James Gibson
00:00:00
I go to the side of the house, to the, uh, to the door. I, who is it? Open the door, then I come to the front, I'm like, man, open the door! Like who is that? I'm, like, it's me. They're like, hey, who was me?
Omar Jimenez
00:00:11
It's the night before New Year's Eve. December 30th, 1989, South Side of Chicago. James Gibson stands in the freezing cold in the alley next to his mom's house and bangs on the door. He's 23, home from college for the holidays, but clearly something's wrong. He's been beaten up and he's in pain.
James Gibson
00:00:33
They finally opened up the door, I stumbled in the house. My sister went to hug me, and I, I, I collapsed. I know I was kicked in the chest, but I didn't know my rib had been cracked, and my sister said, what's wrong with you? And I'm like, man, they been in there doing something to me.
Omar Jimenez
00:00:51
They were police officers, detectives in the Chicago Police Department. They say they'd picked James up because they told him they believed he had something to do with a double homicide. He remembered being cuffed to a chair, slapped, punched, kicked, he'd blacked out at least once. And then for reasons he doesn't fully understand at the time, they let him go. They put him in the back of a police sedan and dropped him off in the alleyway next to his mom's house. Bruised, aching, confused. Now he's standing in his mom's living room, his family's all around him.
Lorraine Brown
00:01:27
My kids running down the stairs, they hugging him, and he's like cringing I knew something was wrong with him.
Omar Jimenez
00:01:33
James' big sister, Lorraine, remembers that day clearly.
Lorraine Brown
00:01:37
My mother was over him like a wet towel. You all right? What happened to your face? Ah, you know, she just, she's just going on and on and one. He say they beat me. They beat you?
James Gibson
00:01:49
And then my mom would fell out and she start hollering and screaming and they, oh, they done beat him. And they start taking my clothes off and they got, oh my god, they start crying.
Lorraine Brown
00:01:58
I said, you can't beat nobody when you arrest them, I say that's against the law.
Omar Jimenez
00:02:06
What James Gibson didn't know at the time was that what happened at the police station would completely change the course of his life. He would end up wrongfully convicted of that double murder. He would spend nearly 30 years in prison. Today, to people in the US, the image of a black man being beaten by the cops, you've seen that before. It's almost too familiar at this point, which means it would be easy to write off James's story as just another personal injustice. But this is different. On Chicago's South Side, there was a group of police officers who came to be known as the Midnight Crew, who used torture regularly to get confessions for decades. And by torture, I mean they beat suspects, shackled them to chairs for days with no food or bathroom access. They electrocuted suspects with homemade devices, burned them on radiators. They suffocated suspects with plastic bags, made them play Russian roulette. And it's all documented in a series of reports and lawsuits dating back to the 80s. And there was one man at the center of it.
Archival
00:03:13
Chicago Police Commander Jon Burge accused of lying about..former Police Commander Jon Burge...Jon Burge...Jon Burge and other officers may be...
Omar Jimenez
00:03:20
A police commander named Jon Burge. Burge was at the center of a pattern and practice of police torture that resulted in at least 130 documented victims. Many have spent years, some decades, in prison for crimes they were later cleared of.
Archival
00:03:38
He served 23 years before he was granted clemency...15 years in prison...A quarter of a century for four men who spent a combined 73 years in prision...
Omar Jimenez
00:03:47
Chicago taxpayers have paid nearly $120 million to the victims of Jon Burge and the Midnight Crew, trying to make up for what can really never be recovered.
Archival
00:03:58
$5.5 million fund for reparations...$14 million to settle their... $100 million to exonerated former prisoner...and the tab is still running...
Omar Jimenez
00:04:08
I'm Omar Jimenez. I've known about this story for a long time, all my journalism career, before it really, back to when I was a student in Chicago. There are still people today untangling themselves from the disaster this era created, arguably one of the darkest chapters in American policing history. We're gonna lay out that history and we're gonna ask, what should justice look like when it's been twisted by coercion, abuse, torture? Is that something you can fix? From CNN Presents, this is Torture Justice.
