High School friends, 16-year-old Michael
Castro and 17-year-old Rico Solis. They had all been shot from
one to six times and some sections of the crime scene were very
bloody despite efforts by the killers to clean up. The shooter,
which is parlance for the actual killer as opposed to any accomplices,
had reloaded his weapon at least three times.
Some of the shots to the heads of various victims appeared to
one veteran police officer as having been delivered execution
style as a sort of coup de gras. A knife was
also used by the killers and some evidence of a struggle was also
present. A warning or control shot had been fired into the ceiling.
Evidence was all over the restaurant. A partially-eaten meal was
in a freshly-changed garbage bag. The bloody mop that the killers
had used to clean some of the scene was resting near the east
door. The mop bucket was propping open another door in the restaurant.
On the lower part of the freezer, the hand of one victim was extending
out the door and bloody prints were on the door frame.
The killers had flipped the electric switches near the door stopping
the wall clock. The crack on the face of the stopped wall clock
initially intrigued investigators until they discovered that it
had been cracked by employees playing biscuit baseball
many weeks earlier. A potentially important piece of evidence
was found on the floor in front of the cooler door and another
near the safe. The safe still had the key in it.
While bags of evidence were later removed from the scene by the
police, we will not attempt here to set forth all the physical
evidence. But, just as important as the evidence which was present
is the evidence which was absent. Police found no shell casings
despite an exhaustive search, and the killers left money on some
victims while taking cash from the safe. Money was found in the
sock of one victim and the wallet of another. The credit card
of one of the victims was hidden behind some boxes.
By Saturday night, the crime scene was described by two others
who were there as dimly lit with powder
from fingerprint dusting everywhere. The floor was filthy
and the paper on the floor, which was put there to protect from
footprints, was tattered and wet. Bags of evidence, some of which
would not be processed for months, lined the hallway to the dining
room. Ten or twelve police clustered around in groups while evidence
technicians worked.
Outside the crime scene sat the victims cars. Police drew
the scene narrowly, which is police parlance for closely.
As soon as the news went out, crews of news reporters and vehicles
descended on the scene and closely surrounded the building to
cover the news story.
The Players: January 9, 1993
Palatine Police Chief Jerry Bratcher
Palatine Police Chief Jerry Bratcher has long played a leadership
role among suburban police chiefs. He is a founding father of
and the power behind the Northwest Police Academy (NWPA); the
owner of a private law enforcement consulting company; the recipient
of an annual honorarium from the Commission on Accreditation for
Law Enforcement Agencies (CALEA); and a key supporter of the Northern
Illinois Police Crime Lab (NIPCL). He has also served as a spokesman
for Micro Aseptica company which sells police departments
a variety of products and services. As one chief said, Jerry
has a lot of irons in the fire and he makes a lot of money.
Another called Bratcher mercenary.
As a result of his extensive business relationships and activities,
Bratcher has a significant amount of economic clout in police
circles. As a consultant, Bratcher assesses the suburban police
departments, screen candidates for law enforcement jobs, and recommends
police chiefs when departments have an opening. He has the ability
to recommend his peers for key slots and well-paying jobs around
the country. He has worked for, among other municipalities, Schaumburg,
Country Club Hills, Huntley and Lincolnwood. Between 1992 and
1996, Bratcher was paid at least $27,000 for his consulting services.
Bratchers economic clout is further enhanced by his role
at the NWPA. When the NWPA first got started, speakers would appear
for free. Under Bratcher, the NWPA began to charge attendees hundreds
of dollars for seminars. The fees, generally paid by municipalities,
were used to retain national experts, enhancing Bratchers
economic clout and status in law enforcement circles.
As the chief of a CALEA-certified department, Bratcher is able
to consult with other departments to help them gain and
retain accreditation. CALEAs fees are hefty, ranging from
$4,500 to $16,150. It is an expensive process to fail.
Bratcher also receives payments for services from Micro Aseptic,
making at least $5,000 in consulting fees in 1995 alone. Bratcher
used his considerable reputation and economic clout to help Micro
Aseptic sell products to other police chiefs. In one instance,
Bratcher used the NWPA as a platform to introduce Micro Aseptics
products and services. As he had at other occasions, Bratcher
introduced Jack Wagner of Micro Aseptic as an expert in combating
blood-borne pathogens. He vouched for Micro Aseptics integrity
and effectiveness. However, he did not reveal his continuing economic
relationship with the company.
At the time, Micro Aseptic was owned and operated by two of Palatines
trustees: Jack Wagner and Gregory Solberg. Wagner also chairs
the public safety committee of the village board, which oversees
the Palatine Police Department. The public safety committee sets
salaries, approves budgets and monitors the departments
performance. Chief Bratchers departmentalong with
the Lincolnwood PDappeared in a 17-minute police training
tape, which was essentially an infomercial for Micro Aseptic products.
The tape credits the NWPA for help in production. (Note: In 1994,
Bratcher served as a paid consultant for Lincolnwood as they searched
for a new chief.) This is an apparent violation of Palatines
ethics ordinance which prohibits, use of village equipment,
material or property for personal ... profit.
Interestingly, Micro Aseptic was chosen to clean up the crime
scene at Browns. Wager maintains that the products were
provided at no charge as a public service. Skeptics have suggested
that it was done for publicity.
In 1993, Bratcher was a big supporter of the Northern Illinois
Police Crime Lab, which was later directed by former Glencoe Police
Chief Bonneville. In 1993-94, Palatine paid over $50,000 to the
NIPCL, a not-for-profit operation to which suburban police departments
pay member fees.
Bratcher is well-liked in law enforcement circles. In fact, in
response to the adverse media coverage of his handling of the
Browns case, a group of police chiefs sent Bratcher a card
saying, Hang in there. He is considered an insider.
One chief noted, He has tremendous contacts both nationally
and internationally.
Although prohibited from endorsing or engaging in political activities
which benefit candidates by federal tax laws and the By-laws of
the 501(c)3 NWPA, Bratcher invited then-candidate for States
Attorney Jack OMalley to appear before the Northwest suburban
police chiefs. Bratcher later prided himself as the first suburban
chief to endorse OMalley. Bratcher did not invite OMalleys
opponent Alderman OConnor.
Bratcher attended informal get-togethers at the Prime Table restaurant
in Rolling Meadowsa hang-out for members of the law enforcement
community. They spent many hours in its bar. As one chief noted,
Well go in at noon and well still be in there
at 8:00 p.m. Another chief discussed the appointment of
a designated driver in anticipation of the large amount of alcohol
that would be consumed by NWPA members. Task Force members drank
and dined at the Prime Table on numerous occasions.
Like the suburban chiefs and some Task Force members, commodities
trader Tom Collins and his Lake States associates also frequented
the Prime Table. Mr. Collins girlfriend, Kathy Chambers,
who was with Collins on his California crime spree, was their
waitress. Many of Collins deals were cut at the Prime Table.
Collins took large sums of money from investors which he was supposed
to invest in the commodities market. In reality, Collins ran a
Ponzi scheme, which bilked most investors of between
$50,000 and $300,000. Some of the losses went into the millions.
This group of Lake States investors included Jerry Bratcher. The
list was a whos who of government officials and businessmen.
Court records indicate that Bratcher lost $125,000 in the scheme.
(Note: Collins ultimately fled to California, where he robbed
a bank and committed suicide.)
On the eve of the murders at Browns Chicken in Palatine,
Police chief Bratcher had successfully positioned himself to sell
a variety of services and products to his fellow suburban chiefs
and their municipalities through his connection to the Northwest
Police Academy, his law enforcement consulting business, and his
relationship with Micro Aseptic, which was owned by two trustees
on the Palatine Board of Trustees.
The States Attorneys Office: Jack OMalley
OMalley was the extremely ambitious States Attorney
of Cook County in 1993. OMalley made no secret of his interest
in running for governor or his desire for publicity to aid him
in that endeavor. Hes never met a microphone he didnt
like, according to his press aid, Andy Knott. OMalley
had communicated his intense desire to run for governor to a coterie
of top States Attorneys early on, which they are fond of
quoting.
However, OMalley found that working with such highly-experienced
career prosecutors, many of them Republicans who had served under
a number of previous States Attorneys, cramped his style.
They were constantly arguing for the office to place a greater
emphasis on street crime as opposed to high-profile cases. So,
rather quickly, in a move unheard of since Bernard Careys
reign as States Attorney, OMalley cleared out the
top echelon of prosecutors and replaced them with his own people.
Similarly, he began a drive to change the nature of the States
Attorneys investigators responsibilities. He quickly
moved his own man, Kevin Kavanaugh, in as Chief Investigator.
Kavanaugh and OMalley had worked together when Kavanaugh
was secretary for the 18th District and OMalley was a police
officer on Mayor Byrnes security detail, which was housed
in the district.
Historically, States Attorney investigators had been detailed
to the office from the Cook County Sheriff. They were sworn officers
whose role had been to track down witnesses and late-breaking
leads prior to trial. They were never considered to be primarily
investigators. The States Attorney had relied on the police
to investigate most cases. In some respects, the office had suffered
since it lacked an independent investigative firepower, particularly
in the areas of organized crime and political corruptionareas
where the Chicago Police had been historically ineffectual.
This stands in contrast with the widespread success of the U.S.
Attorneys and the Justice Department in developing their cases.
The government had been particularly successful in combining representatives
of various federal agencies (i.e., IRS, FBI, Labor) with highly-skilled
career prosecutors to form strike forces on organized
crime and political corruption.
It may be only coincidence that former Illinois Governor Ogilvie
and Attorney General Scott had similarly positioned themselves
for higher office by attacking organized crime, vice, and suburban
corruption as Justice Department prosecutors. They had run their
campaigns as racket-busters, in contrast to the old
corrupt Democratic Daley machine.
Thus, OMalley went before the County Board and the state
urging them to expand the power of the States Attorneys
office by adding more investigators. These investigators would
be directed by him and responsible to him. They would work on
developing early evidence, enabling OMalley to more effectively
prosecute complex cases, especially those that fell outside Chicago
where fewer investigative resources were available.
The question of whether or not to fund 140 investigators, many
of them former Chicago Police Department colleagues of OMalley,
was before the legislature in late 1992 and early 1993, the time
of the Browns killings. OMalley wanted them to possess
full police powers, but, naturally, many objected to his need
for over 100 new patronage appointees, his own army completely
loyal to him.
