Jan 09, 2025
Three former police officers implicated in scores of wrongful conviction cases are coming back to haunt Chicago taxpayers yet again.Former Detective Reynaldo Guevara and former Sgt. Ronald Watts took their place alongside Jon Burge and his midnight crew of Area 2 detectives as the Chicago Police Department's most notorious bad actors and legal liabilities.Another round of costly proof is on Monday’s agenda for the City Council’s Finance Committee.It includes $39.35 million in settlements for six cases. The three largest cases — for $33.75 million combined — are tied to Guevara, Burge and Watts.The largest of the six settlements — for $17.5 million — goes to Thomas Sierra.Thomas Sierra: $17.5M settlementIn 2018, Cook County prosecutors dropped murder charges against Sierra — the latest conviction to collapse that had been based on testimony by Guevara.Jailed at 19, Sierra served 22½ years in prison for the 1995 murder of Noel Andujar only to have prosecutors admit they could no longer “meet their burden” to support the charges against him. Thomas Sierra speaks to reporters in January 2018 after his murder charges were dropped.Andy Grimm/Sun-Times “It's unreal right now,” Sierra said on the day the charges were dropped. “I did all the time for something I didn't do, and now, here it is, two months after being home, State’s Attorney's Office did right.”Prior to his release, Cook County Judge James Obbish ruled that Guevara lied on the witness stand when questioned in an unrelated case about allegations of abuse made by two men who had spent nearly 30 years in prison for a 1998 double-murder. $39.35M in Chicago police settlementsThe City Council Finance Committee on Monday will vote on a six settlement cases involving police misconduct. Of the four largest settlements on the committee aganda, three — for $33.75 million combined — are tied to former former CPD officers who are among the department’s most notorious bad actors: former Detective Reynaldo Guevara, former Sgt. Ronald Watts and the late Cmdr. Jon Burge.Wrongful conviction | Thomas Sierra: $17.5M settlement Jailed at 19, Thomas Sierra served 22½ years in prison for the 1995 murder of Noel Andujar only to have prosecutors admit they no longer could “meet their burden” to support the charges against him.Wrongful conviction | Mark Maxson: $8.75M settlementMark Maxson claims he was beaten by detectives until he confessed to a 1992 South Side murder. He served 22 years in prison before DNA evidence linked the killing to another man.Wrongful conviction | Ben Baker and Clarissa Glenn: $7.5M settlementBaker spent 10 years in prison on a drug case that he claims Watts pinned on him because Baker refused to pay a $1,000 bribe. Glenn, mother of Baker’s three children, was in the car when the couple was stopped by the Watts crew, and entered a guilty plea in connection with the case.Police chase | Estate of Lakisel Thomas $4.5M settlementLakisel Thomas was killed crossing the street in Englewood when she was struck by a car driven by Isaac Wade, who was fleeing police after a traffic stop for an improperly displayed registration tag. Testifying under a grant of immunity from prosecutors, Guevara said he did not remember even minor details about his investigation of that case for a double murder. He replied “I don’t know” to dozens of questions he was asked on the stand, including the address of his old police station.Asked if he beat the two men, as they had claimed at trial and in subsequent postconviction pleadings, Guevara answered, “That’s not something I would have done,” and, prodded by a judge, denied the abuse allegations with a flat “no.” Former Chicago police detective Reynaldo Guevara leaves the Leighton Criminal Courthouse in July 2013. Sun-Times file The judge subsequently ruled that Guevara’s testimony was “bald-faced lies,” and said the detective, who retired in 2005, could not be considered a credible witness in any case.Without Guevara’s testimony, prosecutors grudgingly dropped that case, and the two accused men were released from prison, though the two men were immediately taken into custody by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers.In March 2024, the Finance Committee had signed off on a $5.5 million settlement to another man who spent 22 years in prison in a case investigated by Guevera.Ricardo Rodriquez accused Guevera and his investigative co-horts of bullying witnesses into identifying him as the shooter in a 1995 shooting in Belmont Cragin. At the time, another 33 cases remained pending against Guevera in the courts — cases that could trigger similar settlements.Mark Maxson: $8.75M settlementThe latest in a mountain of Burge-related settlements — for $8.75 million — goes to Mark Maxson. Maxson claims he was beaten by detectives working under Burge until he confessed to a 1992 South Side murder. He served 22 years in prison before DNA evidence linked the killing to another man.Burge was fired by CPD in 1993. Nearly 20 years later, he was sentenced to serve prison time on federal perjury charges for denying allegations of abuse raised in a civil lawsuit. He died in 2018. Flanked by attorneys and supporters, Clarissa Glenn discusses her alleged false conviction by former Chicago Police Sgt. Ronald Watts during a news conference near the site of the former Ida B. Wells Housing Projects at 37th Street and South King Drive on the South Side, Tuesday, July 20, 2021. | Ashlee Rezin/Sun-TimesAshlee Rezin/Sun-Times Related After decades in prison, 8 years in court, Mark Maxson settles wrongful conviction suit for $8.75M Ben Baker and Clarissa Glenn: $7.5M settlementThe latest Watts-related settlement — for $7.5 million — goes to Ben Baker and Clarissa Glenn.Watts led a tactical unit in the CHA’s now-demolished Ida B. Wells housing development until he was slapped with federal charges for shaking down an FBI informant for cash.He pleaded guilty in 2013, and in the years since, more than 200 convictions tainted by the involvement of Watts or officers under his command have been vacated by the state’s attorneys office.Baker and Glenn were among the first to sue the city alleging abuse by Watts and his co-horts. Ben Baker, one of 15 convicted men who said they were framed by Chicago Police Sgt. Ronald Watts. The cases against Baker and those other 14 men were dismissed by the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office in November 2017.Sun-Times file Baker spent 10 years in prison on a drug case that he claims Watts pinned on him because Baker refused to pay a $1,000 bribe. He admitted to dealing drugs, but said he refused to pay “protection” money to Watts and his crew to allow him to deal drugs without interference from police.Glenn was the mother of Baker’s three children. She was in the car when the couple was stopped by the Watts crew.More than 200 other defendants have had their Watts-tainted cases thrown out by the state’s attorney’s office. Former Chicago Police Sgt. Ronald Watts leaves the Dirksen Federal Building in October 2013 after being sentenced for shaking down an FBI informant.Sun-Times file
Respond, make new discussions, see other discussions and customize your news...

To add this website to your home screen:

1. Tap tutorialsPoint

2. Select 'Add to Home screen' or 'Install app'.

3. Follow the on-scrren instructions.

Feedback
FAQ
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service