Robert Nixon and Police Torture in Chicago, 1871–1971
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In 2015, Chicago became the first city in the United States to create a reparations fund for victims of police torture, after investigations revealed that former Chicago police commander Jon Burge tortured numerous suspects in the 1970s, '80s, and '90s. But claims of police torture have even deeper roots in Chicago. In the late 19th century, suspects maintained that Chicago police officers put them in sweatboxes or held them incommunicado until they confessed to crimes they had not committed. In the first decades of the 20th century, suspects and witnesses stated that they admitted guilt only because Chicago officers beat them, threatened them, and subjected them to "sweatbox methods." Those claims continued into the 1960s.
In Robert Nixon and Police Torture in Chicago, 1871–1971, Elizabeth Dale uncovers the lost history of police torture in Chicago between the Chicago Fire and 1971, tracing the types of torture claims made in cases across that period. To show why the criminal justice system failed to adequately deal with many of those allegations of police torture, Dale examines one case in particular, the 1938 trial of Robert Nixon for murder. Nixon's case is famous for being the basis for the novel Native Son, by Richard Wright. Dale considers the part of Nixon's account that Wright left out of his story: Nixon's claims that he confessed after being strung up by his wrists and beaten and the legal system's treatment of those claims. This original study will appeal to scholars and students interested in the history of criminal justice, and general readers interested in Midwest history, criminal cases, and the topic of police torture.
Elizabeth Dale
Elizabeth Dale lives in a West Sussex village in the UK. She always dreamed of being a writer but somehow got sidetracked into getting a physics degree. She has had over 40 books published.
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Robert Nixon and Police Torture in Chicago, 1871–1971 - Elizabeth Dale
Northern Illinois University Press, DeKalb 60115
© 2016 by Northern Illinois University Press
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 1 2 3 4 5
978-0-87580-739-3 (cloth)
978-1-60909-200-9 (ebook)
Book and cover design by Shaun Allshouse
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Dale, Elizabeth, author.
Title: Robert Nixon and police torture in Chicago, 1871-1971 /
Elizabeth Dale.
Description: DeKalb : Northern Illinois University Press, 2016.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016005471| ISBN 9780875807393 (hardback) | ISBN
9781609092009 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Police brutality—Illinois—Chicago—History. | Police
misconduct—Illinois—Chicago--History. |
Torture—Illinois—Chicago—History. | BISAC: HISTORY / United States /
State & Local / Midwest (IA, IL, IN, KS, MI, MN, MO, ND, NE, OH, SD, WI).
| TRUE CRIME / General.
Classification: LCC HV8148.C4 .D35 2016 | DDC 363.2/32—dc23
LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2016005471
Contents
Introduction
Police Torture in Chicago before Jon Burge
Chapter One
Police Torture in Chicago, 1871–1936
Chapter Two
Murder in Black and White
Chapter Three
On Trial
Chapter Four
Appeal
Chapter Five
Patterns and Practice, 1936–1971
Conclusion
The Burden of Proof
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Census Tracts of Chicago, 1940: Races and Nationalities Map. Social Science Research Committee. Reprinted with permission from the Map Collection at the University of Chicago and the Department of Sociology at the University of Chicago.
Robert Nixon in police custody sometime after his arrest for the murder of Florence Johnson. His shirt has already been taken from him for testing. Photograph courtesy of Associated Press.
Introduction
Police Torture in Chicago before Jon Burge
On May 5, 2015, the Chicago City Council passed an ordinance apologizing to the mostly African American victims of torture conducted by Jon Burge and other police officers at Areas Two and Three police headquarters between 1972 and 1991. The ordinance promised to pay individuals with a credible claim of torture,
a group estimated at between 50 and 88 people, up to $100,000 each in damages, and to provide those victims, their children, and grandchildren job training and free education at the city colleges. It also pledged that Chicago public schools would teach eight and tenth graders about the Burge case in history classes. Passage of the ordinance was a historic moment: speaking in the council chambers that morning, Mayor Rahm Emanuel praised it as another step but an essential step in righting a wrong.
And he thanked those who had worked to pass the ordinance, including many victims of the police torture and their families, for helping the city come face-to-face with the past and be honest enough and strong enough to say when we are wrong and to try to make right what we’ve done wrong.
¹
Trying to explain what happened in Chicago between 1972 and 1991, most suggest that when Jon Burge joined the force, he introduced his team to the abusive interrogation techniques he had learned in the military when he served in Vietnam. John Conroy, the author of the newspaper series (which turned into a book-length study) about what happened in Area Two of Chicago, went further, speculating that Burge was a guy who was failed by his supervisors.
