
The Professor and the Prosecutor:
Anita Alvarez’s office turns up the heat on David Protess’s Medill
Innocence Project
The Cook
County State's Attorney's Office provides at least two reporters a memo
containing scurrilous and unsubstantiated claims about the conduct of
the Northwestern University journalism professor and his students in an
earlier case.
By Bryan Smith
Chicago Magazine
February, 2010
In
their own ways, they have risen to stardom on a stage built from
misery, two battlers who grapple with questions of life-and-death
justice: Anita Alvarez, a Chicago native and career prosecutor with
working-class roots, who dramatically emerged from a pack of formidable
opponents to become the first woman and first person of Hispanic
descent to hold the top job in the second-largest prosecutor’s office
in the nation; and the Northwestern University professor David Protess,
a crusader against wrongful convictions who has guided his students to
find fresh evidence that helped free five people from death row and
sprang six others from imprisonment for murders they did not
commit—putting prosecutors on the defensive with each notch in his belt.
Over the more than two decades they built their careers, the two rarely
crossed paths. That changed when Alvarez, who took office a little over
a year ago, found herself dealing with the latest Protess cause: the
claim that a man named Anthony McKinney had been wrongly jailed for
more than 30 years.
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Professor David Protess, the head of the
Medill Innocence Project, has refused to turn over certain materials to
the Cook County state’s attorney, Anita Alvarez.
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In this case, Alvarez turned the tables on Protess, challenging the
motives and ethics of him and his students. In a court filing, her
office has given voice to deeply unflattering, sometimes personal
accusations: that some students may have paid a witness to recant; that
other students “flirted” with witnesses, in effect, to persuade them to
make incriminating statements; and that students may have been so
driven to get an A that they twisted or suppressed evidence to suit
their cause of freeing McKinney.
Alvarez insists that she is simply doing what a prosecutor should
do—make every reasonable effort to ascertain the truth behind possible
evidence and testimony in a criminal case. “I have a duty to seek out
whatever evidence is out there, and that’s what I’m doing,” she told me.
Her approach, however, has set off a national controversy and ignited
counteraccusations that her real interest is to intimidate, bully, and
perhaps destroy Protess’s operation. Alvarez dismisses those
allegations as “insulting.”
Meanwhile, outside court, her office has given at least two reporters a
memo about a 1996 case as “background” information. The memo recounts
scurrilous and unsubstantiated claims about the conduct of Protess and
students who were working on an investigation that resulted in freeing
two men from death row and two others from life sentences. “What on
earth does [an old] memo based on lies and designed to smear my
students have to do with the truth of whether Anthony McKinney was
wrongfully convicted?” asks Protess.
Now, a case that was about whether a convicted man is innocent has
morphed into an increasingly personal brawl between two heavyweights
unwilling to back down—with academics, prosecutors, freedom of the
press advocates, and students hanging on the judge’s decision.
* * *

David Protess, with his former students Nicole Lapin
and Evan Benn, in November at the Cook County criminal courthouse.
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In
her 32nd-floor Loop suite, with its panoramic view of Millennium Park,
Anita Alvarez managed a wry smile when I asked her reaction to some of
the more stinging editorial headlines that have appeared since the
legal flap took wing late last fall—for example, a Huffington Post
essay likening her office to the Gestapo.
Clad in a conservatively cut navy blue suit, occasionally consulting a
legal pad resting next to her on a wood conference table, Alvarez, 50,
denied—as she did in a tartly worded op-ed article in the Chicago
Tribune—any sort of vendetta against Protess or the students in his
Medill Innocence Project. She also said she has been particularly
offended by the force, scope, and ad hominem nature of the criticism.
“Some of it has been hurtful,” she said. “I don’t appreciate the word
‘Gestapo’ in the same sentence as my name. . . . These
people don’t know me, don’t know what I’ve done for
the past 23 years as a prosecutor. I think it’s unfortunate that I am
being personally attacked.” |
She added, “I don’t know why Professor Protess has decided
to go on this national campaign—creating this us-versus-them theory out
there.”
Hunched over a salad at Ina’s café in the West Loop, his
thinning hair almost entirely white, the 63-year-old, slightly rumpled
Protess responded with the kind of bulldog ferocity that delights his
fans and irritates his detractors. He sees a terrible miscarriage of
justice—and he’s been notebook-deep in such miscarriages for more than
20 years, first as a research director for the Better Government
Association and a contributing editor to Chicago Lawyer magazine, and
for the last 11 years as head of the Medill Innocence Project, in which
teams of students in his investigative journalism class are sent into
the field to reexamine the evidence behind possible wrongful
convictions.