Omar Jimenez
00:05:00
James Gibson's story starts in Chicago in the late 60s.
Lorraine Brown
00:05:04
James was hyper.
Omar Jimenez
00:05:06
Lorraine Brown is 10 years older than her little brother James.
Lorraine Brown
00:05:09
He liked to play, he liked to go out, he liked the adventure, he like to do kid stuff. He would just run around and have fun.
Omar Jimenez
00:05:17
She was his protector from the beginning, a second mom.
Lorraine Brown
00:05:20
And I always been there for him because my mom, she was gonna put him up for adoption. And when the people came, I told her that she changed her mind. He wasn't going nowhere. So I kind of made my mom keep James because he became my child, not hers in so many ways.
Omar Jimenez
00:05:37
That story is essentially family lore that Lorraine and James joke about now, but the fact was that Clara, their mom, was the heart of the family. James' dad was around, but he and Clara weren't in a relationship. And she'd been deaf since her childhood, which, as you can imagine, complicated a lot.
James Gibson
00:05:55
At that time, they didn't have a prognose or diagnose from it. They had labeled my mother mentally retarded. She built her own home from the ground, and, uh, she tried to do everything she possibly could with the cost that was dealt to her. She made sure that all her kids went to school and high school and graduated out of high school and went off to college.
Omar Jimenez
00:06:14
'Clara worried about her kids getting caught up in the drugs and gangs that were everywhere in the neighborhood. The Chicago James was born into was pretty much at war with itself. And the history is important here. It's the backdrop to everything that happens later. So we're gonna get into it a little. Chicago was one of the most segregated cities in the country around this time. Still is, actually. In the 50s and 60s, urban renewal efforts and redlining essentially trapped black and other minority residents in tightly defined neighborhoods and public housing high-rises that then started seeing less investment. And then in the 60s it seemed like every summer, tensions with the cops policing mostly black and brown neighborhoods boiled over.
Archival
00:07:01
On the west side of Chicago in 96 degree temperatures at 5 o'clock last Tuesday afternoon, Chicago's slum kids wanted some relief from the heat.
Omar Jimenez
00:07:09
Like in July of 1966, when black kids opening fire hydrants on the westside clashed with police.
Archival
00:07:16
Rocks were thrown at police, and then the real trouble began.
Omar Jimenez
00:07:19
'It escalated into looting and shootouts. More riots followed, again in 1966, after a march for open housing went through an all-white neighborhood.
Archival
00:07:32
There was as much gunfire on the corner of Wooden Lake last night as a Vietnam battlefield.
Omar Jimenez
00:07:37
And in 1968, after Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated. And then came 1969.
Archival
00:07:48
Black people need some peace. Black people needs some peace and we are going to have to fight. We gonna have to struggle.
Omar Jimenez
00:07:55
'Fred Hampton was 21 years old and a leader in the Illinois Black Panther Party when he was shot to death by police in his bed in his Chicago apartment. During the pre-dawn raid, officers fired almost a hundred shots. Two were fired point blank into Fred Hampton's head. They claimed it had been a shootout. Some now refer to it as a shoot-in. It took decades to learn that Hampton and the Panthers had been the target of a covert FBI operation and that the feds and the Chicago police had orchestrated the whole thing. But for Black Chicago, the bloody raid spoke for itself.
Archival
00:08:34
If we are dedicated, then all our sorrow will be turned into action.
Omar Jimenez
00:08:46
People in Chicago's black neighborhoods often saw the police as violent, volatile, and dangerous. To be mistrusted and avoided. And law enforcement often treated the people as violent, volatile and dangerous in need of a heavy hand, all in pursuit of safety in their minds. And that was James Gibson's Chicago. He grew up in Englewood on the South Side. Even when he was coming up in the 70s, his neighborhood was still an at times chaotic, violent place. Competing gangs sold heroin and cocaine. The murder rate in the city spiked in the seventies.
