Jody Weis: Give Koschman witnesses polygraphs
BY CHRIS FUSCO and TIM NOVAK Staff Reporters April 6, 2011 12:00AM
Former Chicago Police Supt. Jody Weis. | Scott Stewart~Sun-Times Library
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Updated: March 26, 2012 9:53AM
Four friends of David Koschman told detectives earlier this year they’d be willing to take lie-detector tests to back up their recollections that Koschman wasn’t being physically aggressive when he was punched in the face by a nephew of Mayor Daley in a drunken confrontation in 2004 that led to his death. It’s time for someone to take them up on that, former Chicago Police Supt. Jody Weis says. The police formally closed the investigation on March 1, which was Weis’ last day on the job. They concluded that Vanecko shouldn’t be charged because he acted in self-defense when he punched Koschman, 21, in the face about 3:15 a.m. on April 25, 2004. Koschman hit the back of his head on Division Street and died from a brain injury 11 days later. According to police reports, the friends who had been out with Koschman told detectives he was being physically aggressive. They told the Sun-Times that’s not true and they never told the police it was. Responding to reports in the Sun-Times, Joseph Ferguson, the city of Chicago’s inspector general, has opened an investigation into how the Chicago Police Department handled the case. Weis said he supports Ferguson’s involvement. Here’s more from his interview: “Now, apparently, there’s been new information that’s come up, and certainly that merits a second look. But I didn’t know the case even existed until it was brought to me, probably it might have been by the Sun-Times’ [records] requests.” “Now, you have conflicting stories. Whenever you have that, now it means, ‘OK, we’ve got to find the truth.’ We don’t know who’s lying. But somebody’s not telling the truth if you now have witnesses saying stories that might be 180 degrees out. . . . I was very encouraged they did say . . . that they’re willing to take polygraphs. “We have to get this right. I don’t think there’s any indication of any nefarious intent or anything such as that. But we do have some inconsistent stories right now. “At the end of the day, it doesn’t really matter whether it’s the mayor’s nephew. There’s a human being that’s dead. We have to make sure we run this all the way out, to make sure that justice is served.”