If, Conroy went on, someone had called Burge in the first time that he roughed up a suspect and said, ‘Burge, you do that one more time and I’ll have you guarding the parking lot at 11th and State,
it would not have happened again. That theory that Chicago’s torture tragedy in the 1970s and 1980s resulted from lack of proper guidance by high-ranking police officers was repeated by federal judge Joan Lefkow when she sentenced Burge for obstruction of justice and perjury in 2011.²
Yet perhaps it is not that simple. Certainly, police torture in Chicago did not begin with Jon Burge. The evidence is difficult to come by; as the historian Alfred McCoy noted in another context, police departments tend to destroy or conceal their records.
But after a search of several publicly available records, I have been able to find at least four hundred claims that officers in the Chicago Police Department used torture on witnesses or suspects between 1871 and 1971. At the time they were made, most of those claims were ignored, discounted, or dismissed by the criminal justice system. Now their history has been forgotten and left out of our attempts to explain what happened in Area Two between 1972 and 1991.³
This book is intended to help us begin to recapture that lost history. It does so by setting out many of those early claims, using them to reveal the patterns of police torture across that period. As Darius Rejali noted in Torture and Democracy, getting the patterns right, specifying claims about the shape of these patterns, is important to any further research.
So too, it is important to tie those claims to names as often as possible, to recognize those whose stories have been lost to our historical memory. It is not enough, however, to simply record the names, the dates, and the claims. To understand how and why police torture happened in Chicago, to consider why it lasted as long as it did, to explore why those claims disappeared from our memory, we need to go beyond lists, to look at how the criminal justice system and the people of Chicago responded to claims of torture when they were made. To do that, this book offers some snapshots of a number of the torture claims made between 1871 and 1971 and looks closely at a single case from 1938. In that case, Robert Nixon, a young black man, was tried for murdering Florence Johnson, the white wife of a Chicago firefighter. A jury found Nixon guilty and that verdict was affirmed on appeal. On June 15, 1939, the people of Illinois put Robert Nixon to death in the electric chair. Robert Nixon went to his death claiming that he had falsely confessed to the Johnson murder after being tortured at police headquarters at 11th and State. The drama surrounding his arrest and trial help us see the context in which torture claims arose. Nixon’s problems proving that he was tortured help us understand how the criminal justice system could help perpetuate torture even as it officially rejected the practice.⁴
There are several reasons why I have chosen to focus on Robert Nixon’s case. In part, it is because a version of Nixon’s trial is already familiar. Two years after Nixon’s execution, Richard Wright published Native Son, his novel about the failures of racial and economic justice on Chicago’s South Side. According to Wright, "many of the newspaper items and some of the scenes in Native Son are but fictionalized versions of Robert Nixon’s trial." Yet for all that Wright used Nixon’s 1938 trial to expose the problems of race and justice in Chicago, in one crucial way Bigger Thomas was not Robert Nixon and Native Son could never be the history of Nixon’s trial. Although Robert Nixon lived much of the social and economic injustice that Native Son exposed and subsequent histories have recorded, Wright’s novel ignored the most important lessons Robert Nixon’s trial taught about the failures of criminal justice: it said almost nothing about police torture. There is the merest hint of it at the start of Book Three, the very beginning of the section that Wright called Fate,
which opens by describing Bigger Thomas’s silence even though the police carried him from one police station to another, though they threatened him, persuaded him, bullied him, and stormed at him.
Yet in the scene when Bigger broke his silence and confessed to State’s Attorney Buckley, there was no hint that force had been involved.⁵
Wright’s failure to call attention to the police torture claims that were central to Robert Nixon’s trial was probably the result of a deliberate decision to emphasize other social ills. Yet it was an artistic judgment that came at a crucial moment, and the timing of Robert Nixon’s case is the second reason why I have chosen to examine it closely in this study. In the first decades of the twentieth century, it was an open secret in Chicago that the police used torture techniques, more often known as sweating or the third degree, to get suspects and witnesses to talk. By the mid-1920s, shifts in public opinion and increased scrutiny by courts meant that police could not do so as openly. In 1936, the United States Supreme Court declared that the use of torture to obtain confessions from criminal defendants was an unconstitutional denial of due process. Scholars have, by and large, concluded that those shifts in public and legal opinion meant that by the late 1930s police torture in the United States finally had been brought to an end. Nixon’s case suggests, to the contrary, that torture continued in Chicago police stations behind closed doors, in forms that left no marks. In Torture and Democracy, Rejali argues that this sort of disappearance is typical in democracies, where governments sweep their less satisfactory or disturbing practices out of sight and out of mind. What the people cannot see, they will not try to stop. Other scholars, notably Stanley Cohen and Jinee Lokaneeta, argue that torture also happens when citizens are unwilling to look too closely at what their governments are doing, particularly because they are afraid and think government wrongdoing is the only way to stop whatever it is they fear.⁶