Critics charged: This was a move to consolidate political
power as well as create an army loyal to OMalley and Kavanaugh.
What other reason could there be, since all of the current investigators
were sworn Sheriffs police? Later, these critics argued
that the prominent role played by the States Attorneys
investigators in Palatine was directly related to OMalleys
desire to favorably influence the political environment required
to secure the desired changes in state law. They maintained that
the budget came from the Cook County Sheriffs Police and
when the States Attorney no longer needed the Sheriffs
police, they would return to active duty on the County force.
OMalley and Kavanaugh could obtain additional funding from
the county to staff now vacant trial preparation slots and other
offices consolidated under Chief Investigator Kavanaugh.
Everyone thought the January Palatine killings would be solved
quickly, in fairly short order, and if States Attorney
investigators could argue that they had a prominent role in solving
it, that would be a great argument to bring to the County Board
and the legislature in support of OMalleys request
for his own investigative force.
The States Attorneys Office: Kevin Kavanaugh
Kevin Kavanaugh had a relationship to Palatine prior to the Browns
murder investigation. Kavanaugh and Sgt. Koziol of Palatine had
worked together successfully on both the Lyng murder and the Erikson
bank robbery cases.
Kavanaugh had been Jack OMalleys lieutenant while
OMalley served as an officer on Jane Byrnes mayoral
detail, and many States Attorneys felt Kavanaugh was attached
at the hip to OMalley.
As a former top States Attorney reports, Kavanaugh
had never been considered a Ôreal policeman.
In fact, he says, Kavanaughs reputation in the police department
stemmed from his incompetence.
Kavanaughs real job was as head of security
for Levy Restaurants, a corporation which runs restaurant concessions
at Arlington Park, Ravinia and several riverboat casinos. Kavanaugh
was formerly with the Chicago Police Departments Internal
Affairs Division and was a lieutenant on leave from the Chicago
Police Department. Kavanaugh then became chief of the States
Attorneys Investigations Bureau. The old guard in the States
Attorneys office described his role there as being one to
make OMalley look good.
Kavanaughs clout within the Chicago Police Department was
partially derived from his ties to Levy Restaurants. That relationship
gave him the ability to give fellow officers moonlighting jobs
with Levy Restaurants. In fact, John Robertson, a Chicago policeman
from the States Attorneys office on the Palatine Task
Force, received his job at Levy through Kavanaugh. In addition,
the connection between Kavanaugh, OMalley and Levy Restaurants
runs deeper. Levy Restaurants contributed in excess of $5000 to
OMalleys campaign. Kavanaugh made personal contributions
as well.
Kavanaugh was bitterly despised by the Chicago media, particularly
WMAQ-TV. The media argues Kavanaugh misled them in a number of
high-visibility cases including the Dowaliby case in which Kavanaugh
and Robertson worked closely. Kavanaugh was quoted as saying,
If I solved the Dowaliby case, this building wouldnt
be tall enough for the feather in my cap.
The States Attorneys Office: Pat OBrien
Pat OBrien was OMalleys liaison and the legal
advisor to the Palatine Task Force. OBrien had previous
experience with Palatine when he assisted the small task force
of Kavanaugh, Koziol and the Palatine Police Department in solving
the Lyng case. He was appointed the head of the Felony Trial Division
in the States Attorneys office by Richard Daley, then
Cook County States Attorney. OBrien was a career prosecutor,
promoted because of Daleys desire to create an office with
a tough-on-crime image. In his work on the Dowaliby
case, defense attorneys charged OBrien with withholding
key evidence from the jury and with exaggerating the accuracy
of the evidence the police had acquired.
After the jury found Cynthia Dowaliby innocent of the murder of
her daughter, she still hoped to clear her husbands name.
He had been convicted. OBrien made various comments attacking
Mrs. Dowalibys character. OMalley, the recently elected
States Attorney at the time of the trial, admitted that
OBriens comments were regrettable and inappropriate.
OMalley consequently demoted OBrien.
The Discovery: January 8-9, 1993
When 16-year-old Palatine High School junior Michael Castro
failed to come home shortly after the 9 p.m. closing of the Browns
Chicken restaurant Friday, January 8, 1993, his parents began
to worry. He always called if he was going to be late.
Shortly after 11 p.m. they drove to the restaurant. It was dimly
lit and appeared to be closed. There was a police officer in the
parking lot. The Castros did not see him get out of his patrol
car and check the restaurant for signs of trouble. The officer
told the Castros, Dont worry about your son, hell
come home. Hell be back. Hell call.
He never did.
Browns cook Guadalupe Maldonados family also started
to worry. He always came home on time. Mrs. Maldonado called Browns
but got no answer. So she sent Guadalupes younger brother
Pedro to the restaurant. According to the Maldonados, a patrol
officer found Pedro looking in the window of Browns, ordered
him off of the property, and told him his brother was probably
out drinking or hanging out. But Guadalupe did not drink
and wouldnt have gone anywhere without his Dodge Charger,
which was still parked in the parking lot along with Castros
car.
At 2 a.m., the Castros called the police again, this time to file
a missing persons report. An officer came to their home and filled
out the paperwork.
The Castros requested they go to Browns. Upon arrival, Castro
said he saw a mop through the window against the wall. He exclaimed,
they will not let these people leave the mop there. They
would make them put it in the closet. Then he shouted, Thats
my sons jacket over there!
He and the officer began checking doors and the officer found
a side door unlocked.
The police officer entered through the unlocked side door and
yelled, Back off! Theres been a crime committed here.
At 3:11 a.m., the officer called in to Palatine. Theres
five in the cooler, was heard over the dispatch.
Within minutes, the parking lot was covered with police cars and
ambulances.
These were the events surrounding the initial discovery of what
has become known as the Browns Chicken Massacre.
Seven people were dead.
The discovery immediately ignited a controversy about the conduct
and effectiveness of the Palatine Police in those first hours
following the crime. The crime itself was committed somewhere
between 9:05 p.m. and 9:55 p.m. Five hours, which later would
be determined to be crucial, passed between the murders and when
the bodies were discovered. Over three hours passed between the
first officers visit to the scene and the discovery.
The families were the first to criticize the Palatine police,
suggesting officers visited Browns twice that Friday evening;
first at the urging of the Castros and then on a routine patrol.
Amazingly, neither of the two officers tried the doors or attempted
to go inside.
Mr. Castro suggested that those hours could have been the key
to life or death. If someone was still living, gasping for
breath, we might have saved his life.
On the Monday following the discovery, States Attorney OMalley
said at a news conference, We have no criticism of the police
investigation. Obviously, we would have preferred it if the police
could have discovered the crime while it was in progress or beforehand
or 15 minutes afterward.
More Inconsistencies
Walt Gasior was Palatines public relations spokesman, an
unsworn officer who held the rank of Deputy Chief. Gasior said
that police had no record of contact with the Maldonado family
and were checking into the Castros charges that the officer
they encountered at 11:45 p.m. never got out of his car to check
inside Browns. On Wednesday, January 13, 1993, in the Chicago
Tribune, Gasior defended Palatine officers against the families
charges, initially contained in the Tribune, that police responded
too slowly, delaying the investigation and making it impossible
to save any of the victims. The families contended that because
they were Hispanic the police took their fears lightly. While
Gasior wouldnt comment on the investigation, he rushed to
defend the Palatine police department. He acknowledged Palatines
understanding of the events preceding the discovery differed from
that of the victims families, but argued that the departments
version was more accurate.
Refusing to identify the officers involved, Gasior acknowledged
the inconsistent chronologies. This evasiveness would be the pattern
throughout the lengthy investigation. Palatine repeatedly refused
to allow the media access to routine, non-investigative aspects
of the investigation which would have further embarrassed the
already fragile credibility of the department. As an explanation
for this suspicious behavior, they claimed that the release of
the information would somehow compromise the course of the investigation.
Gasior said Palatine would investigate the stories to clear up
inconsistencies by reviewing police tapes of calls to the station
and their transcripts. Normal police logs and documents were available
to clear up the matter. Gasior said gratuitously, the victims
families had possibly become confused in the aftermath of the
tragedy, leading to discrepancies in the accounts. Palatine
was blaming the families of the victims for what would turn out
to be their own grievous mistakes.
Castro said he believed his complaints werent taken seriously,
because of our accent, because of our look. Gasior
replied, We are very conscious of how we deal with minorities
and people of other races. In this case, I dont think there
was any attempt to treat these people differently based on their
ethnicity or racial status. Gasior also said the officers
had followed proper police procedures, including rattling
the doors and shining flashlights into the darkened restaurant.
However, he went on to admit that officers checked only one of
the four doors, but would not say which one it was.
Gasior further contended that the officer who encountered Castro
may have checked the building and returned to his car prior to
Castros arrival. Mr. Castro conceded the possibility but
stated, What I think now is he just didnt do his job
real good. Castro made a similar argument in the Chicago
Tribune Wednesday, June 13, 1994. He said he was sure the first
meeting with police took place at 11:45 p.m., noting that he looked
at his watch and the clock on his VCR constantly because he was
worried about his missing son.
Gasior said the Task Force planned to meet with the families.
Were just trying to get to the bottom of these things.
We need to talk to them. We know our procedures. Were not
saying theyre wrong about this. We are just trying to figure
out where the misunderstanding came in.
Gasior stated further that the Maldonado meeting occurred at 12:21
a.m. and at that time, Pedro Maldonado was inside his carnot
looking in the restaurant window as had been reported.
The official record released by the Palatine Police Department,
January 12, 1993, under the title Press Release stated
the following with regard to those early hours:
Press Release
As has been reported, the Palatine Police Department had contact
with the Maldonado and Castro families in the hours preceding
the discovery of the multiple homicides at the Palatine Browns
Chicken Restaurant.
According to records of the incident and the debriefing of
the Palatine police officer, at approximately 12:21 a.m. on January
9, 1993, a Palatine police officer observed a vehicle driving
slowly through the lot of the Browns Chicken Restaurant.
Because of the time of day and actions of the driver, the officer
entered the parking lot of the strip mall immediately north of
the restaurant near the exit to the restaurant parking lot.
