Manhunt Cancelled after Illinois Pig Proven to be a Liar

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I live about 30 mins from Fox Lake, its redneck biker meth city, also a boating community. I like going to Blarney Island tho.
 
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http://news.yahoo.com/illinois-woman-charged-lying-seeing-police-shooting-suspects-134552716.html

Illinois woman charged with lying about seeing police shooting suspects

(Reuters) - An Illinois woman was charged with lying to police after she reported seeing two men near a rural road resembling suspects wanted in the killing of a police officer, causing dozens of officers to flock to the scene, authorities said on Thursday.

Hundreds of police in northern Illinois have been searching for three suspects since Tuesday in the killing of Fox Lake Police Lieutenant Charles Joseph Gliniewicz, a decorated 30-year veteran policeman, who was shot to death during a foot chase.

Kristin Kiefer, 30, of Vernon Hills, Illinois, faces two counts of falsifying a police report after admitting to authorities that she made up the sighting because she wanted attention, the Lake County Sheriff's Office said in a statement.

Some 85 federal, state and local police, 11 canine units and three aircraft responded at about 9:15 p.m. on Wednesday to a remote spot in Lake County near a highway where Kiefer said she saw a white man and a black man near a cornfield after her vehicle broke down, according to the statement.

Kiefer told authorities that the men tried to get into her vehicle, but ran into the cornfield because they feared she was calling police, it said.

Law-enforcement officials said they searched the scene for five hours without finding any sign of the two suspects before Kiefer told investigators she had lied to them because she wanted attention from a family who employs her as a nanny.
 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...ked-outrage-and-a-tears-but-was-it-a-suicide/

That Illinois cop-killing sparked outrage and tears. But was it a suicide?

When Fox Lake police officer Charles Joseph Gliniewicz was found mortally wounded along a forested road in this sleepy northern Illinois town, his fellow officers feared the worst. Just moments before, Gliniewicz had radioed in that he was pursuing three suspicious men. Then his colleagues spotted him in the dirt, bleeding out from a gunshot to the chest. Another slug was lodged in his bulletproof vest.

“Send everybody you possibly can,” radioed in the first cop on the scene. “Officer is down.”

Gliniewicz didn’t make it, but authorities pulled out the big guns to try and capture his killers. Fox Lake shuttered its schools. SWAT teams with Humvees stormed previously quiet neighborhoods. More than 400 officers, including federal agents, K-9 units and helicopters, launched a massive manhunt for the three suspects.

The next day, Fox Lake residents held a vigil to honor the fallen police officer. Hundreds lined the small town’s main street with flags and homemade signs praising Gliniewicz for giving his life to protect them. A phalanx of uniformed officers carried his coffin into a high school packed with mourners.

“When we were growing up, we all knew Joe was a hero,” said his brother, firefighter Michael Gliniewicz, choking back tears. “But now the nation knows he was a hero.”

The cop-killing and its emotional aftermath quickly became national news as Gliniewicz’s death was drawn into a larger debate over attacks on police.

“Every cop in America is looking over their shoulder right now,” said Milwaukee Police Chief Ed Flynn a few days later during a discussion of Gliniewicz’s death on “Fox and Friends.”

Two weeks later, however, the iconic Illinois cop-killing is no longer a clear-cut case of an officer cut down in the line of duty.

Instead, it’s a mystery in which Gliniewicz, himself, may be implicated.

On Tuesday, local media reported that investigators are now weighing the possibility that Gliniewicz was not murdered, but rather killed himself in an elaborately staged suicide.

Citing multiple unnamed individuals, the Chicago Tribune reported that detectives are now determining whether Gliniewicz shot himself. Fox News reported similar information, citing “a source who is a member of the task force” investigating the killing.


Lake County Sheriff’s Office Det. Christopher Covelli told the Tribune that authorities are looking at “every theory” but that they are “still pursuing this as a homicide.”

Yet the media reports are bolstered by a series of bizarre twists in the case.

Gliniewicz was a 30-year veteran, a husband and a father of four boys. Although he had already reached retirement age, his department asked him to stay on for an extra month, according to NBC Chicago. “G.I. Joe,” as his friends called him, dutifully agreed.

If Fox Lake was quick to honor the fallen cop, then the investigation was not. Other than Gliniewicz’s radio call and someone else’s DNA mysteriously found at the scene — investigators won’t say whose or what type — police had little to go on. Somehow, nobody in the tight-knit town of 10,000 had seen a thing.

Namely the three suspects.

