Mystery in Daley nephew case: Why did police open 2nd case file?
BY TIM NOVAK AND CHRIS FUSCO Staff Reporters tnovak@suntimes.com December 17, 2012 12:18AM
Richard J. "R.J." Vanecko's booking mug
VANECKO IN COURT
Richard J. “R.J.” Vanecko will be in court again Monday morning in his involuntary manslaughter case. Special Prosecutor Dan K. Webb and Vanecko’s attorneys are expected to discuss whether they want Judge Arthur F. Hill — who has disclosed ties to Vanecko’s uncle, former Mayor Richard M. Daley — to continue to preside over the case.
Updated: December 17, 2012 2:12AM
There’s a mystery in the David Koschman case that the Chicago Police Department has never explained:
Why did detectives open what they labeled a “non-criminal” investigation into Koschman’s death on the same day they reclassified what originally was a battery case as a ,?
http://www.suntimes.com/16971768-761/mystery-in-daley-nephew-case-why-did-police-open-2nd-case-file.html
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Law-enforcement sources say it’s unusual for the police department to open two separate files on the same case.
Over the past two years, the Sun-Times has asked police officials from Ronald E. Yawger, the retired homicide detective who investigated Koschman’s case in 2004, to former police Supt. Jody Weis, who ordered the reinvestigation last year of Koschman’s death, why that was done.
But no one has been able to explain it.
Chicago Police Department file No. HK323454 is the original battery case, opened after the drunken confrontation on Division Street west of Dearborn in the early-morning hours of April 25, 2004, that sent the 21-year-old from Mount Propect to the hospital in a coma.
http://www.suntimes.com/16971768-761/mystery-in-daley-nephew-case-why-did-police-open-2nd-case-file.html
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