At that point the driver of the vehicle exited his car. The
officer drove into Browns lot and asked this individual,
Sir, what are you up to? The individual stated that
his brother works for Browns Chicken and did not come home
from work yet. The individual also stated that he looked through
the front windows and knocked on the front door but no one was
inside. The officer mentioned that possibly his brother went out
with friends. The individual shrugged his shoulders. The officer
then said maybe he stopped for a few beers after work.
The individual again shrugged his shoulders, got back in his car
and both the officer and the individual drove away.
We learned subsequently that the individual in the incident
at 12:21 a.m. was Pedro Maldonado, brother of Guadalupe Maldonado,
one of the homicide victims.
According to records of the incident and the debriefing of
the Palatine police officer, a call was received by our dispatchers
at 1:02 a.m. by a member of the Castro family. The call stated
that Michael Castro had not yet returned from work and there was
no answer at the business, which was Browns Chicken. A Palatine
police officer was dispatched on a check for well-being incident
and he arrived at the Browns lot at 1:04 a.m. The patrol
officer exited his car and conducted an external check of the
premises of the restaurant. He observed the car of Michael Castro
in the lot. He found the business to be dark, night light on.
He returned to his vehicle and began to leave the lot. As he
was doing so, the officer observed a car pull into the lot of
the strip mall north of Browns. The officer circled the
restaurant again and drove up to the car.
Inside the car were a male and a female. The female rolled
down her window and started speaking to the officer. Due to radio
traffic in his car, he said, I cant hear you.
At that point, the female exited the car and said, Im
the one that called the police. My son has not come home.
The officer asked if it was possible that her son went out with
friends after work. She said yes it was possible. At that point,
she returned to her car and both parties left the scene.
Early Task Force Criticism
In the January 14, 1993, Chicago Tribune story, the Castros
charges were repeated. The Tribune noted that Police said
they have not yet found a record of the call and dispute other
aspects of Castros version ... Police initially visited
the restaurant twice that night and during one stop rattled one
of the stores four doors and shined a flashlight inside
in response to Castros worries.
These points do not appear in the Task Forces press release
concerning the matter.
The Tribune went on to quote Mark Dantzker, a Criminal Justice
Professor at Loyola University. If all this is true, it
definitely would represent one of the failings of todays
police as a whole, that its too much of a hassle to go beyond
the relative ease of shaking a door and shining a flashlight ...
As long as youve done everything that you can do, you have
no reason to worry about a backlash or the people being upset
with you.
Past Trouble at Browns
This argument over initial police response on January 9, 1993,
between the victims family members and Palatine Police,
was especially strange in the context of Palatines prior
record of closely checking on potential problems at Browns.
Browns had been burglarized twice in prior years. Those
burglars had smashed a dial on the safe and taken some chicken,
a phone and a radio.
In fact, in another Task Force press release, Palatine listed
seven previous contacts with the restaurant for insecure
premises (open doors/windows). Two additional incident reports
were written concerning a suspicious subject in the restaurants
vicinity after hours in 1991 and 1992.
What was the purpose of this particular release? Was it self-serving
propaganda meant to bolster Palatines position against the
criticism from family members by illustrating the departments
diligence in responding to life or death calls? Or was the release
an accurate picture of a department consistently doing an effective
job over the years?
BGA staff interviews with former Browns employees indicate
that the Palatine Police did indeed watch the restaurant closely.
Officers often questioned employees who stayed later than normal
to hang out in the restaurant. The police would leave
notes if doors or windows were found open to warn the next shift.
These employees maintain that the Palatine police department was
very sensitive to potential problems at the restaurant.
So why the confusion on the key night in question? Who was the
initial patrolman who went to Browns? Did he stay in the
car as the Castros suggested? Or did he rattle doors and shine
a flashlight inside as Palatines Deputy Chief Gasior contended?
Could lives have been saved had the discovery been made hours
earlier? Were these lost hours crucial to the investigation?
This was, after all, a brightly-lit suburban shopping center on
a Friday night at 9 p.m. It was snowy and colda typical
Chicago winter evening. And there is no mistaking that it only
took between 9:05 and 9:55 p.m. to shoot over twenty .38 caliber
bullets and kill seven people. Surely someone must have seen or
heard something.
Task Force Response
In BGA staff interviews with Task Force members, numerous consistent
themes emerged. One of those themes was that the initial call
regarding Browns was screwed up badly, that the officer
dispatched was a chiefs kid, and therefore the
Task Force was protecting him.
However, most of the Task Force investigators never knew what
happened initially or who the first patrolman on the scene was.
This information was held tightly by a core group of Palatine
Police who met privately two or three times a day in what investigators
of the Task Force cynically labeled, the war room.
It was kept from both the media and investigators from other departments.
What was the reason for hiding this information? It did not appear
to have anything to do with the ongoing criminal investigation.
But it had everything to do with the questionable performance
of the Palatine Police Department in those early hours.
Internal task force documents clarify the situation and explain
the reason for secrecy:
At 1:06 a.m., Officer Bonneville proceeded to do the below listed
events:
Checked on the well being of Castro
Identified Castros vehicle in lot located in middle
of two other vehicles (five cars in lot including a white station
wagon)
Officer Bonneville drove through lot, parked on east side
of building and saw utility light on. All other lights were off.
Officer Bonneville exited his vehicle, checked two doors
on east side and found them to be secure. He then proceeded to
check two doors on west side of building and both of the west
side doors were also secure. He then proceeded to check the employees
door and as he turned the knob, he found the door to be locked.
He did not observe any activity inside the building and
did not hear any noises.
As Officer Bonneville proceeded to leave the scene, he
observed a red Volvo pulling into the Browns lot. A female
exited the Volvo looking for her son (possibly Mrs. Castro).
The internal Task Force account is clearly at odds with the
Castros versionthey said their initial meeting occurred
at 11:45 p.m. and that the officer did not leave his car. It is
also inconsistent with statements issued by Deputy Chief Gasior:
He rattled doors and shined in a light ... Officer only
checked one of the four doors. And it obviously contradicts
another official Palatine press release which states the officer
conducted an external check of the premises, but fails
to mention that he tried the restaurant doors and found them to
be locked.
So did Officer Bonneville remain in his vehicle in the face of
Mr. & Mrs. Castros worries about their son and tell
them, Dont worry about your son, hell come home?
Or did Officer Bonneville exit his vehicle and find all the doors
locked as he reported?
Did Bonneville try only one door, which is Deputy Gasiors
official version given to the press?
Or was the official press release accurate which asserted that
Bonneville conducted an external check of the premises?
Obviously, one door was open. Bonneville had filed a false report.
Questions to Answer
Why are we reveling in this minutia? The debate about what
exactly happened at the crime scene, which began with the Castros
charges that ricocheted through the Chicago Tribune, Sun-Times
and Daily Herald, was ultimately dropped by the media amidst a
storm of conflicting statements by the Palatine force. Palatine
assured the press that the inconsistencies and conflicting statements
would be explained. Chief Bratchers response to the medias
criticism on January 24, 1993 as the issue faded was, someday,
sometime in the not too distant future youll be able to
objectively evaluate this officers response. And I dont
think its going to be an issue.
In fact, this one issue serves as a symbol of the inconsistencies,
deceptions, outright lies and cover-ups which characterize the
entire murder investigation.
Who is Officer Bonneville?
Officer Bonneville is the son of Chief Bonneville, one-time President
of the Northern Illinois Police Crime Lab (NIPCL). Chief Bonneville
is a good friend of Jerry Bratcher, who has been involved both
personally and economically with the NIPCL for years. Officer
Bonneville is described by many interviewed suburban chiefs as
a lost soul.
In fact, according to reports in the Daily Herald, Officer Bonneville
was almost dismissed from the force in December 1992, just days
before the Palatine murders, for getting into an altercation with
a member of another department.
Chief Bratcher gave him the largest suspension possible without
termination30 days. Despite this, Bratcher indicated at
the time he felt Officer Bonneville had good qualities.
Bonneville had thus spent the entire month, immediately prior
to his arrival at the murder site, on suspension.
On the Discovery
What we see in the first hours of the murder is a pattern to be
repeated throughout the investigation. The investigators make
a grievous mistakehere, the failure to find the open door.
They are criticized by distraught family members. Task Force officials
then seek to cover up the mistake, putting out misleading statements
to the media which contradict the true facts known and available
to them, while hiding incriminating facts under the catch-phrase
of we cant talk about an ongoing investigation.
Then the Task Force embarks on a PR offensive.
The January 18, 1993 release which explains the structure of the
task force and cites its wondrous management is an example of
this PR offensive. The press release was crafted in the hopes
the media would follow this suggested news story and forget about
the mistakes.
And, as we ultimately saw, the coverage of the Castro controversy
was dropped by the media.
The delayed discovery of the murders also illustrates the impact
on this case of the spider web of cronyism and financial relationships
which surround the Palatine police department and Jerry Bratcher.
Palatine paid over $50,000 a year to the NIPCL. The Department
also has a vote to elect the labs Board of Directors.
Officer Bonnevilles father was the President of the NIPCL.
Would Chief Bratcher have retained Bonneville, in view of his
constant personnel problems, if he had not been the son of Chief
Bonneville? Might another more effective police officer have met
Mr. Castro that snowy night, gotten out of the car, tried and
found the open door, discovered the crime scene, and given the
police a three-hour jump on this case?
Would the routine attention officers had shown to Browns
in the pastchecking on the safety of employees working late
and checking for open doors and windowshave resulted in
a discovery that night of the scene hours earlier while a victim
and potential witness might still have been alive? In other words,
would a different officer have performed properly?
But as Jim Bell, current Task Force Coordinator, reminded us
in the January 1996 anniversary press conference, Quite
frankly, all of our best witnesses are dead.
Would they have been if the officers had listened more attentively
to the pleas of concerned family members?
3:11 a.m.: The Crime Scene
There had been only one murder in Palatine in the prior four years.
And yet the initial response to the murders was staffed and completely
controlled by the Palatine police department.
Palatine Police Sergeant Brian Opitz
The sergeant on duty that evening was Sgt. Brian Opitz. Opitz
had been a sergeant for two years and a detective since 1991.
He worked on only one murder case in his 10 years with the Palatine
Police Department: the Lyng case. Opitz had a small role in this
case. He had done some surveillance. But Lyng was radically different
from Browns. The Lyng Case was solved 20 years after it
had been committed when key witness finally came forward and told
police how Ms. Lyng had been killed.