James Gibson
00:09:25
We feared everybody. You know what I'm saying? That's why gangs was formed because we couldn't go across 55th Street.
Omar Jimenez
00:09:32
55th Street, just a couple blocks from the house where James grew up. It had become a dangerous border dividing Englewood and the majority white neighborhood to the north.
James Gibson
00:09:41
They used to hang up dummies with knives in their backs, telling black people to go back across 55th Street, you know what I'm saying? Then we had the police, which we thought was supposed to protect us. They were terrorizing us.
Omar Jimenez
00:09:53
Police violence, gang violence, racist violence, it was a lot for young people to deal with. As James's sister Lorraine put it:
Lorraine Brown
00:10:03
Stay in the house, do what you gotta do, go to work, go to school, whatever you gotta to do, and come back home.
Omar Jimenez
00:10:11
Into all of this walked a man named Jonn Burge. He joined the force in 1970, just 22 years old, fresh off a tour as a military police officer in Vietnam.
John Conroy
00:10:23
You know, new recruits were investigated. And so this detective was assigned with, you know investigating with Jon Burge.
Omar Jimenez
00:10:30
John Conroy is a long time Chicago journalist. His coverage of Jon Burge and the Midnight Crew for the Chicago Reader, pretty legendary. A lot of what we know about Burge comes from his reporting.
John Conroy
00:10:42
And he said, Jon Burge would be a pleasure to deal with as a member of the public. He's polite. I imagine he can be firm. And it may seem like I've gone overboard in my description of this young man, but he is all man.
Omar Jimenez
00:11:00
However he was described, Burge had grown up on the South Side, not far from James Gibson, just a little more than two decades before. But the Chicago neighborhood he came home to as a vet had changed during his years in the Army. All those riots of the late 60s, they'd happened while he was overseas. The streets looked different, felt different.
John Conroy
00:11:24
He just seemed like the kind of guy who, you know, he'd be at my family's 4th of July picnic and my elderly aunt wouldn't be able to start her car. He'd be the first guy out there trying to get the car started. That was the kind a guy he struck me as. And yet, the other side was there too.
Omar Jimenez
00:11:43
The other side. That's what left its mark on Chicago. Burge shot up the ranks in the years after he joined the police department, and soon he had a small group of trusted detectives who worked under him. That group came to be called the Midnight Crew, because of their night shift hours. And it seemed like Burge gave those detectives wide leeway: Do what you need to do. Close cases. And they sent a lot of people to jail, whether it was legal or not, ethical or not. In many cases, Burge and his officers did it by torturing people into confessions. Many of them turned out to be false.
Omar Jimenez
00:12:37
None of this was on James Gibson's radar in December of 1989. He was halfway through his sophomore year at Wiley University, a historically black Methodist college in Marshall, Texas. And on the train ride home to Chicago, he was thinking about his mom's Christmas dinner spread and about his girlfriend.
James Gibson
00:12:54
I'm coming back for the holidays. I'm finna eat some of my mama good cooking, uh, banana pudding, and peach cobblins, and that's all that was. I'm going to see my girl, I'm gonna see my family, and that was it. I'm a rock star, you know what I'm saying? I graduated high school, I went to college, I done left the hood, I coming back. It just was a, was supposed to have been a couple of days, you know what I mean? And it took 30 years.
Omar Jimenez
00:13:19
'30 years, which starts three days before Christmas 1989. The crime that changed the course of James's life happened not far from his mom's house. Someone shot and killed two men at a garage on the South Side of Chicago. 56-Year-old Hunter Wash, who was black, and 61-year old Lloyd Benjamin, who is white. It was a broad daylight double murder. Wash, nicknamed Smiley by the neighborhood, was a mechanic and Benjamin was his insurance agent. Police thought it was an attempted robbery, even though the cash that Benjamin was carrying was found on his body. James, meanwhile, said he'd been running an errand on the other side of the neighborhood when the men got shot. Picking up a car battery charger, he'd loaned out.
