Alstory Simon Lawsuit Says Northwestern Journalism Professor Coerced False Murder Confession

ASSOCIATED PRESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

A man wrongly imprisoned for 15 years for a Chicago double murder has sued Northwestern University for $40 million, alleging it allowed an investigative journalism professor to coerce a false confession from him.
The lawsuit pits Alstory Simon, 64, who was released from prison in October, against David Protess, a former Northwestern journalism professor. Simon accuses Protess of conspiring with Paul Ciolino, a private investigator, to frame him for a 1982 double killing.
The lawsuit is the latest twist in a mishandled murder case that has seen two convictions overturned and contributed to Illinois abandoning the death penalty.
Protess and Ciolino “intentionally manufactured false witness statements against Simon and then used the fabricated evidence, along with terrifying threats and other illegal and deceitful tactics, to coerce a knowingly false confession from Simon,” says the lawsuit, filed Tuesday in federal court.
“Northwestern’s conduct permitted a culture of lawlessness to thrive,” in Protess’ once-heralded investigative journalism program, the lawsuit claims. Students from Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism participated in the work that snared Simon.
Protess in 1999 was reviewing the fatal shooting of Marilyn Green, 19, and Jerry Hillard, 18, at a public swimming pool. At the time, Anthony Porter was on death row for the slayings. Porter was released after Simon unexpectedly made a videotaped confession to Ciolino that he was the sole killer. A day after Porter’s release on Feb. 4, 1999, Simon was charged with the pool slayings.
Despite pleading guilty to murder and manslaughter — and giving a television interview from behind bars in which he again admitted to the shootings — Simon later recanted, and for years sought to prove he’d been manipulated by Protess, the private eye, and his former defense lawyer.
A breakthrough came in October, when the Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez got Simon’s 37-year sentence thrown out.
“At the end of the day and in the best interests of justice, we could reach no other conclusion but that the investigation of this case has been so deeply corroded and corrupted that we can no longer maintain the legitimacy of this conviction,” Alvarez said then.
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