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Chicago moves to have verdict in cop beating set aside

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The city also argued in the motion that the misconduct in the Abbate case happened several years ago and things are different now. The old Office of Professional Standards, which investigated the Abbate case, was renamed and reconfigured in the wake of the scandal. Also, city lawyers noted that there is a new mayor as well as a different police superintendent.

While the city’s effort to erase the jury’s verdict would not strike down the record of testimony in the trial, it does pose some risks to the public good, experts said.

“By allowing the kind of agreed-upon whitewash of the jury verdict it tends to increase the possibility of future bad conduct,” said Richard Zitrin, a law professor at the University of California Hastings College of the Law, who has testified before Congress about secret settlements in police misconduct cases.

“The problem is that the lawyer representing the plaintiff has a duty to do what’s right for the plaintiff and that duty does not include a duty to do what’s right for the public as a whole.”

Obrycka’s lawyer Terry Ekl did not respond to calls for comment Monday. City officials also did not immediately answer questions about the move.

In the memorandum filed Monday, the city cited some legal precedents supporting the move to vacate the jury verdict. But federal courts have not always agreed with such motions when public misconduct issues are involved.

In a 2000 case in Virginia, after a federal jury found for a plaintiff in a police excessive force lawsuit, both sides filed a motion to vacate the verdict in favor of a settlement. In that case, the judge wrote “the public’s interest in judicial economy, finality of judgment, and the integrity of the courts outweighs the parties’ interest in having the verdict vacated.”

Lawyer Christopher Smith, who has represented several plaintiffs in lawsuits against the Chicago Police Department, said claims of a pattern and practice of cover-ups are allowed into cases rarely and on narrow terms.

Applying the precedent from the Abbate verdict to other lawsuits is challenging, he said. However, given the circumstances of the case — the fact that Abbate was off-duty and in a bar — the verdict made a strong statement.

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