James Gibson
00:14:04
I come back with the battery charger. And I gone back in the house. A couple hours later, I come back out. The dope boys was saying, man, um, white boy got hit on the corner.
Omar Jimenez
00:14:17
'Police would later say James's name had come up in the streets as being involved in the shooting. He did have a record as a small-time dealer.
James Gibson
00:14:25
The police called me, and I'm like, man, I don't know nothing about all this. I just got in town and I don't know nothing about what they're doing on the block.
Omar Jimenez
00:14:33
Less than a week later, on December 27th, police said they got another tip, a call on their anonymous tip line, saying James was the shooter. That same day, police came and picked him up. What happened next has been investigated, litigated, told, and retold for 35 years. After police picked him up, two days after Christmas, they cuffed him to a chair at the station and left him there for a day.
James Gibson
00:15:09
I asked them, I'm like, what that, what y'all, what happened? You know what I'm saying? Somebody lose something or something? How much money do you need? I was talkin real crazy.
Omar Jimenez
00:15:16
On December 28th, 24 hours later, James says he was still cuffed to a chair. He hadn't eaten or been allowed to use the bathroom. He had to pee on the floor. Police kept making him stand in lineups alongside some other guys they'd brought in. James says the police had each man in the lineup shout something a witness had heard at the crime scene.
James Gibson
00:15:40
They made me say, um, what's up motherf—r now? And then I, and I kept saying, what's up motherf—r now? And they said, they're like, no, say it like you mean it, motherf—r. And then one of them came and smacked me across the head like, motherf—r I said, say it like you meant it, what's up, motherf—r? And then they took me back to the room.
Omar Jimenez
00:15:55
'Then he says the beatings started. Two detectives at first, then four. They slapped him, called him the n-word, told him they were through playing with him. And they started laying out narratives. In one, James was the shooter.
James Gibson
00:16:15
One of them, they said, oh, don't look too good on you, boy. Don't look too good for the home team, boy, we got you picked out in the lineup.
Omar Jimenez
00:16:24
They were throwing a lot at him, names, scenarios. At one point, James says they told him somebody else, a guy James grew up with named Keith Smith, had told them James killed the mechanic and the insurance man while trying to rob them. Then they floated another theory. James murdered the men with a neighborhood drug addict named Fernando Webb, who went by the name Bodine. James told them none of that was true.
James Gibson
00:16:49
He said that you and Bodine did it. I said, well, maybe him and Bodine did it? He said, well man you did it, well maybe you and him did it! I said well shit, he said I did it, maybe you and him did it.
Omar Jimenez
00:16:57
The detectives kicked him in the chest, punched him in his side, the stomach, the groin. They beat him with their fists and feet, demanding he make a statement backing up their story.
James Gibson
00:17:09
I wasn't no kid, I graduated high school and college, I'm paying bills, I don't care. How much y'all beat up on me on this? I ain't kill nobody, I ain't sign that shit, I don't care what you say.
Omar Jimenez
00:17:21
Another night went by with him cuffed to a chair. Still no food, no water, no bathroom. The next day, day three, they kept beating him with blows to the back of his head and neck and slaps to his face. They pushed him again and again to tell them something very specific, that he had been there at the scene of the crime. Now, in other rooms in the same station, police were interrogating Keith Smith at the same time and subjecting him to the same treatment. They questioned Fernando Webb too. They were trying to get each of the three men to point the finger at the others. And Keith Smith, who was also getting punched and kicked, signed a statement placing Gibson at the scene. A statement he later said he didn't write or review and only signed because he was tired of getting beaten up and was told he could go home if he signed. I spoke to Keith Smith for this story. He said at the time of the murder, he was sleeping at home. I also tried to track down Fernando Webb, and based on what we believe is a close family member, he appears to have died decades ago. So we don't have his side of this story. But in the room where James was being interrogated, he says something weird happened. One of the detectives ran in, obviously worked up about something, and started whispering to the assistant state's attorney who had come to take James's statement.
