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Chicago accepts $33 million police misconduct settlements

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — The Chicago City Council on Thursday signed off on nearly $33 million in legal settlements for two notorious cases of police misconduct, shining an expensive light on how the city deals with wrongdoing in the Chicago Police Department.

In what may be the largest single settlement of its kind in city history, the aldermen approved a $22.5 million payment to settle the lawsuit brought by the family of Christina Eilman. She was a 21-year-old former California college student in the throes of a bipolar episode in May 2006 when police arrested her at Midway Airport and released her a day later in a crime-plagued South Side neighborhood, despite her parents’ long-distance attempts to get police to help them reach her.

Within hours, she was abducted and sexually assaulted at knifepoint, then plummeted from the seventh floor of a vacant apartment in public housing. She suffered permanent brain damage and other lasting injuries.

“We are very pleased with this settlement as it will provide the support and resources she will need for the rest of her life,” Eilman’s parents, Kathleen and Richard Paine, said in a statement. “But we won’t forget those police officers who seemed to go out of their way to expose our daughter to becoming assaulted and to come so close to death

“To those few officers who attempted to help her, we offer our thanks. Still, we will not forget those in command nor those who had the chance to offer assistance and consciously chose not to.”

The other settlement, for $10.25 million, was in a case filed by Alton Logan, who spent 26 years in prison for a murder he did not commit. He alleged that former Chicago police Cmdr. Jon Burge and his so-called midnight crew of detectives hid evidence of Logan’s innocence.

Logan contends Burge, who is serving a 4 1/2-year federal prison term for lying about torturing suspects, knew that a convicted cop killer was the real murderer, a man later linked to the crime by a long-hidden confession and the weapon.

The settlement in the Burge case brings the city’s total in Burge-related cases to nearly $60 million — with four cases still pending.

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