A captivating account of the most corrupt and blood-soaked chapters in Chicago law enforcement history
In December 1969, the FBI, the Chicago Police Department, and the office of States Attorney, led by rising political star Edward V. Hanrahan, conspired to assassinate Black Panther leader Fred Hampton, and then flagrantly covered up their misconduct. Thirteen years later, Jackie Wilson was tortured by the same police department and wrongfully incarcerated for thirty-six years.
Drawing on unique insights from his role as a leading opposition lawyer in both cases, award-winning author Flint Taylor details the vast political corruption uncovered in the Hampton case and the twists and turns of Wilson's forty-year effort to win his freedom.
With blistering clarity and righteous indignation, The Conviction Machine shines a penetrating light on the sordid world of prosecutorial misconduct and police violence.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
PART I: THE MURDER OF FRED HAMPTON
Chapter 1: The Vicious Black Panthers
Chapter 2: Edward V. Hanrahan and His Special Prosecutions Unit
Chapter 3: The SAO, FBI, and SAP Plan the Murderous Raid
Chapter 4: Rush Is Next
Chapter 5: Hanrahan Strikes Back
Chapter 6: Those Bullet Holes Aren’t
Chapter 7: Hanrahan Is a Madman
Chapter 8: The Coroner’s Inquest
Chapter 9: The Federal Grand Jury
Chapter 10: The Federal Grand Jury Report
Chapter 11: The Special Prosecutor
Chapter 12: The Special Grand Jury
Chapter 13: The Indictment
Chapter 14: Hanrahan Takes the Stand
Chapter 15: The Battle to Unseal the Indictment
Chapter 16: Political and Legal Machinations and Maneuvers
Chapter 17: More of the Same, an Election, and a Political Revolt
Chapter 18: Hanrahan on Trial
Chapter 19: A Show Hearing
Chapter 20: The Trial Continues
Chapter 21: An Election and Another Verdict
Chapter 22: Our Lawsuit, Part One: Discovery of the FBI’s Role
Chapter 23: The Civil Rights Trial
Chapter 24: The Appeals
Chapter 25: A Retrial?
Chapter 26: And the Beat Goes On
Part II: THE JACKIE WILSON SAGA
Chapter 1: The Culture
Chapter 2: The Wilsons Are Captured, Tortured, and Convicted
Chapter 3: The Convictions Are Reversed
Chapter 4: Enter The International Con Man
Chapter 5: Jackie’s Second Trial Begins
Chapter 6: Coleman Takes the Stand
Chapter 7: The Trial Concludes
Chapter 8: Andrew’s Civil Rights Trials
Chapter 9: Appeals and a Police Board Hearing
Chapter 10: A Special Prosecutor, a Report, and a Conviction
Chapter 11: Jackie Gets a New Hearing
Chapter 12: The Torture Hearing and The Judge’s Decision
Chapter 13: The Torture Hearing Appeal
Chapter 14: Uncovering More Coleman Evidence
Chapter 15: Groundhog Day: the Third Trial Begins
Chapter 16: Trutenko Takes the Stand
Chapter 17: A Certificate of Innocence and Another Special Prosecutor
Chapter 18: A Civil Suit, Another Special Prosecutor, and a Conversation with Coleman
Chapter 19: Trutenko and Horvat in the Dock
Chapter 20: Trutenko Walks
Afterword
Selected Bibliography / Resources
About the Author :
As a law student, Flint Taylor was a founding member of the People’s Law Office and has been a partner of the PLO since 1972. As a student and lawyer, he has been dedicated to litigating against police violence and racism for more than fifty-four years. Among the landmark cases that Taylor has litigated are the Fred Hampton Black Panther case; the Greensboro, North Carolina case against the KKK, Nazis and Greensboro police; and a series of cases arising from a pattern and practice of police torture and cover-up by Chicago police Commander Jon Burge, former Cook County State’s Attorney and Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley, and numerous other law enforcement officials. He has represented, and continues to represent, many wrongfully convicted persons, including police torture victims who have spent decades in prison and on death row. He has chronicled his work and that of the People’s Law Office in an award-winning historical memoir titled The Torture Machine.
Review :
"At last, Flint Taylor has given us an intimate, accurate, behind the scenes, forceful portrayal of the murderous machinations of the underbelly of American justice. I’ve been anxiously awaiting Flint’s exemplary work. Taylor vividly expresses the politically motivated, taxpayer-financed, and treacherous shenanigans of our nation’s political establishment and its enforcement apparatus; the American police departments, who area all too frequently in cahoots with the FBI, ICE, CIA, etc. Racism is its idealized engine, its raison d^etre.