Opitz was on duty that night but in his own words wishes he would
have been closer to the scene so he could have known what was
going on at the restaurant that fateful night. Opitz reported
to then-Sergeant John Koziol, who was really in charge. Koziol,
in turn, reported to Chief Bratcher.
Sergeant Bob Haas
Initially in charge of the crime scene was Sergeant Bob Haas.
With Palatine since 1983, he had almost no investigative experience.
In a sworn deposition, Haas noted his lack of investigative inexperience,
pointing out that he had no prior detective work in field operations.
But that Friday night he was the street supervisor. Haas had been
a school liaison officer at the local high school. According to
students, he was reputed to fix the school parking lottery, so
the pretty senior girls had the best parking spots.
As Patrol Division Supervisor his responsibility was to ensure
crime scene protection until the arrival of detectives. Haas would
later be appointed by Chief Bratcher as the supervisor of all
field investigators. Forty five minutes after the discovery, Haas
turned the crime scene over to Sgt. John Koziol.
Sergeant John Koziol
Finally there was Koziol, a former hospital security guard. He
had been with the Palatine Police Department since 1985. Koziol
spent four years on patrol, two years as a detective and two years
as sergeant of detectives. He was the lead investigator for Palatine
on the Lyng case, assigned to work with Kevin Kavanaugh of the
States Attorneys office. But, unlike Browns,
there had been no crime scene in the Lyng case for him to organize
or investigate since that crime had occurred 10 years prior to
his joining the force.
Koziol noted, I was now in the stage of orchestrating the
entire investigation. From the beginning, he felt there
had been problems with the press trying to inundate our
crime scene.
These were the Palatine officers who secured the crime scene and
called for assistance. The crime scene was secured narrowly, and
only the immediate area around the restaurant was confined. The
parking lot was not secured, and the media and other onlookers
quickly filled the Browns lot, invariably destroying any
potential tire treads or footprints or other evidence which might
have been in the parking lot.
The Arrival of the Lab
At approximately 4 a.m., Palatine evidence technicians, who
were also inexperienced in this type of crime, and the Northern
Illinois Police Crime Lab (NIPCL) began processing evidence from
the crime scene. One key detective who was on the scene early
told the BGA these evidence technicians were of questionable value.
He called them the Palatine version of evidence technicians.
As explained earlier, Palatine had an ongoing relationship with
the NIPCL. According to a range of suburban chiefs, the labs
reputation at the time of the murders was poor. Since then, the
lab has moved to change key personnel to upgrade its image and
its performance.
More problems at the core: The NIPCL
Just as inexperience, political connections and defensive PR plagued
the Task Force, similarly significant problems were present in
the NIPCL. The lab, the site where all evidence, fingerprints
and blood samples were processed, had applied forand failed
to receiveaccreditation several times.
At the time of the Palatine killings, the lab was handled by Charles
Principe who according to insiders seemed to inherit the
responsibility of being the labs executive director.
Lab sources told the BGA that Jane Homeyer, a Ph.D. forensic scientist,
left the labs employment shortly following being assigned
to work on the Palatine killings because of the direction
the lab was going. Homeyer was later called back by the
labs board of directors and hired as the executive director
in early 1994a year after the lab bungled some of the critical
evidence handling in the Palatine case.
Throughout the first year of the investigation, the lab failed
to give the Palatine case priority and was plagued with a shortage
of experienced employees. One former lab employee states, I
have witnessed poor quality work being performed, incorrect reports
being sent out, and analysts working outside their area of expertise.
Still another lab employee said that at the time of the Browns
murders, several lab employees were dedicating their energies
to an analysis of bird feces which were found on cars
along the north shore. One internal lab memo, dated January 21,
1993, mentions both investigations. The tasks outlined for the
bird investigation are markedly more focused, urgent and include
a deadline for processing all evidence (January 22, 1993 at 5
p.m.). The Palatine list does not include any outlines, goals
or deadlines. NIPCL case #93-00157, the Browns Chicken killings,
received little priority.
An article in the February 1993 Daily Herald read: Law enforcement
sources say the delay is primarily due to the Palatine Task Forces
almost total reliance for evidence processing on a north suburban
crime lab set up by a consortium of suburban police departments,
and the crime labs minimal use of help offered by more experienced
crime lab run by Chicago and the State Police.
Even in the few instances where the Task Force went outside the
NIPCL for supplemental evidence processing, their efforts were
begrudging and, in one instance, bordering on the bizarre and
inexplicable. Throughout early January 1993, the Task Force steadfastly
refused to give sample bullets to the Chicago Police Crime Laboratory
despite the fact the Chicago lab had access to many thousands
of weapons confiscated from Chicago streets every year. According
to Chicago Police Laboratory personnel, they werent
interested in our help at the time. Following the suggestion
of a Chicago police detective, the Task Force finally relented
and gave the Chicago Police Crime Laboratory several bullets for
analysis in late January 1993. Then, in a transaction which one
senior Chicago Police Lab source labels bizarre, the
Task Force demanded that the samples which were given to Chicago
be returned to the Task Force. A Task Force detective took the
samples from Chicago on February 18, 1993. Somewhat later, reversing
itself yet again, the task force decided to give back the bullets
to Chicago on May 12, 1993 but chose to not return to Chicago
one of the best samples originally given to Chicago
in Januarybullet 17-01. One internationally recognized Chicago
Police Crime Lab analyst characterized the transactions as being
handled, extremely poorly ... they were not interested in
our help and thats stupid.
Despite Chicagos offers of help the Task Force continued
to rely primarily on the NIPCL. Three months after the killings,
all the Palatine evidence had not been processed according to
minutes from a lab meeting. Lab sources told the BGA that the
lab did not have an adequate number of qualified employees. Furthermore,
lab employees had a hard time processing the evidence because
they lacked insight on what to look for. According to one senior
lab employee, police are always looking to the crime labs
to solve the crimes. The delay in processing some of the
evidence might also have resulted from the fact that some of the
victims clothing were apparently stored in/hung over
at the Palatine Police Department, according to one lab
document.
Considering the magnitude of the Browns Chicken killings,
a sufficiently-staffed crime lab with highly-skilled analysts
working in their area of expertise should have been chosen for
handling the evidenceespecially an experienced lab like
Chicago or an accredited lab like the State.
Internal turmoil at the lab and a lack of leadership also caused
the technicians serious delays in analyzing the evidence. Ph.D.
Jane Homeyer, who left the labs employ following the Browns
killings, returned as director later. The former NIPCL acting
director, who led the lab technicians in the first hours of the
Browns crime scene analysis, was described by a fellow employee:
In his daily activities around the lab, Charles showed a
lack of good judgment and an inability to make decisions, often
inappropriately delegating decisions in topics such as hiring
and safety management to junior employees. Later, Charles
was let go by the lab for unethical activities, and
lab employees were notified to keep it confidential for
the well-being of the lab. Two of the four people sent by
the crime lab to analyze the Browns scene were ultimately
fired by the lab. Weeks after obtaining 90 latent fingerprints,
the lab had still not processed a single one.
One fingerprint ultimate approved by the lab, led to the misidentification
of a West Chicago man as a possible Browns suspect. The
fingerprint identification when sent to the FBI in Washington,
could not be verified by them. The suspect maintained, and still
maintains by press accounts, that he had never been in Palatine.
The incident further reinforced the publics lack of confidence
in the Task Forces competence and ultimately was used as
one of the reasons that the Village of Palatine used to justify
no longer using the NIPCL.
Documents obtained from the lab which relate to the Palatine investigation
show that evidence confiscated from suspect Martin Blakes
home was being tested and focused upon months after Blake was
released for lack of evidence.
The lab experienced technical problems as well. The evidentiary
database which was stored on the labs computers, including
all evidence information about the Browns Chicken killings,
was erased from the computers in early 1994 and had to be reconstructed
over a long period of time. Sources in the lab told us that reports
on evidence in the Palatine killings were not entered in the lab
computer until the late summer of 1994, despite being received
by the lab in March of the same year. Regrettably, neither the
labs founder nor his son saw fit to provide the most basic
computer back-up for the critical lab database.
Regardless of the labs inefficiency, inexperienced staff
and internal problems, Chief Bratcher vowed unrelenting confidence
in the lab. Minutes from a March 3, 1993 lab meeting held in Palatine
read: Chief Bratcher addressed the attendees about an incident
of negative press the lab received on the Browns case. He
stated in no way would the attitude of the media be interpreted
as his. He is very satisfied with the work the lab has completed
and so informed the source. Only years later and with a
rising tide of media and public criticism did Bratcher sever Palatines
ties to the lab.
Chief Robert Bonneville, a friend of Bratchers and the father
of the Palatine police officer who bungled the initial discovery
of the crime scene, had served as Treasurer, Vice President and
ultimately as President of the NIPCL during this period.
More Mistakes
At the crime scene a number of key mistakes occurred. In any crime
of this magnitude legends develop. But we were told repeatedly
of one such legend.
Multiple sources told the BGA that approximately over fifty people
trudged through the scene in addition to six unneeded paramedics.
Tours were given. One eyewitness described the resulting crime
scene as incredibly dirty, rendering virtually useless the papers
which had been put down to cover the floor and protect possible
evidence. As one person present at the scene commented, Id
call it a mess. Another officer noted that so many people
went through the crime scene that a chart had to be created which
contained the names and prints of those who toured the scene for
elimination purposes. One NIPCL source said of the tens of thousands
of cases processed by them, there had never been a case with more
elimination prints. Incredibly, the list of names of people required
to submit elimination prints included civilian dispatchers from
the communication center. Even more incredibly, not included in
this list were some of the police who were present at the crime
scene.
An apparent accident, based on a lack of knowledge of the Browns
cooking operation, occurred when someone touring the scene accidentally
turned on the cooking oil while searching for spent cartridge
casings. The oil overflowed, covering the floor in the rear of
the restaurant.
The Task Force also ignored important evidence. According to Frank
Portillo, CEO of Browns Chicken and Pasta headquartered
in Oak Brook, Illinois, the Task Force never analyzed the rare
cottonseed oil used in the chickens special recipe. This
cooking oil coated almost the entire restaurant, making it impossible
for anyone in the restaurant to not have traces of the oil on
their clothing, shoes and personal belongings. This oil could
have conceivably been transferred to a getaway car by the killer(s).