James Gibson
00:18:49
All the time, they don't know I'm, I'm breathing lips and shit because my mama deaf and I'm listening, breathing their lips. He tell the state's attorney, bro, man, uh, this n— got the military downstairs.
Omar Jimenez
00:19:02
It was James' sister, Lorraine. She and her husband were both Army. They were home in Chicago for just five days over Christmas, and she was getting ready to ship back out to Germany when she got a call from her mom about what happened.
Lorraine Brown
00:19:16
So me and Steve, we dressed in sweatsuits with Army down the leg. We go over there to the district office where he was at and we come to find out what's going on with my brother. He comes out and he says that we're gonna let James go, let his mother know that he's gonna be released. So I leave.
Omar Jimenez
00:19:37
James says the news that he had military family looking for him seemed to have an immediate effect.
James Gibson
00:19:44
They grabbed me up and ran me literally down the back steps and throw me in the back seat of a, of a slick boy car they used to call them back then. Slick boy, they throw me the back of the car and drove off like crazy and I'm, I'm in the backseat rolling around and shit, I'm in pain and I didn't even know my rib was broken all of this stuff was hurting. I had so much going on, knots and shit all on my body.
Omar Jimenez
00:20:05
That's when the police car dropped James Gibson off next to his mom's house. It was dark out.
James Gibson
00:20:10
I'm like, you motherf—r's man, y'all have had me in there since yesterday. All the time, man, they had me in there four days.
Omar Jimenez
00:20:19
James didn't realize how long he'd been gone. The torture lasted almost 98 hours. Maybe you don't think that torture is something that happens here in the U.S. Maybe you imagine it as something that happens in authoritarian regimes and other times in other countries. But James Gibson was tortured. He was beaten, denied food and water and sleep and a bathroom for four days, in an attempt to get him to confess to something he says he didn't do. Torture happened here, in Chicago. We're gonna take a short break. We'll be right back.
Omar Jimenez
00:21:15
Lorraine was there when James came walking into his mom's living room after being held at the station, and she was shocked at what she saw. Her brother was clearly injured.
Lorraine Brown
00:21:25
I'm getting ready to call the police department, I need to find out who I need to call to get, getta, getta put in a complaint, cuz this ain't right.
Omar Jimenez
00:21:32
Now, Lorraine was military. She told us her mind went straight to the Geneva Conventions of all things. She knew what had happened to James wasn't allowed, not in Chicago, not anywhere, not even in a war zone. So she got on the phone and stayed on the phone until she got through to the Chicago PD's Office of Professional Standards, OPS. But James couldn't believe she was calling the police on the police.
Lorraine Brown
00:22:01
He was, he was a little scared of that. Like, why are you calling them? They just beat me up. I didn't know anything else to say. I didn't, you know, you're not supposed to beat nobody. I called them and, and put in a complaint for my baby brother. Why y'all beat him up? I didn't understand that. I really didn't understand that.
Omar Jimenez
00:22:21
What was on your mind when you said I, I gotta call them and what did you think was gonna happen?
Lorraine Brown
00:22:28
That somebody would look into it. I just knew that somebody that cares somewhere, some way, I knew something told me that somebody was gonna look into. Somebody was gonna into it!
Omar Jimenez
00:22:44
She wasn't wrong, exactly, but it took longer than any of them ever imagined. Because a day after police dropped James Gibson near his mom's house, officers showed up again. Now we don't know for sure what changed since the day before, but this time, police came to arrest James for first degree murder.