The history of police torture claims in Chicago between 1871 and 1971 offers evidence that torture did continue even after the law, and public opinion, ostensibly rejected it. Robert Nixon’s case offers an explanation of why that may have happened, showing how the court procedures meant to outlaw torture instead made it possible for the police to hide what they were doing and for juries and judges to let them do so. Other claims recounted in this book suggest that torture also continued because claims of torture were increasingly left out of accounts in newspapers and other popular treatments of trials. That silence turned the claims of torture that were reported into anomalies, the work of rogue cops, occasional accidents of overzealous policing. That is a problem that transcends Jon Burge.⁷
Chapter One
Police Torture in Chicago, 1871–1936
Long before Jon Burge joined the Chicago Police Department in March 1970, people complained of being tortured by the city’s police. In 1931, the National Commission on Law Observance and Enforcement, popularly known as the Wickersham Commission, charged that the police in Chicago, and in several other major cities in the United States, often used torture, usually known as the third degree, when they interrogated suspects. That report defined the third degree as the employment of methods which inflict suffering, physical or mental, upon a person in order to obtain information about a crime
and found that police officers in Chicago typically used one or more of three different approaches:
Physical abuse: Law enforcement officers beat suspects or witnesses with rubber hoses, belts, or other items; struck them with their fists or slapped them, kicked or kneed them; hung them by their wrists or neck; or exposed their victims to physical extremes such as rooms that were too cold or too hot (often known as the sweatbox
or sweating
).
Deprivation: Officers held victims in isolation from friends or family for days (also known as holding someone incommunicado); or deprived them of food, drink, sleep, or necessary medical treatment (or drugs, in the case of addicts).
Psychological pressure: Officers threatened suspects, witnesses, or a family member with violence, prosecution, increased punishment, or being turned over to a mob; or subjected witnesses or suspects to extensive and extended interrogation that was conducted over a period of days or late at night.¹
Torture in Chicago in the Late Nineteenth Century
The Wickersham Commission’s report looked at claims of torture in Chicago in the 1920s, but there were complaints long before that. Charges that law enforcement personnel used torture to try to obtain confessions appear in Illinois court records and news accounts shortly after the Civil War. In 1869, William Stallings of Venice, Illinois sued, asserting that after he was arrested for larceny the arresting officers took him to a nearby wood, placed him under a tree, took out a rope, and told him he would be hanged if he did not confess. Around the same time, John Francis insisted that he confessed to a robbery in Clark County, Illinois only after being taken from his home by a mob of men and hanged from a tree until he was nearly senseless.² Presumably to stop the practice, the Illinois General Assembly passed a law in 1874 that declared it a crime to use force or imprisonment to compel confessions.³
Beginning in the 1880s, several suspects taken into custody by Pinkerton agents in Chicago claimed the agents tortured them by putting them in a sweatbox.
Sweatboxes, which had been used during the Civil War and by some slave owners before that war, were small, intensely hot, often smelly or airless rooms. Suspects and witnesses were held in the sweatbox until the discomfort made them willing to talk.⁴ In 1885, Frank Bernard claimed that after being arrested on a warrant by a Pinkerton agent he was detained for several days at the agency’s Chicago office, where he spent most of his time in the sweatbox. John B. Owens was taken to Chicago in 1887 and put in the Pinkerton ‘sweat-box’
until he confessed to robbing a train. In 1893, Walter Martin said he was tricked into going to Chicago to meet a man who seized him and took him to the Pinkerton offices, where he was held for two weeks. At night he was chained to a bed; during the day he was locked in a small closet and threatened with the sweat-box
if he did not confess to committing arson. While the sweatbox, usually in combination with being held incommunicado for several days and nights, seemed to be the Pinkertons’ preferred technique, some men claimed that private detectives in Chicago used other forms of torture: W. J. Gallagher, suspected of election fraud in 1884, complained he had been arrested and kept in the offices of a Chicago detective agency overnight, chained to an investigator. Gallagher said that whenever he fell asleep his companion jerked the chain to wake him up and began to question him, effectively subjecting him to sleep deprivation.⁵
In the last decades of the nineteenth century, news stories suggested that federal and state agencies in Chicago also used the sweatbox or held suspects incommunicado. News accounts in 1878 reported that special federal agent James Stuart, investigating a claim of mail theft in Chicago, put Carl August Namuth in the sweatbox to get him to confess. A year later, Henry Sloan, a witness questioned concerning a suspected confidence game, was put in the sweatbox by federal officials to try to get the story of the crime out of him. In 1895, agents in the United States Secret Service kept C. O. Jones, a local newspaper artist, in the sweatbox for five hours as they investigated stamp counterfeiting in Chicago. Two years before, state fire inspectors investigating arson cases held Otto Jirsa and other suspects incommunicado in a secret room at the Gault House, a local hotel.⁶
