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Friday
Sep102004
Friday, September 10, 2004 at 03:14AM
Even though Cook County prosecutors dropped all
charges against Darrell Cannon in a 1983 murder, the Illinois Prisoner
Review Board said Thursday it believed he had a role in the slaying and
decided he should remain in prison indefinitely. Board Chairman Jorge
Montes said he was "inclined to believe" Cannon's claim that detectives
working under former Chicago police Cmdr. Jon Burge extracted a
confession from Cannon through torture. But the board, said Montes, did
not accept Cannon's claim that he was only an unwitting bystander to
the gang-related slaying. The ruling capped an unusual parole
revocation hearing at which Burge and four detectives he once
supervised invoked their 5th Amendment right against
self-incrimination, refusing to answer questions about how they
obtained a murder confession from Cannon.
Cannon, 53, alleges the detectives under Burge took him to remote
locations where they shocked his genitals with a cattle prod, put a
shotgun he thought was loaded in his mouth and repeatedly pulled the
trigger and taunted him with racial epithets. In January 1991, just
before a trial judge was scheduled to hear testimony about the torture,
Cook County prosecutors agreed to a plea deal with Cannon. He pleaded
guilty and dropped the torture allegations in exchange for a scheduled
August 2003 release date. Before he was released, the Prisoner Review
Board served Cannon with a parole revocation notice issued after he was
convicted in the 1983 slaying. As a result, Cannon remained in Tamms
Correctional Center, the state's highest security prison. [more ]