Protess insisted that Alvarez picked this fight—and she made it
personal. “The us-versus-them theory is unfortunate,” he told me, “but
its source is Anita Alvarez’s prosecutors. . . . We voluntarily gave
them new evidence of a prisoner’s innocence [and] they slapped us with
subpoenas.”
The battle is being waged before the circuit court judge Diane Gordon
Cannon as part of the proceedings reviewing the conviction of McKinney.
As this story went to press, lawyers from Northwestern were preparing
to meet a January deadline to respond to Alvarez’s latest filing. Oral
arguments are expected to follow soon after.
One measure of how bitter the fight has become is the internal memo, a
copy of which was plucked from the files of the Cook County state’s
attorney’s office and provided by Alvarez’s spokeswoman, Sally Daly, to
at least two news organizations, including Chicago.
Though it is not clear who wrote the memo, the document was apparently
prepared in the aftermath of the so-called Ford Heights Four case, in
which the Innocence Project helped free four men imprisoned for a
double murder they did not commit. The men won a $36-million settlement
from Cook County after they were pardoned and released in 1996, and the
case made stars out of Protess and his students.
While purporting to describe the investigation that led to the freeing
of the men, the memo includes personal allegations that Protess and his
students engaged in a wide range of questionable conduct. At least one
reference to possible misconduct (which Protess has denied and will not
be repeated here) has nothing directly to do with the facts of the Ford
Heights Four case. Protess says that other allegations—such as the
suggestion that he paid $2,000 to a man who confessed to the
murders—were discredited.
“Obviously, if that information had any kind of credibility, Jack
O’Malley, who was state’s attorney at the time, would not have freed
the Ford Heights Four and incarcerated the three guilty people we
brought to his attention,” Protess says. (Calls to O’Malley, now an
Illinois appellate judge, were not returned.)
When I asked Alvarez whether she thought it was appropriate for the
Cook County state’s attorney’s office to be distributing an old memo
filled with unsubstantiated accusations against people with whom she is
locked in a legal battle, she appeared stunned. Sally Daly had joined
us for the interview, and at that point she jumped in. The document was
provided, she said, “in the interest of trying to get the whole picture
out there, as opposed to only Professor Protess’s version of facts.”
I asked Alvarez if the document had been offered with her approval.
“No,” she said. Daly later told me that the office would have no
further comment on the memo.
Protess says he first learned of the memo when a reporter called asking
for a response to the allegations it contained. He says he was
shocked and angry that “the state, having spent six months harassing my
students, are now so desperate that they are leaking internal
memoranda.”
* * *
Nearly
lost in the rancor is the man whose 1981 murder conviction and
subsequent life sentence set the Protess-Alvarez clash in motion.
Anthony McKinney was a teenager on September 15, 1978, when a security
guard named Donald Lundahl was killed in his car by a shotgun blast
during an apparent robbery in Harvey.
McKinney was held for questioning after he ran up to police on the
scene, saying he was being chased by a group of gang members. McKinney
immediately became the prime suspect, but he denied any involvement,
and the police—lacking a murder weapon—released him after questioning.
Within days, detectives arrested him and said two eyewitnesses had
identified him as the killer.
McKinney again denied involvement, but after a long
interrogation, he signed a confession. At his trial he recanted,
claiming that he had been beaten into giving the statement.
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Anthony Porter, who was freed from death row by
evidence uncovered by the Innocence Project
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He also
offered an alibi that was backed by his father: He had been watching
the Ali-Spinks championship fight during the time of the murder, set at
between 9:30 and 9:45 p.m.

Anthony McKinney
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Despite
the absence of any physical evidence, McKinney was convicted.
Prosecutors originally sought the death penalty, but a judge sentenced
him to life. Since that time, according to McKinney’s lawyers, he has
been housed in psychiatric units of the Illinois Department of
Corrections and continues to insist that he is innocent.
The case was brought to the attention of Protess and his Innocence
Project in the fall of 2003 through Michael McKinney, Anthony’s younger
brother. (Protess says he sifts through thousands of cases for wrongful
convictions.) Over the next three years, nine teams of students in
Protess’s investigative journalism class revisited every detail of the
case.