But police never checked evidence for the presence of cottonseed
oil.
A mishap of greater proportion was that one of the victims
bodies was never fingerprinted. By failing to take the prints
from this victim, investigators ensured they would never be able
to positively identify a possible suspects prints, since
they could just as easily be those of the victim. If that victim
used an alias, we may never know who he really was.
Similarly, at least 17 vendors and former employees who had access
to the front and rear areas of the restaurant in the days before
the murders, were neither questioned nor fingerprinted. Likewise,
some Browns employees were not fingerprinted until two-and-a-half
years after the murders.
Even Frank Portillo was never formally interviewed, particularly
in the days following the murders. Jim Bell of the FBI finally
wrote to Portillo on January 2, 1996three years after the
murders, to obtain a list of these employees and vendors who were
in Browns prior to the murders. Despite the Task Forces
previous contacts with you over the past years, we were not aware
that you had this information. We are interested in this list
and any identifiers you have on these individuals.
Portillo had compiled this list at the request of the BGA after
he disclosed that one of his employees, who had been all over
the restaurant the day before the killings, had not been fingerprinted.
The BGA, not the Palatine Police, asked him to survey his employees
and vendors in search of people who were in the restaurant prior
to the killings. The BGA was told by Chief Bratcher and States
Attorney OBrien that latent prints were significant to the
case.
Potential key prints were smudged while trying to analyze the
crime scene and what had occurred.
In a typical press conference years later on the anniversary of
the killings, the Task Force sent on to make a huge media event
about using new fingerprint technology to analyze the prints they
consider to be evidence. One senior police official on the Task
Force echoed the thoughts expressed to the BGA by many other police:
If they have good prints, then either the killer never fingerprinted
before, or they have the wrong prints. An NIPCL source said,
I think the killer may have worn gloves.
It took the NIPCL seven days to process the site. The Chicago
Crime Lab had offered their help immediately after the murders.
However, no bullets were sent to the Chicago Lab until January
29, 1993. Soon after that, the Task Force took the bullets back
and did not return them to the Chicago Crime Lab until May of
that year.
Approximately 25% of the recovered weapons in Chicago met the
characteristics of what was determined to be the killing weapon
in Palatine. In the time that the Chicago Crime Lab did not have
access to a bullet fired from the murder weapon, between 1300
and 1600 weapons were recovered. Any of these could have been
tested and found to be the murder weapon. But they werent.
Palatine thought the NIPCL could handle the test.
The Early Days
The Cook County Sheriffs Police (CCSP) were called in
early. Len Marek was high in the Sheriffs chain of command
and one of the first officers on the scene. Bratcher was a close
friend of Marek, who lived in Palatine. Frank Medrys, who had
been with the Sheriff for 13 years and a detective for three to
four years, arrived at the crime scene at 6 a.m. in response to
a call from CCSP dispatch. Ultimately, the CCSPs activities
were supervised by Deputy Chief Frank Braun, who also arrived
early that morning.
Though Chief Bratcher attended staff meetings that first day,
Medrys noted that Koziol was clearly in charge.
The First Lead
A lead quickly developed. Friends of Martin Blake, a recently
fired Browns employee got together and delegated Blakes
roommate Beringer as the one to call Palatine. Paul Beringer indicated
Blake had been acting erratically, that he owned a gun and that
he had made threats against the owners of Browns.
At the same time, a number of potential eyewitnesses were emerging.
One had seen a suspicious-looking man at Browns during the
key time frame.
Bratcher held a meeting at 9 a.m. on Saturday and told the CCSP
he wanted them to help out. Bratcher said he didnt have
enough people to follow all the emerging leads. He established
a procedure to use one Palatine person and one representative
of the Sheriffs police on each lead.
Based on the statements of Blakes roommate and other friends,
a surveillance of Blakes residence was initiated. During
the surveillance, Blake appeared to be behaving oddly, moving
repeatedly from his property to his vehicle parked outside. Blake
was arrested on the authority of Joan OBrien, the Assistant
States Attorney assigned to the investigation that day.
The Investigation of Martin Blake
That first afternoon, Saturday, January 9, 1993, an investigative
team visited a key witness who had driven by Browns that
Friday. During her questioning, Palatine Policeman Fanning showed
this witness six or seven photos. One of them was Blake. At first,
the witness couldnt ID any of the photos. So Fanning asked
her to choose the man who looked most similar to the one shed
seen. Of all the photos, the witness said the one of Blake sort
of looked like the man shed seen, but she wasnt
sure. Upon reporting back to the station, the Palatine officer
blurted out the witness had IDd Blake.
One detective characterized this as an example of a good police
officer trying to impose his bias because of the need to have
a solid lead. This officer simply showed a lack of experience.
In this case, he only heard what he wanted to hear. Fanning filed
a report saying, the witness IDd Blake. Obviously,
the report was false. But Palatine rushed forward anyway.
Palatine focused quickly on Blake. As a suspect, he looked
very good.
One detective in the room during Blakes questioning that
first weekend said, He didnt fit, but they wanted
to make him fit. They were trying to fit him into the crime.
Everyone felt they were going to solve the crime very quickly.
When that didnt occur, a Task Force had to be formed.
Many officers involved in the first days of the investigation
felt that the best leads went to special officers, and assignments
were based on politics within the Palatine police department.
Dont get me wrongall leads have to be followed,
but some leads seem much better than others and those went to
connected guys, said one officer. Most of the county guys
felt they were there simply to assist and viewed themselves as
just helpers, warm bodies.
One detective noted that Koziol was an example of this preferential
system, calling him Palatines fair-haired guy.
This particular detective liked him and said Koziols reputation
came from the Erikson bank robbery case, in which Koziol and Kavanaugh
became close friends as members of a small task force.
Subsequently, it was Haas who took Blake to a lineup run by Koziol.
There, the same witness who had been shown the photographs including
Blake failed to ID him. Earlier that day, she called headquarters
to tell officers she still was unsure about her identification,
but she was brought in for a physical line-up anyway. It was later
determined that the witness had actually seen one of the victims
that evening.
Haas, who knew Blake from his time spent handling high school
students, then took Blake for a lie detector test at John Reid
& Associates. Blake wanted to take the test to prove his innocence.
The test turned out to be inconclusive.
Ultimately, Blakes alibi, that he was at a party with numerous
people and only left to get some beer, checked out. In addition,
Blake owned the wrong gunit was a .22, and the blood on
his gym shoes didnt match. Clearly, they had the wrong guy.
Ultimately, Palatine had to release Blake after three days of
questioning.
Three wasted hours became three wasted days. There were no good
leads and no good suspects. It was time for Bratcher to call in
the help he previously dismissed so cavalierly. As he once commented
regarding those early hours, If theres anything worse
than not having enough people on a case like this its having
too many, stumbling over each other, confusing the issue, going
in all directions. Finally yielding, Bratcher changed his
mind and began to form a task force.
A Typical Suburban Crime?
How did Palatine begin their investigation into the Browns
murders? In the Chicago Tribune on January 14, 1993, Detective
George Latti, a 24-year veteran of the Boston police department
was quoted as saying, The textbook version would have police
simply stand outside the crime scene and look around for places
where people might have seen anything. The next step is to send
officers door-to-door searching for that information. You cant
conduct a good investigation any other way.
As law enforcement professionals know, most murders occur between
people who know each other. So, as one highly-placed Chicago law
enforcement official explained to the BGA/Crime Commission Blue
Ribbon Panel, you always look for the wife when the husband
is murdered.
Suburban police departments are well-qualified to handle this
type of murder. Thus, the Browns crime was initially treated
as a typical, solvable suburban crime. The investigation of Blake
was an example of this phenomenon. He had worked at the restaurant,
he knew the employees and owners, and he was disgruntled. But
what happens if the obvious suspect falls through? What then?
One very experienced detective present from the beginning of the
investigation notes that the first 72 hours of a murder investigation
are crucial. In fact, 75% of all cleared murders are solved in
the first 30 days. But States Attorney OMalley issued
this statement at a press conference organized upon Blakes
release. This crime has not been solved and yes, there is
a murderer or murderers on the loose. I cant deny that.
On January 12, 1993, OMalley admitted, in the most forthright
discussion yet of the case, the police had no suspects and there
were few promising leads. A $100,000 reward fund was introduced
by Trustee Wagner of Micro Aseptic Corporation. He solicited local
businesses for donations to increase the publics willingness
to turn over information to the Task Force. Wagner made a personal
contribution of $1250.
Yet OMalley was quick to warn the public that some crimes
remain unsolved. These comments came in the wake of the Dowaliby
case in which States Attorneys, including OBrien,
had botched the trial, wrongly convicting David Dowaliby. In November
of 1992, Dowaliby was released, his conviction overturned. OMalley
was in no hurry to try another innocent suspect.
The Canvass
Loyola professor Martin Dantzker noted in the Chicago Tribune,
It is critical to blanket the area with officers as soon
as possible. The longer it takes to identify suspects, the more
difficult it gets simply because evidence runs out, it gets old,
people forget and the suspect gets further away.
So who was in charge of the canvass of the highly-trafficked area
surrounding Browns?
Koziol was in charge of the canvass according to Task Force officers.
Koziol said, Canvassing has got to be done for the simple
fact that if a person washes out you have to have these things
done. It has to be done even if the suspect doesnt
wash out. You build a better case by finding potential witnesses.
So at the beginning Koziol tried to get the canvass going. They
wanted to target the employees at the grocery store across from
Browns where there were employees working that night around
10 p.m. But in Koziols own words, he was also responsible
for answering the phone, recruiting investigators, assigning
officers to the families of the victims, and briefing those officers
reporting for duty.
In addition, two of his key people, Opitz and Haas, were quickly
dispatched to work on the Blake lead, which consumed almost the
entire small initial group of investigators. The culmination of
their efforts occurred when Koziol himself orchestrated a physical
line-up for a key eyewitness. The crime scene canvass was neglected.
One experienced homicide detective told the BGA, This was
improper scene investigation. Blake could have waited until the
scene work was done or at least until it was in the process of
being done.