Lorraine Brown
00:23:08
They took him. I was in shock. Everybody was just standing there looking crazy. I know I was. And Steve was like, man, they just took your brother away.
Omar Jimenez
00:23:23
It was December 31st, 1989. It would be almost 30 years before James Gibson would be free again.
Omar Jimenez
00:23:42
For the first 10 months, James was held in the county jail, trying to figure out what just happened, what was happening to him. There was no way, he thought, that the story he said police manufactured was gonna convict him.
James Gibson
00:23:56
I said, man, that shit ain't gonna hold up in court. I ain't did nothing. Like man, shit, when y'all get through talking, they gotta let me go.
Omar Jimenez
00:24:05
But he was getting the sense that the whole system was stacking the deck against him, card by card, everybody, from the police to his own public defender, it seemed. In his mind, they had already decided he was guilty. First, there was the situation with his injuries. James says that when he first appeared before a judge, not long after police came back to his house and arrested him after those days he spent cuffed to a chair being beaten, that judge ordered him sent to the hospital to be treated. And have photos taken of his injuries. I've seen the photos. They're dated January 2nd, 1990 with the description written as right chest swollen and left chest swollen. But James says the photos didn't make it into his case file.
James Gibson
00:24:51
When I started having a dialog with my attorney and he started playing like he didn't know what I was talking about, like I was crazy. I said, the fix is in.
Omar Jimenez
00:24:59
In October of 1990, 10 months after he was arrested, James Gibson went before a judge in a bench trial. No jury. He says his attorney pushed him to take that route because there was no telling what kind of a jury he'd get. And James agreed to it because he was still sure that the lack of evidence against him made it impossible for prosecutors to make a convincing case.
James Gibson
00:25:25
'He said, you go in front of a jury trial with a white man murdering, and you African-American gang banging and all that s—, man, they're gonna nail your a—. So I figured that I, I'd take the bench trial and that's where I f—ed up at.
Omar Jimenez
00:25:37
He told me when I spoke to him this summer that if he could tell this past version of himself anything, at this point, he would be to take a jury trial. But he didn't. The trial took just two days. He was found guilty largely on testimony from police who said he'd confessed under interrogation to being at the scene. James's public defender never brought up the fact that James had been tortured at the police station. He was sentenced to life in prison.
Lorraine Brown
00:26:13
When they sentenced James, they said he was guilty, I was there.
Omar Jimenez
00:26:18
Lorraine Brown had to go back to her overseas army job right after James was arrested, but she managed to get back to the states for his trial.
Lorraine Brown
00:26:27
I was on bended knees a lot. I was in my room praying. I was the shower praying. I was, I prayed every day. Every day.
Omar Jimenez
00:26:44
She said when James got life, their sister almost fainted in court.
Lorraine Brown
00:26:48
My sister was really afraid. She said, he's not gonna make it in jail. He's not going to make it in jail. I was like, he gonna make. I'm gonna do a lot of prayer and he gonna make it. He gonna make it. He gonna make it because this ain't right.
Omar Jimenez
00:27:04
Lorraine and Clara, her and James' mom, were sure about that, that it wasn't right what had happened to James and that it might take time, but justice was eventually going to catch up with him and he'd be free.
Omar Jimenez
00:27:22
Here's the thing James Gibson wanted me to know about his case.
James Gibson
00:27:26
I've never confessed to no murders or participated or seeing any murders.
Omar Jimenez
00:27:33
James says he wasn't beaten into a confession because he never signed anything saying he was involved in the murders. Now, to be clear, the official record says that James gave a statement that he saw another guy from the neighborhood, Keith Smith, give a pistol to known drug addict Fernando Webb, aka, Bodine. And that reported statement put James at the scene of the crime. But James says when the detectives tried to get him to sign a statement, he refused because it wasn't true. The case against James relied almost entirely on the testimony of police who said James told them he was at the scene.
