Showing posts with label Illinois State Police. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illinois State Police. Show all posts

Sunday, April 10, 2011

State Police back down from Koschman review

In a puzzling move, the Illinois State Police recently decided not to review the David Koschman homicide case, rejecting requests from Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez. What a shame. What an embarrassment.

Although many details around the case are yet unclear, what is obvious is that Mayor Richard J. Daley's nephew Richard J. “R.J.” Vanecko was involved in the 21-year-old Mount Prospect man's death.

Police have at least indicated that it was Vanecko who threw a punch that hit Koschman in the face outside a Rush Street bar and sent him on a fatal fall that resulted in brain damage and killed him 11 days later. However, no one was ever charged for any crime connected to what the Cook County Medical Examiner called a homicide.

The case was closed in 2004, the same year the incident occurred. The case was opened again earlier this year, but then closed again... still, heavily shrouded in doubt. Conflicting witness accounts and questionable handling of the case by the Chicago Police Department are signs for some that CPD detectives involved did not do all they could do to make sure justice was served. And now it's looking like CPD isn't the only law enforcement agency avoiding the case.

The Chicago Sun-Times' Michael Sneed asks this question in a recent column: Is Alvarez, State Police playing hot potato with Koschman case?

I think there might be a little hot potato going on as Sneed speculates. Read the article linked to above for an interesting look into the idea. 


To end this on a positive note — while it's discouraging that the state police won't review this case, at least Chicago's inspector general is said to have an independent review on slate. 

The Chicago Sun-Times has done an awesome job of staying on top of this story. The articles listed below are essential to understanding what is, and what isn't going on in the Koschman case.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

State Police to review David Koschman homicide

David Koschman
In about 10 days, it will have been 7 years since David Koschman died from brain injuries suffered outside a Rush Street bar in an altercation with a nephew of Mayor Richard M. Daley and White House Chief of Staff William Daley who left Koschman unconscious in the street.


The 21-year-old Mount Prospect man died 11 days later.
The Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office ruled the death a homicide. Police knew that the Daleys’ nephew, Richard J. “R.J.” Vanecko threw the punch that connected with Koschman’s face and sent him on a fall that resulted in fatal brain damage. But no one was charged for the crime; it was ruled self defense, and the case was closed with countless questions still unanswered. The case was opened again earlier this year, but then closed again, still, with numerous questions unanswered.


Now the Illinois State Police department is gearing up for an independent review of the case, keeping alive the hope many have that justice is served. I commend Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez for requesting the review. The Sun-Times also deserves a great deal of credit for not letting this questionable handling of a homicide case involving someone with obvious connections to Chicago power simply fade away. They have been persistent, resourceful and scrappy in digging for the truth.


Read the full story from the Chicago Sun-Times here and read a previous blog post from me about this issue here.