NEWSLETTER AUGUST 2021
Survivors of police torture are still in prison. Here’s how to help them get out.
By Gerald Reed, as told to Troi Valles - Published in The TRiiBE - August 3, 2021 My name is Elijah Gerald Reed. I’m the son of Armanda Shackelford, and I was just released from prison after serving 31 years for a crime that I didn’t commit. In 1990, I was told the Chicago police were looking for me for a crime committed a year earlier. I knew I had nothing to do with it so I went willingly to the police station to straighten things out. When I went, I was arrested at the station and then taken to Area 3 Homicide. I was held overnight. All through the night, detectives asked me the same questions over and over again. I refused to answer. I wanted my phone call and I wanted a lawyer. Whenever I did answer, telling them I had no knowledge of what I was being accused of, they were unhappy. Photo: Chicago Sun-Times That was when the intimidation went from being verbal to physical. I was in their hands — this was their place. I was in they house. Anything they wanted to do to me they could. And they did. I was beaten on by the detectives. I was beaten so badly, that a metal rod that was in my thigh, surgically placed there following a gunshot wound from years before, was snapped, with the screws shaking out of place. I got beat on a lot coming up, but I could handle that. What made me break was when they talked about my momma. “You’re gonna send your mom to an early grave,” they told me. “She’s gonna die, and it’ll be your fault.” I would do anything for my momma. Her death was not something I could live with. So, under extreme physical and psychological duress, I signed a false confession. They used that document and their own testimony to convict me of a double murder that I had no part in whatsoever. I was sentenced to natural life. I didn’t know if I would ever breathe free air again. I was 26 years old. As it turns out, I was not the only one subjected to this treatment. There are many survivors of police torture in the state of Illinois. Jon Burge was a detective and a police commander from 1972 to 1991. In that time, he taught officers how to use torture to extract confessions from innocent people so the Chicago Police Department (CPD) could tell the public they were solving murders. But the torture is much broader than Jon Burge and his Midnight Crew. Police regularly used intimidation—whether physical, mental or emotional—to get people to falsely confess or to accuse others of things that they know did not happen. P.O. BOX 647 EVANSTON, IL 60204 CHICAGOTORTUREJUSTICE.ORG