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Officials trip over themselves explaining their handling of police beating of bartender

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — In riveting testimony Tuesday, high-ranking law enforcement officials tripped over themselves trying to explain to a federal jury how they handled the early days of the explosive reports that an off-duty Chicago police officer had pummeled a female bartender half his size — and that it had all been caught on videotape.

Debra Kirby, who was head of the Internal Affairs Division at the time and remains a ranking member in the department, told the jury at the civil trial stemming from the 2007 beating that during a phone call she told a Cook County prosecutor she wanted Officer Anthony Abbate charged with a felony and denied ever seeking a misdemeanor offense.

"Absolutely I never said that," Kirby said of the lesser charge. ". . . I wanted him charged with a felony."

Minutes later, IAD Sgt. Joseph Stehlik told the jury that he, Kirby and others discussed the beating as a misdemeanor, or simple battery, and that he heard Kirby tell that to the prosecutor during the same phone call. He never heard her seek a felony charge in the conversation, he said.

"I don't recall hearing her say that, no," Stehlik said under questioning by attorney Terry Ekl, who is representing the bartender, Karolina Obrycka, in the lawsuit against the city and Abbate.

The case took an even odder turn in the afternoon when the prosecutor took the witness stand and denied the phone call took place at all.

"I did not get any such call," said Thomas Bilyk, who is now the chief of juvenile division for the state's attorney's office but in 2007 oversaw investigations into officers suspected of criminal behavior.

How charges were secured against Abbate is a central point in the trial. Obrycka's attorneys argue that the department's longstanding unofficial code of silence led to Abbate's assault as well as efforts to cover up or minimize a beating that Obrycka says left her bruised and still suffering panic attacks to this day.

Abbate was initially charged with a misdemeanor by Chicago police for the attack inside Jesse's Short Stop Inn on Feb. 19, 2007. Charges were later upgraded to felonies by the state's attorney's office just before the videotape was released to the public, bringing a firestorm of media attention on the vicious beating.

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