So the canvass was dropped in the flurry of activity surrounding
the surveillance, arrest and eventual release of Martin Blake.
What now? They had to go back to square one and start the canvas
all over again.
The initial canvass, according to Koziol, was orchestrated by,
my investigators ... some arrived after I did and did not
even go to the scene. So investigators, who later classified
themselves as inexperienced, whose leaders were also inexperienced
in murder investigations, organized the canvass on their own in
the absence of Sgt. Koziol, the leader of the investigation. Koziol
was too busy, picking up ringing phones to take a lead ...
made arrangements with our lab people to have them process the
crime scene, spoke to our evidence technicians, monitored the
information coming in ... had to get officers assigned to handle
the families ... Big part of our time was spent trying to identify
people.
Years later, when now-commander Koziol was asked if there were
any suspects other than Blake at the time he said, Im
sure there were but they dont come to mind now, as far as
if you were to ask me for a name, I couldnt give you one.
This was an example of the investigative leaderships obsessive
tunnel vision, which was completely focused on Blake in those
first days. Investigators were trying to turn the Browns
case into a typical, and thus solvable, suburban crime. But that
attempt failed.
The Search for New Evidence
It was now the Monday afternoon following the killings. Blake
had been released and, as Koziol pointed out, investigators had
no other serious suspects. The investigation had to move from
the early stages in which the suburban police department hoped
to solve the crime quickly by finding a guilty party with a connection
to the Browns victims.
Now the crime scene had to be re-analyzed in a search for clues.
Potential eye witnesses had to be located. If that didnt
work, the next step would be to create a psychological profile
of the suspect(s) and to begin a review of current intelligence.
Current intelligence consists of information provided by informants
to the various levels of law enforcement in the area.
But the investigators were in a difficult position. As they opened
these new investigative avenues, the trail was quickly growing
cold.
Veteran Chicago police homicide detective Richard Zuley, who believed
former Chicago Chief of Detectives Joe Deleonardis admonition
of one more door as gospel, arrived on the Wednesday
following Blakes arrest. The first thing he asked was whether
officers had done a canvass of the neighborhood businesses and
general area. He was told it wasnt finished.
It never would be.
That same Wednesday, Zuley and Sgt. Valdez of the State Police
went to the scene with other new Task Force members. Surprisingly,
they were not allowed to enter Browns. So, the officers
did a cursory investigation of the strip mall stores. It quickly
became clear that no thorough canvass had been done after potential
witnesses were found. When the two experienced detectives returned
to headquarters and suggested a thorough canvass be completed
they were told, We already did a canvass.
Early Media Criticism
That same day the Tribune noted: The owner of a store in
the strip mall behind Browns said Tuesday that one of his
employees saw a car idling by the restaurant shortly after closing
time. That information was passed on to police Saturday ... but
police did not return to the mall to follow up until Monday.
On Thursday, January 14, 1993, the Tribune headline read:
POLICE STILL HAVENT TALKED TO SOME NEAR MURDER SITE
... Police investigating the Palatine restaurant massacre waited
more than two days before contacting many potential witnesses
and have yet to interview some residents and business owners within
100 yards of the crime scene ...
The article went on to list examples of the Task Force failing
to interview several potential witnesses. Police had not canvassed
the apartment or offices below a resident of a complex adjacent
to Browns, who had heard shots at 9:40 p.m. that Friday
evening. Similarly, the night manager of a cafe located directly
across the street from Browns said she saw no police until
the Tuesday after the murders.
When pressed by the media to respond to these glaring oversights,
Deputy Chief Walt Gasior admitted it is standard technique to
canvass but said, Im not going to comment on the specifics
of this investigation. Again, Palatine was avoiding discussion
of fundamental police performance by asserting that this somehow
might impede their investigation. It was a pattern that they would
repeat over and over again.
But the Tribune continued to point out the failure of investigators
to complete a canvass. Interviews with more than two dozen
residents and store owners within eye sight of the restaurant
... revealed that they were not contacted by police until Monday
night, later or not at all.
All this occurred in the light of basic law enforcement knowledge
that time has a destructive effect on the memories of witnesses,
the actual physical evidence and the trail of the killers. At
least nine businesses in the area were not contacted until late
Monday afternoon, and at least nine more had not heard from police
by Wednesday afternoon.
Gasior responded to the medias charges in the January 16,
1993 edition of the Chicago Tribune. He effectively admitted there
was truth to the papers assertions about the haphazard quality
and organization of the canvass. He said investigators had done
a preliminary canvass on Saturday and a follow-up on Monday.
Note the use of the term preliminary. Clearly, an exhaustive canvass
had not been completed when the first lead fell apart.
Gasior then launched what was becoming the departments familiar
refrainhe attacked the citizens who spoke to the Tribune
in a critical manner with regard to the Palatine police forces
performance by saying, common sense and our shared societal
values tell us to call police whenever we may have been a witness
to a crime. I would say that the burden is on anyone who has information.
The Tribune then noted, He would not say if an exhaustive
canvass of the area had been completed. Gasior continued
to cover-up task force mistakes.
The Tribunes allegations were reinforced by the BGA investigation.
The BGA spoke with the owner of an Amoco gas station located less
than a mile from Browns on Northwest Highway. The owner
routinely taped surveillance of his customers activities
to prevent theft. On that particular Friday night, the surveillance
tape was running throughout the entire evening. Every customer
and vehicle in the station and the time at which they drove up
Northwest Highway would have been recorded. The Palatine police
never thought to ask for the tape and it was subsequently destroyed.
This tape would have been a unique investigative tool to identify
the traditionally elusive drivers who pass a crime scene while
the crime is in progress. However, the Amoco owner indicated that
although the police had used his tapes in the past, this time
they never came around.
Thus, the command was exposed to brutal media pressures. Given
the initial failure to discover the crime scene, the false start
on Blake, and the media discovery of the failure to canvass effectively,
the leadership found itself in a defensive position from the beginning.
This snide, defensive posturing would continue until the present
day.
The response was to circle the wagons. News media reports which
contained too many facts indicating leaks fostered an atmosphere
of paranoia toward the press and the public. Koziol confirmed
they had problems with the press trying to inundate our
crime scene. I had as little to do with the press as I could.
States Attorney Jack OMalleys public relations
person Andy Knott was busy telling investigators not to talk to
the press and, in the words of one assistant states attorney,
making investigative decisions.
The Task Force: Early Beginnings
Chief Jerry Bratcher knew he needed help. By 8:45 a.m. on Saturday,
January 18, 1993, official releases from the Palatine police department
referred to an investigative task force. The Task
Force had expanded to include more than 75 investigators,
officers, analysts and other support staff, including representatives
of the, Palatine Police Department, Cook County Sheriffs
Police, Cook County States Attorneys Office, and the
Illinois State Police.
There are two obvious reasons for a task force. First, to enlarge
the body of man power available for the investigation and second,
to bring in high-quality individuals to share experiences and
approaches.
The Origins of Strike Forces
A model example of a task force was the US Department of Justices
Organized Crime Strike Forces. The Strike Forces were put together
in the late 1960s as a result of Robert Kennedys frustration
with organized crime in the Hoffa/Teamsters cases. In 1967,
high-ranking representatives of all Federal agencies dealing with
organized crime were assigned to a particular city to attack the
Mafia family in that geographic region. The Strike Forces matched
representatives of the FBI, IRS, Secret Service, Narcotics and
the Department of Labor together with a number of highly-experienced
Justice Department lawyers.
The theory was that you would take these experienced agents and
lawyers out of their daily routine and have them concentrate solely
on organized crime. They would work together as a team, across
jurisdictional lines, placing inter-agency rivalries aside. Working
with lawyers early on in the cases would result in more successful
prosecutions. They would share agency intelligence, a practice
rare in federal law enforcement circles. Experts on mob activity
who did not usually communicate with one another were able to
pool their resources and generate creative investigative ideas.
The concept of joining together investigators and lawyers was
so successful that the original Buffalo plan, (named
after Buffalo, New Yorkthe site of the first strike force)
invented by Henry Peterson ultimately blossomed, with President
Nixons encouragement, to 200 lawyers located in 20 cities.
The results were often spectacular, with whole Mafia families
sent to federal prisons.
The strike force concept called for superior leadership. Henry
Peterson had risen through the FBI ranks to head Justices
organized crime section comprised of highly-skilled investigators.
Many of these were GS grade 14 and 15 agents or area supervisors
at the FBI or IRS with years of organized crime experience. They
were carefully screened career people, challenged to share their
knowledge of organized crime families in a spirit and atmosphere
of complete and unselfish cooperation. Inter-agency rivalry and
competition were downplayed. They were career Justice lawyers,
not US Attorneys chosen on the basis of national politics, who
had no reason to compete for publicity since they answered to
their career supervisors in Washington. The strong leadership
of the Strike Forces, combined with a free flow of information
and its comparative analysis produced the most dramatic successes
of federal law enforcement since Hoovers FBI in the 1930s.
An Ideal Task Force
The intent of the BGA/Crime Commissions investigation into
the handling of the Palatine murder investigation is not to simply
criticize. We are attempting to open debate and analysis which
will lead the way toward more advanced, efficient task forces.
Our goal is a task force which would effectively utilize the talent
of Chicagolands police departments, facilitating better
cooperation between various law enforcement agencies, ensuring
the use of appropriate investigative techniques, and avoiding
the interference of personality conflicts or issues not related
to the case.
The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) offers one intriguing
task force model. Founded in 1967, the NTSB investigates traffic
incidents which it believes to have national implications, issues
reports and recommendations based on these investigations, and
works with states, community groups and others to promote passage
of safety legislation consistent with their recommendations.
Our interests focus on the NTSBs Go Team, a
group of NTSB personnel representing a range of investigative
skills. On 24-alert, the Go-Team arrives immediately at accident
scenes. The team consists of approximately six specialists and
experts directed by an investigator-in-charge. An
NTSB board member always accompanies the team to the site, while
a Public Affairs officer coordinates media activities. Go-Team
member are used to working together and accustomed to working
within an already established power structure, avoiding the time-wasting
turf wars and the uncertainty over roles that torment ad hoc task
forces.
After completing an investigation, the NTSB makes recommendations
based on their findings to help improve transportation safety.
They also maintain a database of their reports and recommendations
which they make available to other agencies and groups.
