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Chicago’s Emanuel defends bid to erase verdict in police beating case

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The police official who ran Internal Affairs at the time of the 2007 bar beating, Debra Kirby, has been promoted repeatedly to other top jobs in the department — including by McCarthy.

Kirby’s involvement in the Abbate case came into question at the trial. Her testimony that she sought felony charges against Abbate was contradicted by an internal affairs investigator who testified that Kirby discussed less serious charges. A Cook County assistant state’s attorney went further in his testimony, denying that Kirby even called him to talk about charges.

The contradictions between Kirby and the other officials first came up in sworn depositions before Emanuel took office in 2011, meaning the new administration was aware of the issue. McCarthy promoted Kirby and placed her in charge of preparations for last May’s NATO summit.

Many of the cases the Abbate verdict could influence involve allegations against the Special Operations Section that was disbanded following a 2006 scandal. Allegations that internal affairs under Kirby failed to investigate SOS officers have been central to many of the cases.

The legal precedent aside, Bowman said the Abbate verdict is a milestone if Emanuel is serious about setting standards of professionalism in the Police Department.

“The jury for the first time in anyone’s memory specifically found there is a policy of employing a code of silence,” he said. “It’s terribly important.”

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