With the aid of Sergio Serritella, a private investigator who helps
teach the class, the students tracked down the two witnesses who
originally identified McKinney. One man, Wayne Phillips, had testified
that from 50 yards away he heard McKinney threaten the victim and utter
the words, “Your money or your life.” Both witnesses recanted to the
students, alleging that they identified McKinney only after being
beaten and threatened by the case’s lead detective, who, the students
discovered, had a history of brutality complaints against him. The
students also located two admitted gang members who said they had
indeed chased McKinney the night of the murder, as he had claimed.
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Most importantly, the students found a man named Anthony Drake, a gang
member who had pleaded guilty in 1988 to beating a disabled man to
death. In a videotaped statement, Drake told the students that he was
present when the Lundahl murder took place and that McKinney was not.
What’s more, Drake said on the tape, another man, Roger McGruder,
committed the murder, while a man named Michael Lane was at the scene.
(Both have denied any involvement.)
In 2005, the students tracked down Drake’s nephew, Francis, who signed
a statement swearing that on the night of the murder, his uncle and
Lane had admitted their involvement in the killing. Francis, who was
eight at the time of the murder, recalled that his uncle was “very
nervous and excited” and his voice sounded “higher, like he was upset.”
By 2006, the students had shared what they had found with the Center on
Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern’s Bluhm Legal Clinic—a sister
group of sorts to Protess’s Innocence Project that is made up of
law-school faculty, outside attorneys, and law students who represent
imprisoned clients with claims of innocence. People at the center
vetted the information, and, in the summer of 2006, the center, with
Protess’s blessing, turned over the students’ findings to the office of
the Cook County state’s attorney, Dick Devine—“the way we’ve done with
all our investigations,” Protess says.
Two years later, in October 2008, lawyers for the center filed a
petition asking that McKinney’s conviction be vacated or that he be
granted a new trial. In the meantime, Protess posted the results of the
investigation on the Innocence Project’s website and cooperated with
the journalist Maurice Possley on a November 20, 2008, front-page
article in the Chicago Sun-Times.
Protess says he and his students cooperated fully with prosecutors.
Indeed, he says, two prosecutors from the state’s attorney’s office
flew to Miami to see one of the students, Evan Benn—by then a reporter
with the Miami Herald—and treated him to dinner while they debriefed
him on the McKinney case. “I did not see this as an adversarial
process, based on past experience,” Protess says. He assumed the case
would go the way of the previous 11 wrongful convictions he and his
students had helped overturn—with the outcome rising and falling on the
merits of the information they had uncovered.
* * *
The tone of the situation changed in May 2009, five months after
Alvarez had been sworn into office, when she served a subpoena she had
filed in April—a court-backed document demanding that Protess turn over
a thick portfolio of material touching on the McKinney investigation.
The subpoena asked for all unpublished interviews; all notes,
memoranda, reports, and summaries made by the students; all electronic
communications involving the case; and the grade each student who
worked on the case received each quarter, the grading criteria, and
course syllabi.
Protess was stunned. “I said, ‘Holy shit. They don’t want to just
litigate the McKinney case. They want to litigate us.’ ” That night, he
told his wife, “Well, Anita Alvarez just declared war on our Innocence
Project.”
According to Protess, his lawyers, Richard J. O’Brien and Linda R.
Friedlieb of the big Chicago law firm Sidley Austin, sent a “sternly
worded” letter to Alvarez’s office demanding that the subpoena be
either withdrawn or significantly narrowed. When Alvarez’s office
refused, the lawyers filed a motion to quash the subpoena on the
grounds, among others, that the students were reporters and therefore
protected by the Illinois reporter shield law, which gives journalists
special privileges to withhold certain unpublished information. The
grades, Protess’s lawyers argue, are protected by federal law.
Alvarez’s response in early November touched the match to the tinder.
By then, her office had spent months re-interviewing the witnesses
produced by the students, and now the prosecutors recounted in detail
their version of what had transpired. The students had been “snotty and
manipulative,” Anthony Drake was quoted as saying in a report included
as an exhibit. Michael Lane, one of the men Drake placed at the scene
of the murder, told investigators that the female students had “com[e]
on” to him, acting as if they were going to “give up some pussy if I
would talk to them,” according to another exhibit attached to the
filing. (Lane told the investigator he knew it was “all an act” but
decided to talk anyway, according to the exhibit.) Both Anthony Drake
and his nephew, Francis, recanted the statements they had given to the
students.