James Gibson
00:28:15
If you said I did sign the statement, then show me the statement up on the proper chain of evidence that I signed. If you say I put my initials on it, show me the initials where I put my intial on it. If you I said this, then it's show it to me. How do you fight a case that don't exist? How do you fight a case that don't exist?
Omar Jimenez
00:28:35
He says the entire theory of who killed the two neighborhood men in 1989 was a web of lies, but it convinced the judge.
Omar Jimenez
00:28:52
What happened to James Gibson was more than violence at the hands of police. It didn't start with him being cuffed to a chair, it didn't end with him going to prison. It was, as civil and criminal trials have found, part of this system, a system in which police and the city that employed them, supported them and defended them, cleared cases with, as we've learned, not a lot of regard for truth and justice and less regard for human beings.
Dr. Laurence Ralph
00:29:19
It's very hard to talk about torture, because on the one hand, if you listen to a torture survivor say what happened to them, it quickly becomes very hard to grapple with that pain, emotionally, psychologically. But then on the other hand, if you sanitize it, it almost takes away the purpose of talking about it.
Omar Jimenez
00:29:47
That's Dr. Lawrence Ralph. He's an anthropologist and a professor at Princeton where he studies and lectures on policing. He wrote a book about Jon Burge and the Midnight Crew called "The Torture Letters". Now I talk to him because we need to understand what torture actually is because we're gonna be talking about it a lot. And the way we talk about it matters. He says a good place to start is the United Nation's definition.
Dr. Laurence Ralph
00:30:12
It's pain, inflicting pain, either physical or psychological, but it's with a purpose to, to coerce, extract, punish people, or intimidate them. And people within a certain hierarchy of power are usually in the position to do that.
Omar Jimenez
00:30:31
Now, look, it might seem obvious to point out that torture is wrong. There are good reasons it's illegal. It's right there in the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, the Bill of Rights: cruel and unusual punishments shall not be inflicted.
Dr. Laurence Ralph
00:30:46
We've normalized torture a lot. I see it in cartoons, I see in TV shows, we often give it euphemisms like, oh, it's just brutality or police violence. But no, it's, torture, you know, definitionally. And, and that brings us to questions about law and justice. Because there's a violence, it's purposeful, but it's also in violation of what we know in terms of the law as due process, innocent until proven guilty. Torture flies in the face of that.
Omar Jimenez
00:31:26
Torture used to force confessions, to manufacture a solve for a crime, perverts justice. Innocent people end up jailed, which means the guilty go free. And as we'll come to see convictions built on torture, even ones that might've been won by other means can be overturned. But James would wait a long time. He was staring down a life sentence for a crime he would never stop insisting he didn't commit. The year stretched out ahead of him. He was alone.
James Gibson
00:32:08
I ain't had nobody to talk to on the phone. I couldn't call my mama because she couldn't hear. I couldn't call my daddy because I didn't know where he was at. My grandfather was dead, my great grandmama was a hundred and something years old, she couldn't help me. Couldn't nobody help me? I can scream, holla, it's just, just what it was.
Omar Jimenez
00:32:31
What James didn't know is he wasn't alone, because by the 1990s, there were already dozens and dozens of Chicago men who had been tortured by Burge's detectives, forced to confess, and caught up in manipulated or manufactured narratives designed to put people away and close the cases. James had no idea, but one of those men had dragged the police department into court over his own torture. A lot of people wanted the story to stay buried, but it was about to break wide open.
Episode 2 Teaser
00:33:10
...The torture machine was a box that had a generator in it, and they attached wires to the generator in this box. And they had clips, alligator clips, on the wire...How do you deal with violence? One of the ways is violence has to mean violence...These anonymous letters came in Chicago Police Department envelopes and there were four of them...She told me I was coming home, and I believe that. And I put every effort in tearing they ass up. I didn't miss a beat. And I'm still mad, too.
Episode 2 Teaser
00:33:56
That's in the next episode.