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Jury hears about alleged threats made by Chicago cop charged in bar beating

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Gary Ortiz, childhood friend of former Chicago Police Officer Anthony Abbate, leaves Dirksen U.S. Courthouse during a lunch break in the trial against Abbate, who is accused of beating of a female bartender, at Dirksen U.S. Courthouse in Chicago, Illinois, Thursday, October 25, 2012. (Photo by Heather Charles/Chicago Tribune/MCT)

(MCT) — CHICAGO — After Martin Kolodziej got word that a confidante of Anthony Abbate — the off-duty Chicago police officer who had just violently attacked one of his female bartenders — wanted to meet, the tavern manager wasn’t taking chances, he told a federal jury Thursday.

Kolodziej went to a Best Buy and bought a tape recorder so he could document what happened next. After all, he had just viewed the videotape from his newly installed security system that captured Abbate pummeling bartender Karolina Obrycka.

The conversation Kolodziej secretly recorded with Patti Chiriboga, Abbate’s friend of 20 years, has emerged as a key piece of evidence in Obrycka’s federal lawsuit against Abbate and the city. In the conversation — heard Thursday by the jury — Chiriboga told Kolodziej that an angry Abbate wanted the videotape and the matter to go away — and he was willing to falsify evidence or plant cocaine on his accusers if necessary.

But Chiriboga, in painful testimony Thursday, denied that Abbate ever asked her to pass that message, flip-flopping on her sworn testimony before a Cook County grand jury in 2007. Another Abbate friend also took the witness stand at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse on Thursday to deny allegations he tried to bribe Obrycka into not pursuing the matter by offering help with her medical bills.

Chiriboga insisted she didn’t “go to the grand jury to lie,” only that she was confused and that her “mind wasn’t all there.”

Obrycka’s attorney, Terry Ekl, quickly pounced.

“You didn’t go to the grand jury to lie, but you just did when you got in there,” said Ekl, his voice rising.

Chiriboga, who narrowed her eyes and glowered at Ekl during his questioning, retorted, “I was a basket case at the grand jury.”

The alleged threats passed on by Chiriboga are central to Obrycka’s case. The former bartender’s lawsuit contends that Abbate; his close friends, including fellow police officers; and higher-ranking members of the department sought to cover up and then failed to properly investigate the beating in the days immediately afterward.

It all happened, the lawsuit alleges, because of the city’s unofficial “code of silence” policy that protects wayward officers.

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