The assassination of a young brilliant, gifted and courageous Black leader, Fred Hampton, was in a real sense its ultimate achievement. Fred’s assignation was not just a localized Chicago travesty of justice. It was the only officially sanctioned taxpayer-financed assassination of an American citizen for political reasons and political objectives by the U.S. Government in American history. And I was to be included in its deadly, deliberate undertaking! Fred’s assassination is the framework, the backdrop, the murderous modus operandi that still permeates our American law enforcement policy. Minneapolis and the murders of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by America’s police operatives are our most recent reminders that much more remains to be done, and it must be done by the power of the people, common ordinary people.
Thank you, Flint Taylor, for "connecting the deadly dots". The "Conviction Machine" is a must-read for all freedom-loving, justice-seeking, and people-loving people. —Bobby Rush, former U.S. Congressman and former Deputy Minister of defense of the Black Panther Party
"Most often, popular history tells the story of the predator and not the prey. This is not that story.My Brother, Beloved Atty. Flint Taylor is the David who slew the Goliathan: the CHICAGO POLITICAL/POLICE MACHINE. If you keep hope alive and stay in the fight, you will win; even in the face of the most daunting odds and intimidating foes, you will win. This book is your blueprint." —The Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, and his daughter, Santita Jackson, Producer/Host of the "KEEP HOPE ALIVE with REV. JESSE JACKSON and the SANTITA JACKSON Radio Shows.
“A masterful chronicle of Fred Hampton's murder and its aftermath, Taylor's insider account reveals the shocking depth of official conspiracy and cover-up while celebrating the tireless advocates who refused to let the truth die with Hampton.”
—Chesa Boudin
“Flint Taylor is a gift to Chicago and the nation. This rigorous, unsparing and brilliant dissection of decades-long racism, corruption, and lies by Chicago law enforcement, prosecutors, and judges should be required reading in law schools nationwide. We can only hope it triggers a long overdue reckoning with the true character of our criminal legal system.”
—Dr. Martha Biondi, author of The Black Revolution on Campus and We Are Internationalists: Prexy Nesbitt and the Fight for African Liberation
“Flint Taylor exposes the absurd, cowardly and racist machinations of Chicago officials, who permitted police to get away with torture rather than take a stand to stop them. The book reads like a novel by Kafka—except it’s true.”
—Ben Joravsky, journalist and host of The Ben Joravsky Show podcast
"The Conviction Machine is a scathing, jaw-dropping indictment of our criminal justice system and the conspiratorial ways prosecutors are complicit in police murder. Flint Taylor, a true legal legend, exposes the truth that we must acknowledge: the Chicago police tortured and murdered in cold blood, prosecutors were complicit, and this history must be retold to understand the battles we face today." —Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve, PhD Author of Crook County and Crime Fictions
"Only a legal practitioner of Flint Taylor's skill and vast experience could have written this diagnosis of the routine cruelties and frequent absurdities produced by a criminal justice system built on a bedrock of unacknowledged racism. Drawing on two epic cases, he provides a devastating account of the interactions between police abuse, prosecutorial misconduct, and political machinations. A brilliant and necessary book." —Jamie Kalven, Founder of the Invisible Institute, and Pulitzer Prize-winning Journalist
Praise for The Torture Machine
"If it was not for Flint Taylor I would still be languishing in prison. He brought hope to a hopeless place."
—Darrell Cannon, torture survivor
"It is impossible to fully understand the continuing challenges created by unjustifiable police violence against black and brown people without appreciating the historical backdrop that sustains this national crisis. Flint Taylor's powerful new book, informed by his decades as one of the most effective advocates addressing these issues, is a must-read."
—Bryan Stevenson, best-selling author of Just Mercy
"Taylor is a walking passcode to CPD misconduct. It was Taylor and his colleagues who unearthed the crimes committed by the “Midnight Crew,” a squad of racist cops who tortured blacks to extract their false confessions."
—Rolling Stone
"[A] searing memoir... essential reading for all who care about this country—past and future."
—Heather Ann Thompson, Pulitzer Prize winning author of Blood in the Water
"Incredible and devastating."
—Jeremy Scahill
"[A]n unsparing dissection of foundational racism in the criminal justice system ... It could not be more timely."
—Jamie Kalven, Investigative Reporter and Founder, Invisible Institute
"Each victim's case is a fascinating story in itself while the totality of the lawyers' efforts fighting a resistant establishment is staggering."
—The Observer