Claims that Chicago police officers were using similar forms of torture began after the city reorganized its police department between 1875 and 1885. Reorganization was prompted by a combination of elite and business fears of labor militancy and the expansion of the city with the incorporation of the suburbs in Lake View, Hyde Park, and Englewood. It brought with it a series of reforms designed to remake Chicago’s police into professional crime stoppers. The department grew dramatically between 1883 and 1884, from 637 men, a number that included officers and clerical staff, to 924 employees, of whom 576 were patrolmen.⁷ In 1884, the police department admitted that Lawrence Beatty, suspected leader in a burglary ring, had escaped from the sweatbox at the Central police station. Two other men who were suspected of being part of his gang were too big to slip out of the hole Beatty made in a window; they remained in the sweatbox as police tried to convince them to confess. During a murder investigation a year later, the police officers at the Desplaines station made little secret of the fact they were holding a number of Italian immigrants incommunicado as they tried to induce them to confess. Suspects in other cases said police officers used threats or other means to scare them into confessing: Frank Chapek, a suspected anarchist, claimed in 1888 that police officers threatened him with dynamite and held a knife to his neck to try to make him confess. Other efforts were more imaginative: the Milwaukee Journal reported that Chicago police at the Fifteenth Street station used a skull with eyes that lit up to try to frighten a confession out of one suspect in 1896.⁸
Police torture claims figured in the investigations into Chicago’s most notorious cases in the 1880s and 1890s. During the investigation into the Haymarket bombing in 1886, reports in the Chicago Tribune made it clear that police officers under the command of Inspector John Bonfield were holding suspects incommunicado and threatening them to make them confess. At least one witness questioned during the investigation, Vaclav Djemek, made more serious charges. He insisted that when he said that he knew nothing about the Haymarket bombing and would not turn state’s evidence, he was cursed at and kicked by officers, who threatened he would be hanged. One of the Haymarket defendants, George Engle, said that police officers held him incommunicado and put him in the sweat-box.
⁹
Three years later, during the investigation into the murder of Dr. Patrick Cronin at the hands of the Clan-Na-Gael, an Irish Republican organization, Chicago police officers held Martin Burke, one of the suspects, incommunicado. When Burke’s lawyer filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to try to get access to his client, the chief of police, George Hubbard, refused on the grounds that the Chicago police officer who had taken him to Chicago from Canada was serving the interests of the federal government and was thus outside the reach of the state court. The judge who heard the petition agreed, and Burke stayed under police control until the trial. Several years later, when one of Burke’s codefendants was retried for the Cronin murder, defense attorney W. R. Wing argued to the jury that Burke, who had died of tuberculosis in prison waiting for the appeal, had been subjected to physical tortures by the police as they tried to get him to confess in 1889. The judge in the second trial did not allow Wing to develop that argument, which meant that any attempt to establish what the Chicago police did to Martin Burke died with him.¹⁰ At the end of the century, during the investigation into the notorious workings of Dr. Holmes, the serial murderer immortalized in Devil in the White City, the police put Patrick Quinlan, Holmes’s handyman, through the sweat-box
at the Harrison Street police station on several different days, at least once for five hours. Quinlan’s wife and her good friend Mrs. L. Doyle were both sweated by the police from 9:00 in the morning until 1:00 in the afternoon, and another witness, Joseph Owens, was sweated at the Harrison Street station for more than five hours by officers trying to find out what he knew about Dr. Holmes’s plans.¹¹
By the 1890s, undergoing a sweating
in Chicago referred either to being put in a special room or being subjected to sweatbox methods,
which often meant an intensive and extensive interrogation conducted by relays of police officers. Whether a place or a practice, sweating was a coercive and physically difficult process.¹² There is considerable evidence that across the 1890s it also became a well-established part of criminal investigations in the city. In 1893, George Craig, suspected of murdering a small child, was sweated at the West Chicago Avenue station. A year later, after two special police officers were killed, police officers at that same station put two suspects, Henry Griswold and William Lake, through the sweatbox for five hours each. In 1894, officers at the Attrill police station used the sweatbox on Joseph Shuppick, while their counterparts at the East Chicago station sweated eight suspects in another murder case. Laek Lindell, a young man accused of attempted murder, was put in the sweatbox at the Woodlawn station in 1896; and Red Sullivan, a suspected robber, had to undergo the pumping process in the sweatbox
that same year. The next year, the technique flourished. Two murder suspects whom the police refused to name were sweated at the East Chicago station in April; Henry Dunker was sweated at the Hyde Park station in August; in October, officers put Nick Redmond through the sweatbox at the Maxwell Street station; Joe Keller