‘Kidnapped’ Victims of Chicago Police Detail Ordeal in Federal Civil-Rights Suit

Chicago police officers followed and yelled “that they were watching” two men whom they “essentially kidnapped” at Homan Square, according to the first federal civil-rights lawsuit to stem from a cascade of allegations about the secretive compound.

In a suit filed against the city of Chicago late on Thursday night, John Vergara and Jose Garcia charge that police “knowingly and intentionally schemed and worked together in a common plan to falsely arrest, illegally detain, and physically abuse” them – without cause, charge, arrest, or access to an attorney – before they were ultimately released from Homan Square in September 2011.

chigAlong with co-plaintiff Carlos Ruiz, Vergara and Garcia describe harassment and intimidation by officers that continued after their eight- to nine-hour incommunicado detention, first reported by the Guardian on 4 March, which they allege was designed to ensure the three Chicagoans did not pursue legal action. The men are now suing for violations of the US constitutional prohibition on unreasonable searches and seizures.

“Until publication of details about Homan Square in the Guardian newspaper, plaintiffs relied on the defendant officers’ threats and did not speak to attorneys about their experience at Homan Square because they were afraid of police and concerned for the safety of their families,” the lawsuit states.

The lawsuit is the first filed on behalf of Homan Square victims against the Chicago police since the Guardian exposed stories from inside Homan Square on 24 February. It charges that police tactics at the police warehouse likened by attorneys and activists to the domestic equivalent of a CIA “black site” have “gone unchecked” and resulted from an atmosphere of “deliberate indifference to an obvious need, and in a manner that shocks the conscience”.

Vergara and Ruiz told the Guardian earlier this month that officers wearing ski masks took them to Homan Square after raiding the Paseo Boricua Grocery & Deli, guns drawn in Chicago’s largely Puerto Rican Humboldt Park neighborhood.

“The innocent civilians brought to Homan Square were physically seized and essentially kidnapped by unidentified officers, placed in police vehicles, and driven to a then-secret location,” the suit reads.

At the warehouse, the men, Ruiz and two others were handcuffed to a metal bar – and to one another – for nearly nine hours until Vergara threatened to inform attorney Blake Horwitz what the police were doing.

Once confronted with a threat of legal action, Vergara and Ruiz told the Guardian, the officers offered Vergara a deal: he and the others – save deli operator Eddie Calderon, who later faced drug charges – could go free, provided they never tell a lawyer about their ordeal at Homan Square.

“If you’re going to tell Blake, I’m going to pin a case on you and everybody else in here,” the lawsuit quotes the officers telling Vergara, who took the deal under what the suit calls police threats and intimidation.

That intimidation did not end after their release, the lawsuit alleges. “On a daily basis,” the suit claims, the officers drove past the Paseo Boricua Grocery & Deli and “yelled from their police cars that they were watching plaintiffs”.

The suit comes shortly after the Guardian reported that the chief of the Chicago police department’s organized crime unit – a major unit operating out of Homan Square responsible for combating gangs, drugs and vice – quietly resigned from the force last week. On Thursday night, Chicago police spokesperson Marty Maloney emailed the Guardian to claim that Nicholas Roti’s retirement was “in the works for some time” and that Roti has now joined the Illinois State Police.

The Chicago police continue to deny any misconduct at Homan Square, despitethe first-hand accounts of 11 people thus far who have told the Guardian consistent stories of police holding them off-the-books at the facility for hours; denying them access to phone calls and legal counsel; often handcuffing them to a bar behind a bench in cell-like rooms; and in some cases, inflicting physical pain.

In several cases, people formerly detained at Homan Square described officers offering them their freedom in exchange for informing on others or providing them with guns.

The lawsuit, filed by Horwitz, charges that the city of Chicago – where incumbent mayor Rahm Emanuel is fighting for his political future in an April runoff reelection – is responsible for creating what it describes as an essentially predatory police environment:

[T]he City’s Conduct was to act like the proverbial ostrich and, though aware of misconduct at Homan Square, allowed the misconduct to occur in such a manner as to permit officers: to seize, transport and secretly detain citizens at Homan Square; to detain citizens for extended periods of time while handcuffed to a bar on a cell wall; to interrogate citizens when they had not been read their Miranda rights; to deny citizens access to attorneys; to attempt to coerce false confessions out of citizens; to deny citizens the ability to tell their families of their whereabouts; to refuse citizens access to a restroom, food, or water; and to threaten citizens that they would be charged with crimes if they did not provide information.

Vergara, Garcia and Ruiz seek compensatory damages from Chicago; punishment for the officers involved; and, Horwitz, told the Guardian on Thursday, the closing of Homan Square.

While the Chicago police have said rules about documenting arrestees at police stations apply at Homan Square, Horwitz said at a press conference announcing the lawsuit on Friday that he expected there would be “no documentation referable” to his clients’ arrest.

“You’ll find in these Homan Square incidents that on many occasions there will be no paper, no documentation whatsoever of arresting people,” Horwitz said.

Asked why the suit does not include any of the other eight Homan Square ex-detainees whom the Guardian has interviewed, Horwitz said: “Because that’s who I represent.” He said he could not answer whether or not others would be joining the suit at a later date. “I can’t speak on behalf of individuals who I don’t represent,” he said.

Marc Freeman, who was held at Homan on 22 October 2014, said he was disappointed not to be included in the lawsuit.

“Being left out makes me feel like a second class citizen,” Freeman told the Guardian on Friday.