Perhaps the most serious accusation was that the Innocence Project had
paid Drake for the videotaped interview that exculpated McKinney—a
statement that explicitly contradicts what Drake said on the tape.
Prosecutors allege the payment arrangement was indirect: According to
the exhibit, someone associated with the Innocence Project
intentionally overpaid a cabdriver by $40 in a wink-and-a-nod ruse to
funnel money to Drake.
The prosecutors’ version of events says that after the taping, “a
detective” gave the cabdriver $60 to drive Drake two miles and told the
driver to give $40 to Drake and keep the rest as a tip. Prosecutors say
Drake then used the $40 to buy crack. Drake’s account is supported,
they claim, by the cabdriver’s log.
But Evan Benn—the former student whom prosecutors took to dinner in
Miami—insists the cabbie told him the trip would cost from $40 to $45.
According to a first-person account he wrote in the St. Louis
Post-Dispatch, where he now works, the driver was given $60 and told to
keep the change as a tip. “We had no way of knowing the cabbie would
drop Drake off two miles away,” Benn wrote.
In any case, from Protess’s point of view, the claim that someone would
confess to being present at a capital murder in return for part of a
cab fare “is so inherently implausible that I can’t believe that the
state is even trying to put it out there.”
Beyond the question of payments, Protess says he is particularly
outraged at the suggestion that his female students flirted with
witnesses to get them to implicate themselves. “As a female
professional, for [Alvarez] to say that about my professional female
students is offensive,” Protess says.
I asked one of the female former students who had worked on the Ford
Heights Four case, Laura Sullivan—now a correspondent at National
Public Radio—if she had ever flirted to get information. “Never. Not
once,” she said. Did Protess ever suggest that such behavior was an
appropriate tactic? “He was way too professional for that.”
That’s not to say that Protess’s methods haven’t occasionally raised
eyebrows. In the Ford Heights Four case, for example, Protess arranged
for Paul Ciolino, a private investigator who was working with the
class, to pose as the high-powered Hollywood producer Jerry Bruckheimer
during an interview with a witness. (The incident is described in the
state’s attorney’s “background” memo.) According to an account in
Protess’s book on the case, A Promise of Justice, Ciolino, with
slicked-back hair, wearing a sharkskin suit and gold cuff links, told
the witness, “If you’re willing to tell your story, it could be worth
something.” Most mainstream journalists would frown upon assuming a
false identity to gather information.
(The ploy did not affect the outcome of the case. For his part, Protess
says that at the time, the tactic was “a perfectly legitimate
technique. It’s been part of a Chicago tradition of investigative
reporting for decades.”)
When I asked Alvarez if she thought the charges involving the
overpayment and the flirting were plausible, or even worth pursuing,
she said, “When you say, ‘Is it plausible’—I’ve seen so much in my 23
years as a prosecutor. Anything is possible.”
Her goal, she insisted, is not to smear Protess or the students. “We
are in the midst of looking at this case, and we have been for two
years plus, and there have been serious credibility issues that have
arisen based on our interviews with witnesses that Northwestern has
already interviewed. . . . To suggest that it’s a vendetta is false,
and it’s misleading.”
* * *
The "vendetta" accusation has mainly grown out of Alvarez’s demand to
see the grades of the students who worked on the McKinney case. Her
office says it has pursued the matter in part because of a statement
given to them by Michael Lane, who told investigators that the students
were being nice to him so he would “give them an interview . . . so
they could get a good grade.” That statement, says Alvarez, “begs the
question, Would a student do this and why?”
Grades are typically protected under federal law, though they can be
obtained under court order. In this case, however, almost unanimously,
experts in media law have questioned the relevance, propriety, and
motivation behind such a request. “Once you start asking for grades,
we’re no longer debating the merits” of the case at hand, says Damon E.
Dunn, a media lawyer with the Chicago firm Funkhouser Vegosen Liebman
& Dunn. “Now you’re bordering more on harassing the students.”
Erik Ugland, a media lawyer and assistant professor at Marquette
University’s Diederich College of Communication, says the demand for
students’ grades “makes me suspicious about the sincerity of the
prosecutors’ concerns.” He continues, “It makes them look defensive and
petty and, I think, invites the conclusion that their real aim is not
to discover the truth but to beat back any public scrutiny of their
work.”
One former student, Diana Samuels, who says she received an A in the
class in 2008 after finding evidence that confirmed a man’s guilt
rather than exonerating him, told me, “You don’t take that class for a
grade. Honestly, it’s about the experience of going out there and
working on a real case.”
