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Former lawyer for Chicago police testifies about department’s reaction to bartender beating

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But Debra Kirby, then the head of OPS and still a high-ranking member of the department, told the jury that she told Bilyk during a phone call that she wanted Abbate charged with a felony. Bilyk denied any such call. And a Chicago police detective testified that Bilyk had indicated that misdemeanor charges were appropriate for Abbate.

The misdemeanor charges against Abbate were eventually upgraded to felonies at about the same time that the videotape was made public by Obrycka’s lawyers. Abbate was later found guilty but spared prison by a judge who sentenced him to probation for two years. He was subsequently fired from the department.

The city’s attorneys also called Matthew Hickman, an expert on use of force by police who formerly worked for the U.S. Department of Justice as a statistician. Hickman challenged an expert witness for Obrycka who said the Chicago Police Department’s rate of finding wrongdoing with officers accused of excessive force paled by comparison with national averages. Hickman said the expert, however, had “cherry-picked” national data to compare with Chicago figures.

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