The group maintains its independence from other agencies to remain
as impartial in their recommendations as possible. It operates
its own technical laboratory to ensure proper and unbiased analysis
of evidence.
The Chicago Crime Commissions research into task force options
has revealed more clues as to how to structure Chicagos
ideal task force. The first type of task force they outline, the
Ad Hoc Multi- Agency Task Force, reflects the philosophy behind
Palatines task force. It is the most common system, built
on allegiances, friendships, business and personal relationships,
and whatever other assistance is available at the time.
Problems develop quickly in this task force model. The delay in
assembling the group can hinder the investigation from the outset,
organization can be haphazard, issues not related to the case
may interfere with investigative work, and power struggles may
develop.
Another type of task force suggested by the Crime Commission is
the Major Case Squads. In this model, specific individuals with
specialized training are drawn from a regional base and organized
into a special unit. These squads can be county-wide and county-run,
as in Lake County, or they can be a cooperative venture managed
by an independent board of directors representing various law
enforcement agencies, as is the case with the Greater St. Louis
Major Case Squad. Like the NTSBs Go Team, this
model offers the clear advantage that specific individuals who
work routinely together and whose training is on point are available
instantly at the crime scene, without the initial haggling and
confusion over roles and responsibilities which characterize the
typical task force.
The U.S. Department of Justice conducted a study on one example
of an ideal task force, the Organized Crime Narcotics Trafficking
Enforcement Program. The OCN program was developed by the Bureau
of Justice Assistance at the U.S. Department of Justice in response
to the inability of many individual law enforcement agencies to
handle narcotics trafficking conspiracies on their own. The program
seeks to enhance the effectiveness of narcotics investigations
by pooling resources from various sectors.
The study states, successful cases most often result when
skilled local, state, and federal investigators and prosecutors
pool their resources, capabilities and expertise in planned and
coordinated enforcement actions, echoing the philosophy
behind the Go-Team and the St. Louis Major Case Squads. Each OCN
project must include, at a minimum, one federal agency, one state
or local agency, one prosecutor, and a management Control
Group.
The Control Group is made up of the senior operations managers
of those agencies expected to be most involved in cases conducted
by the project. This control group is the mechanism within the
OCN program which is intended to prevent any single agency from
controlling or dominating the project. The group shares the coordination
and direction of personnel, financial, equipment and technical
resources. Members of the Control Group have an equal voice on
all matters, and the decisions of the Control Group must be unanimous.
This shared management system is critical to the success of the
program, which comes as no surprise, considering that a need
for better cooperation was cited as the number one cause
for the failure of task forces by members of the State Association
of Chiefs of Police in the International Association of Chiefs
of Polices May 1995 Joint Research Project.
Task force organization cannot be left to luck or happenstance,
nor can one expect to solve the crime by simply hiring more bodies.
If people are not accustomed to working together, if they are
not clear about their roles, if they do not respect the training
and experience of their peers and supervisors, or if there are
blurred lines of authority between the local Police Department,
States Attorneys Office and others on the task force,
even a thousand-man task force would be counter-productive.
We recommend that representatives from suburban, city and state
law enforcement agencies pursue the development of a reliable,
organized, experienced, multi-jurisdictional crime response team.
Issues of cost effectiveness will need to be analyzed. Funding
need not, however, be the barrier toward the formation of a model
task force. In St. Louis, for example, most of the extra time
committed is volunteered and the extra needs for equipment and
specialized resources are financed by private contributions and
administered by an independent board of directors.
A Palatine Strike Force
Chief Bratcher wasnt looking for creativity, he wanted help.
Clearly understaffed and inexperienced to deal with a crime of
this magnitude, Bratchers forces, as Koziol pointed out,
were stretched very thin. Bratcher turned to the first obvious
choicethe Cook County Sheriff. Chief Frank Braun and Detective
Medrys of the CCSP were among the first officers gathered at the
crime scene in the early hours. Bratchers friend Commander
Marek was also there.
According to Bratcher, Within an hour and a half I had more
than 20 investigators assembled. And a lot of experienced homicide
investigators.
Who were these men? Well, we know there was not a collection of
20 experienced homicide investigators present in those early hours.
One source, a highly-respected law enforcement agent who worked
on the Task Force in the first week, told the BGA: We tried
to put together a list of guys to work on the case. We were sitting
and trying to remember who was working and writing their names
on a piece of paper. We were just there in a support role ...
we brought in several of our guys and they are good but no, they
are not experienced homicide investigators.
Because of his involvement with the Northwest Police Academy,
Bratcher had many friends throughout local and national law enforcement.
But through the first days following the discovery of the bodies,
Palatine, assisted by the CCSP, performed the bulk of the investigative
work. Even the Blake lead was staffed almost entirely by Palatine
officers. CCSP guys were used strictly in a support role.
Koziol explains the reasoning behind the task force. Reflecting
on when he first arrived at the scene and spoke with Chief Bratcher,
Koziol said, Ôwe knew immediately that the crime was large
and we were going to need assistance from other agencies.
But Bratchers feeling was, if theres anything
worse than not having enough people on a case like this its
having too many, stumbling over each other, confusing the issue,
going in all directions.
Koziol listed the key early officers as Opitz, Briscoe, Walker,
Fanning and Haas from Palatine as well as Medrys, Alvarado and
Schwartz from the Sheriffs Police.
Key Palatine Officers
Opitz was the investigator basically assigned to track down
leads. In retrospect, Opitz explained his definition of
a task force this way: It would be in our case individuals
in the name of law enforcement from different agencies ... putting
their minds and talents together to work on this crime.
He points out that in those early hours, the Chief put the
Task Force together, expanding it to include by the middle
of the week officers from Des Plaines, Arlington Heights and Chicago.
Opitz himself had only worked on one murder case, Lyng, which
had happened 20 years earlier, had no crime scene, and provided
no opportunity to track down initial leads. Opitz admits he had
no experience in murders much less one of this magnitude. But
as Koziol indicated, he was the top Palatine person assigned
to track down leads.
Koziol himself had gone from supervising five people to over one
hundred within one week. But he was in Bratchers high favor.
Detective Fanning of Palatine was similarly inexperienced. Recall
that Fanning blurted out, she IDd Blake, when
a key witness only stated that, of the individuals in a photo
line-up, Blake looked closest to a person shed seen. Fanning
went on to author an official police report that was a clear exaggeration
of the sequence of events at the witness home. This report
was, not what happened, according to a fellow Task
Force investigator. Had Fanning knowingly filed a false report?
Or was he so woefully inexperienced that he did not realize his
crucial mistake? Whatever the case, the eyewitness ruled out Blake
in a subsequent line-up and he was eventually released.
Role of the States Attorneys Office
In these first few hours, discussions were going on in the States
Attorneys office concerning whether or not they should be
involved in the Palatine matter and, if so, to what extent. Joan
OBrien and Paul Tsukuno were on the scene doing what Assistant
States Attorneys (ASAs) routinely do; namely, advising on
legal issues as they arise.
It was the ASAs who determined sufficient probable cause to arrest
Martin Blake on Saturday, January 9. The States Attorneys
office also found on Monday that there was not enough evidence
to charge Blake and therefore, he had to be released. However,
at that point the States Attorneys office was not
in full command of the investigation. They were only involved
in an advisory capacity.
But their role early on assured Bratcher all legal procedures
would be followed correctly. As he said months later, in June
1993: It is incomprehensible that we would jeopardize our
case by failing to follow basic legal procedures in the handling
of any suspects in that case. Our case investigation and questioning
have been conducted in close coordination with the legal counsel
of the Cook County States Attorneys Office. We are
confident that our actions were legal and proper. Remember,
Palatine ultimately paid Blake nearly $100,000 in a false arrest
suit.
The key question debated at the highest levels of the States
Attorneys Office was, should they take over and run the
investigation? An argument ensued over the offices degree
of involvement. Traditionally, States Attorneys wait for
the police to solve the crime. They then judge its prosecutorial
merit, decide whether to indict and when the investigation is
basically over, the prosecution may begin.
The top managers of the States Attorneys office, individuals
who had served various States Attorneys of both parties,
knew clearly of OMalleys avaricious desire to
continue to be in the news. As already noted, legends often
arise from investigations, and a number of top assistants point
to a key meeting during the summer of 1993, approximately six
months after the Browns massacre. OMalley, hungry
for high-profile cases, shouted at one point in the meeting, Get
me a priest! This expressed, as one top former States
Attorney present at the meeting reports, both his belief that
there were criminal priests who needed to be prosecuted and his
desire to prosecute high-profile cases to maintain political visibility.
He added that he believed the latter to have been the true motivator
of OMalleys outburst. In addition, he noted that the
first assistant, Andrea Zopp, also wanted to turn the offices
focus toward glitzy, high-profile crimes.
The top assistants basic disagreement with OMalley
stemmed from the conflict between their belief in prosecuting
non-glamorous criminals, such as those involved in black
on black crime, and OMalleys desire to prosecute
high-profile cases in an effort, they believe, to become governor.
OMalley wanted to help out his friend Bratcher and become
heavily involved in directing the investigation with his new staff
of States Attorney investigators. The old guard
top assistants advised him to restrain himself. Let them
solve the case and bring it to us for prosecution.
The argument raged back and forth during that first weekend. But
OMalley had already begun holding press conferences in Palatine
and the old guard knew that they lost this battle, a significant
step on the way to losing the war.
OMalleys Key Representatives
Pat OBrien was assigned as legal advisor to the Task Force.
Kevin Kavanaugh assumed a prominent supervisory role in the investigation.
Indeed, on the flow chart illustrating Task Force organization,
Kavanaugh and OBrien were directly below Chief Bratcher.
They, along with Frank Braun of CCSP, oversaw the entire task
force. They were ranked higher than Sgt. Koziol, key homicide
detectives and representatives of the FBI.
Kavanaugh was described by most officers interviewed by the BGA
as the, tactical commander. Also assigned to the Task
Force by OMalley were Robertson, a highly- experienced and
well-respected investigator, and Andy Knott, OMalleys
public relations person who was studying to become a lawyer.
Knotts reputation was that he tended to be unhelpful, snotty
and difficult to deal with. Knott does not appear on the organizational
flow chart but, surprisingly, he became heavily involved in tactical
decisions.