Alvarez calls the brouhaha over grades a red herring. “Everybody’s
focus is on grades and not focusing on all this other information that
is relevant. The grades are only 1 percent of what we’re looking for.
Ninety-nine percent of what was contained in that subpoena is all
relevant information that we are entitled to.”
* * *
The outcome of the dispute may hinge in part on whether the students in
Protess’s class are reporters. The Innocence Project contends that they
are, and thus are protected by the Illinois reporter shield law.
Alvarez counters that the students were acting as criminal
investigators, not reporters. “When I was a law student, I wasn’t a
lawyer,” she says. “These students wrote no newspaper story on this
case, they wrote no magazine articles. . . . What is the purpose of
this particular class? . . . The whole purpose of this was to gather
information for court, to gather information that they believe is going
to exonerate someone.”
As investigators, she argues, the students should meet the same
obligations as any other investigator in a criminal matter—and that
would be to turn over any material that might be deemed relevant. For
instance, she says the students interviewed Michael Lane but did not
tender any internal notes, statements, or reports about the interview,
as an investigator would have to.
In her November filing, Alvarez argues that even if a judge rules that
the students are protected by the shield law, they waived their
protection by providing information to the Center on Wrongful
Convictions. “There are rules we have to abide by in court,” she says.
“We could never hold back [information] or pick and choose and say, ‘I
interviewed this guy five times, but I’m only giving you this one
videotape.’ Well, if you taped him five times, you’ve got to give us
those five tapes. . . . All that is relevant information for us. It’s
necessary in the whole truth-seeking process.”
Protess responds that Alvarez doesn’t understand the nature of what he
and his students do: “Anita Alvarez is apparently unable to hold two
compatible but different terms in her head. She claims we’re
investigators, not journalists. We claim that we’re investigative
journalists—two concepts put together into a time-honored tradition of
journalism that goes back centuries.”
A fellow Illinois prosecutor, however, strongly backs Alvarez’s
contention. The DuPage County state’s attorney, Joseph Birkett, who
calls himself a staunch defender of the state’s reporter shield law,
agrees that the students gave up their privilege by working “hand in
hand” with defense lawyers. “If you are working on an investigation and
are assembling evidence for a team of lawyers, I’m sorry, you may be a
journalist, but in that scenario you are an investigator, and the
journalistic privilege is not going to apply,” he says.
* * *
People in and around the media business have rallied behind Protess and
the students. H. Lee Sarokin, a former federal judge and a regular
contributor to The Huffington Post, wrote the blistering essay that
invoked the Gestapo. “It is a flagrant attempt to intimidate the Medill
Innocence Project and other similar projects which have been so
successful in overturning wrongful convictions,” Sarokin wrote of the
subpoena. In another post, he wrote: “One can understand that the
prosecutor’s office might be embarrassed as a result by the efforts of
a bunch of journalism students, but such embarrassment does not warrant
a vendetta against them.”
On the other hand, several prosecutors have spoken out on behalf of
Alvarez. “I know Anita Alvarez—she’s a friend,” says Birkett. “I do not
think [she] would be involved in any witch hunt. . . . I truly think if
she’s pursuing this, there’s something to it.”
Alvarez’s predecessor, Dick Devine, doubts that her motives are
questionable. “I believe that whatever approach is being taken by her
is being taken because she believes it’s the right thing to do,” he
says. (Alvarez served as Devine’s chief of staff, though in the 2008
election he supported another candidate.) “I believe she’s going into
this with honest motives.”
Still, Devine says that in the wrongful conviction case of Anthony
Porter, who was freed largely because of information uncovered by the
Innocence Project, he never considered subpoenaing the Northwestern
students. “I concluded from what I saw that we had to get Mr. Porter
out on bond promptly while we sorted out this new evidence,” he says.
Alvarez insists she is being every bit as evenhanded as Devine was.
“This isn’t a contest,” she says. “I’m not attacking the Innocence
Project, and I didn’t when we filed the subpoena. I think they play a
valid role and we can work together on cases. . . . Presently we’re
working with them on two other cases in addition to this one.”
Protess remains unconvinced. “Her office has subpoenaed my students’
grades, questioned their motivation, claimed they bribed witnesses,
leaked false information about them from a case that’s 13 years old,
accused them of being an arm of the defense team—and that’s not
counting the stuff [her office has] said about me. I’d hate to think
what Anita Alvarez would do if she really wanted to attack our
Innocence Project.”
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