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Jurors in trial of Chicago officer accused in beating hear conflicting testimony

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — A federal jury heard more conflicting testimony Thursday into how the Chicago police and Cook County prosecutors handled the investigation into off-duty cop Anthony Abbate’s videotaped beating of a female bartender.

A top Chicago police commander insisted that officials in the state’s attorney’s office made the decision to treat the bar beating as a misdemeanor — only to falter moments later when he got key details of the investigation wrong.

The testimony underscored the apparent confusion over how the 2007 beating inside Jesse’s Short Stop Inn was handled because of the involvement of an off-duty cop as well as the infighting among police and prosecutors over how to charge Abbate.

How Abbate was charged is a central question in the federal trial stemming from the lawsuit by the bartender, Karolina Obrycka, against Abbate and the city. The lawsuit contends that police officials tried to minimize her beating by quietly filing misdemeanor charges against the officer. The charges were later upgraded to felonies at about the time that Abbate’s lawyers publicly released the videotape, which quickly went viral and caused a firestorm of criticism for the department.

On the witness stand Thursday, Keith Calloway, who was an Internal Affairs Division lieutenant involved in the Abbate investigation, said the videotape showed “evil and mean” conduct on Abbate’s part. Calloway, now a deputy chief of the organized crime unit, held firm that he asked for felony charges during a meeting with Assistant State’s Attorney Thomas Bilyk. But Bilyk said no, Calloway said..

“I said, ‘Tom, this is ridiculous. This is a felony, correct?’ ” Calloway recalled. “Tom said, ‘No, not really. When you look at the tape ... and she wasn’t really injured.’ ”

In testifying earlier in the week, Bilyk denied there were any discussions of what kind of charges to bring. And on Thursday, Assistant State’s Attorney Lauren Freeman concurred with Bilyk’s testimony.

After insisting he wanted Abbate to be charged with a felony, Calloway, the state’s first witness, said he wasn’t even aware that one of his detectives went to Obrycka’s home for her to sign a misdemeanor complaint.

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