States Attorney investigators had been used in other high-profile
cases. One top assistant points out that Robertson and four other
investigators went to Washington, DC, to sift through Congressman
Mel Reynolds garbage. He noted that the investigative unit
in the States Attorneys office was, organized
and expanded shortly before the Palatine investigation,
upon OMalleys insistence. Simultaneously, OMalley
removed many career prosecutors who were opposed to the idea.
As evidence of OMalleys interest in achieving a high
profile in the public eye, one assistant cites the practice of
holding charges in felony review so that OMalley
could gain time to hold press conferences and secure television
coverage. He contends that this is a running joke
in the States Attorneys office. This action can potentially
harm prosecutions when defense attorneys become aware of the practice
and exploit the time gap.
The Rest of the Task Force
Thank you for your offers of support and well be calling
on you, but well be calling on you as the need arises,
Bratcher said in the Daily Herald on January 24, 1993, which characterized
his early response to offers for help.
The Illinois State Police were never called by Chief Bratcher.
An assistant director of the ISP, Tom Shemp, called Palatine himself
wondering why they hadnt called him within a few days of
the murders. As a result of Shemps call to Bratcher, the
ISP sent a few people: Leonard, Valdez, Monsen and Meyer. Valdez
was an investigator, the others were intelligence analysts.
The Monday following the murders, Chief Bratcher contacted the
FBI, who sent in their Rapid Start Teamessentially a profile
team. This was their first case. Jim Bell was named Task Force
coordinator in March 1995, after serving as one of the initial
FBI advisors to the Task Force. Bell was cited as an expert in
organizing large-scale cases, having managed or participated
in over 40 major task force operations nation-wide.
Although often referred to as an FBI agent in the Chicago press,
in reality Bell was not an agent but a civilian referred to as
a major case specialist. His GS (general service)
rating was below that of other FBI agents assigned to the case.
His experience with the FBIs Violent Criminal Apprehension
Program (VICAP), made him an expert on serial crimes. But there
was no evidence of the Browns massacre being the work of
a serial killer. Indeed, most police interviewed by the BGA agreed
that Browns was a botched robbery.
According to the organizational flow chart, the FBI worked as
technical support alongside the state intelligence analysts, under
the administrative branch of the Task Force. They were responsible
for implementing an automated case-management system.
After the release of suspect Blake, one senior OMalley aid
said, everyone knew the real investigation was about to
begin.
As the role of the FBI was being expanded, on Wednesday, January
13, 1993, two veteran Chicago Police Department detectives arrived:
Sgt. Paul Carrol, a participant in a number of task forces, and
Detective Richard Zuley, a highly-respected veteran officer. Zuley
had years of homicide investigative experience including successfully
investigating some of the most notorious murder cases in the citycases
called heater cases. These heater cases included the
murder of the Boyz to Men manager in a Gold Coast hotel, the Dantrell
Davis case, the Choi Jewelry double murder on North Clark Street
in 1989 and the Dana Feiter case, the woman murdered at a North
Side cash station. As one investigator noted, murder was
Zuleys thing.
Other suburbs offered help on an ad hoc basis. Ultimately, by
January 17, 1993, there were 10 investigative teams comprised
of two men each. The investigating officers came from Palatine
(5), Cook County Sheriffs Police (5), Chicago (1), Des Plaines
(2), Skokie (2), Rolling Meadows, Arlington Heights, and the States
Attorneys office. The other representative of the Chicago
police department was not an investigatorhe worked on the
support staff.
But it took nine days to assemble these investigators. They were
not command staff but analysts from the state and crime analysts
from the FBI. There were legal advisors and investigators from
the States Attorneys Office. Yet there were relatively
few actual street investigators.
But, there were never 140 investigators working on
the crime, as many have suggested. However, many of the investigators
and support staff were the best and brightest from
their departments. The rank and file were skilled and experienced.
It was the inexperienced leadership of the Task Force that lacked
the skill to manage the investigation well.
After all, Pat OBrien was a lawyer inexperienced in investigations.
Kavanaughs reputation was as an IAD administrator and restaurant
security boss. And Koziol himself admitted his inexperience in
homicide investigations.
How Was This Task Force to Operate?
Clearly, Chief Bratcher was in charge and responsiblehe
had assembled the Task Force. Day- to-day operations were controlled
by Kavanaugh and Koziol with heavy investigative input from Pat
OBrien of the States Attorneys office.
Conceptually, they were striving for teamwork. For instance, in
the agenda for Bratchers staff meeting on February 1, 1993,
he used the word team seven times. He describes nine
investigative teams, all to equally impact the investigation
and work in unison with each other. Theoretically, the data gathered
and reviewed by the crime scene analysts, the work of the FBI
profilers, and any incoming current intelligence from
agencies like the Chicago Gang Crimes unit would be funneled to
these investigative teams.
Tightly-Held Information
But, in reality, these categories of information were tightly
held by the command staff and never shared with the investigators.
Task Force leaders would meet in the so-called war room
behind closed doors. They would emerge with orders for the investigators
without offering any discussion of the course of the investigation.
For the first six weeks, no briefing session was held when the
morning shift replaced the late shift. Further into the investigation,
a senior investigator told us the briefing sessions were used
as a time to reprimand officers for filing things incorrectly
as opposed to being a forum for exchanging information.
As noted by former Chicago Police Superintendent Richard Brezack,
some of the most valuable information used to solve crimes emerges
from casual discussions over cups of coffee. Investigators would
gather together in an informal setting and discuss a case, sharing
their individual experiences with one another. This cultivation
of new ideas is not possible when even the most basic of briefing
sessions are not conducted. This lack of shared information and
honest teamwork doomed the task force from its inception.
Consequently, fundamental pieces of evidencethings left
at the crime scene, lists of witnesses who had come forward, and
the work product from analysts and profilerswere never shared
with the investigators. Many investigators interviewed were not
aware of all the physical evidence. Indeed, to this day state
analysts have never been informed of certain key elements of the
crime. One investigator succinctly identified the problems this
created: Whats the point of creating profiles if you
dont share them with the investigators?
Wasted Talent
Creativity among investigators was not encouraged. This responsibility
was left to Kavanaugh, Koziol and OBrien. Chief Bratcher
really didnt participate. The task force was designed to
ensure that Palatine and the States Attorneys office
would solve the crime. Many highly-skilled investigators found
themselves answering phones and taking incoming leads. Ultimately,
they began calling themselves Kelly girls. These investigators,
who had decades of experience between them, were hardly ever busy.
They were not used to follow up even the most basic leadsdespite
a backlog.
One extremely-experienced investigator went home after three days
on the Task Force and told his wife, They are not telling
us anything. Theyll never solve this crime.
Looking at the Federal Task Force model, it is important to recall
that the leadershipJustice Department lawyerswere
given no line-authority over the investigators. Being experienced
agents, the investigators were often older and more experienced
than the attorneys. Thus it was necessary to lead by persuasion:
to ask agents to do thingsnot order them. In Palatine, the
leaders of the Task Force lacked the necessary authority because
they did not command the respect of the investigators.
Task Force members have pointed out that each department sent
their top investigators to work on the Task Force. Ultimately,
many of these talented officers requested their home departments
to remove them from the Task Force. They felt they were misused
resources. One Task Force member said, If you wrote
a book about the Palatine Task Force, it would be titled, ÔHow
not to run a major investigation.
Indeed, rather than a true task force which followed the Federal
model of putting everyone in a room to share everything, this
investigation was held tightly. It was run by a few people who
asked the investigators to run down various leads without explaining
how those leads fit into the big picture.
This placed tremendous power and responsibility for the investigation
in the hands of a few who were woefully inexperienced in murder
cases. The consequence of this inexperience was that many of the
investigators quickly lost confidence in the leadership, resulting
in a wide, disastrous split right down the middle of Bratchers
team. As Yankees Manager Billy Martin used to say, My
job is to stop half the team, who isnt sure I know what
I am doing, from joining the other half, who are convinced that
I dont know what I am doing.
It is the nature of an ad hoc task force like Palatine for the
investigators from other jurisdictions to be loyal not to the
Task Force, but to their own departments. The Task Force was inexperienced
in the type of leadership needed to mold these diverse groups
into an effective team.
The lack of skill and homicide experience had become obvious to
the experienced investigative members of the team.
It was reported that early on, Zuley pointed out to Bratcher he
felt Koziol lacked experience and savvy. The commands apparent
authority began to melt away during the investigation of what
has become known as Lead 80. Their authority disintegrated
as the investigators observed conduct which indicated a lack of
knowledge of fundamental investigative procedures. The split which
ensued between the command and the investigators involved with
Lead 80 caused the command to position themselves on the defensive.
They attacked the credibility of the lead based upon the actions
and personalities of the investigating detectives, not on the
actual evidence.
The Investigation of Lead 80
The Tip
Early on, Reynaldo (a.k.a. Bacilio) Aviles, an incarcerated member
of the Puerto Rican (PR) Stones gang, told the States Attorneys
office that he knew of a number of robberies that Jose Cruz and
other members of the PR Stones had committed. Aviles said that
Cruz and other gang members were responsible for the Palatine
murders, and that he had gained this information through phone
conversations with Cruz while in county jail.
On Wednesday, January 13, 1993, States Attorney Investigator
Robertson assigned Chicago Detective Richard Zuley to this leadnumber
80. Zuley and his partner Illinois State Police Sgt. Valdez, immediately
contacted the Chicago Gang Crimes unit to request information
on the individual identified by AvilesJose Cruz. They then
interviewed Aviles in Cook County Jail.
But Pat OBrien was skeptical of Aviles veracity. He
emphasized that Aviles claims, because he had two prior
convictions, had to be proved to establish his credibility as
a source. However, OBrien still went to a judge to obtain
a judicial overhear to listen to Aviles jailhouse conversations.
The procedure was highly unusual. In the hundreds of investigations
Zuley had been involved with, this was the first in which an overhear
request was made.
Meanwhile, OBrien instructed that Aviles was to have no
further conversations with Cruz until the paperwork was completed
and the overhear arranged. Aviles agreed.
In the interim and against OBriens direction, Aviles
again talked to Cruz who, when asked about the murders said he
did not want to talk about it; This thing is too hot. Im
not going to talk about it anymore.
BGA Report -- Part 1
Part 2 Part 3
Part 4) |