In the days and nights after the fatal shooting, police officers described the search for the men as a matter of life or death.

“I would consider anyone who would murder police officer extremely dangerous,” said Cmdr. George Filenko, Lake County Major Crimes Task Force, on Sept. 3.

Despite the massive manhunt, however, authorities never caught a trace of the three men — two white, one black — Gliniewicz mentioned moments before his death. Stranger still, the three men have been downgraded since then to mere “persons of interest,” instead of suspects, although officials won’t say what evidence prompted the change.

Then there is the coroner’s report. A week after Gliniewicz died, Lake County Coroner Thomas Rudd squelched rumors that the cop had been shot in the back or the neck by revealing that the fatal shot was to the torso.

“… I cannot give a manner of death because I don’t know what happened in terms of where did this bullet come from,” Rudd told the Chicago Tribune. “Right now, all unnatural deaths are up for suggestion. That means homicide, suicide, accident, undetermined.”

Rudd’s revelation prompted anger from investigators, who accused the coroner of jeopardizing the investigation. But it also prompted officials to admit that they were not discounting suicide as a cause of death.

“We do not discount a single thing,” Filenko told the Tribune.

The investigation was then roiled further by an even more bizarre event. On Friday, a former Chicago police officer named Joseph Battaglia called the coroner’s officer and allegedly threatened to harm Rudd and Filenko unless they declared Gliniewicz’s death a suicide, according to the Tribune.

Officials say Battaglia made a series of calls to police agencies and media outlets regarding Gliniewicz. His lawyer said the 54-year-old retired cop had been “stupid” and “reckless” but never meant to harm anyone.


“Everything is coming out but it’s still slow,” said attorney Myron Goldstin outside court, adding that Battaglia wasn’t involved in the Gliniewicz investigation and had no special insight into the case. “… As a former police officer, he was naturally, as everyone else is, concerned about the investigation.”

Finally, there are Tuesday’s media reports, which appear to back Battaglia’s claims by suggesting that Gliniewicz killed himself and staged the suicide to look like a murder.

“Gliniewicz’s body was found face down in a remote area, his service weapon next to him,” reported Fox News’s Matt Finn, citing the unnamed Task Force member. “Two shell casings were found: one came from a shot that hit Gliniewicz’s Kevlar vest; roughly 100 feet away, another casing was found from the fatal shot that struck Gliniewicz underneath his bulletproof vest in a downward trajectory, hitting him near the heart.”

“Sources say one hand was found underneath his chest in what’s described as a gun-holding position,” Finn continued. “Two separate sources say Gliniewicz had no defensive wounds and there was no sign of a struggle, especially one to save his own life.”

It’s still too early to say who killed Lt. Joe Gliniewicz, let alone why.

Like the broader debate over policing in America, the case of the beloved cop found dead in the dirt is proving more complicated than first meets the eye.

Well.. Well.. If "GI Joe" really committed that instead of being "assassinated".. I bet some of supporters are going feeling like...

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I always thought it was a suicide. Police are trained to give better descriptions than just saying 2 white guys and a black guy, it was no clothing descriptions or anything. Those cops just saying murder so his family can get his pension which they wouldn't be able to get with a suicide
 
http://www.chicagotribune.com/subur...-police-shooting-met-0922-20150921-story.html

As probe of officer's death enters 4th week, focus still on homicide

Lake County authorities said Monday they continue to investigate the shooting death of a Fox Lake police officer as a homicide but said results from gunshot residue testing "do not support or exclude any specific theory."

Stressing that there has been no "slowdown" in the case, Detective Christopher Covelli of the Lake County Sheriff's office said at a news conference late Monday that police continue to "seek justice" for Fox Lake Lt. Charles Joseph Gliniewicz, his family and the community and that "justice will be served."

As the probe enters its fourth week, Covelli said the Lake County Major Crime Task Force received results of gunshot residue and ballistics testing earlier Monday but declined to elaborate on their results.

Speaking in front of the Fox Lake police station — still strewn with tributes to "G.I. Joe," as Gliniewicz was sometimes known — Covelli said authorities have followed up on about 300 leads. He said that 80 DNA samples from interviews have been taken from people questioned in the investigation, and revealed that multiple DNA samples not belonging to Gliniewicz were taken from the remote area where the officer was found mortally wounded Sept. 1.

Gliniewicz, 52, was found dead near U.S. 12 shortly after he radioed in that he had spotted suspicious activity and was pursuing three people whom he described only as two white males and one black male.

Covelli cited that description as among the reasons authorities are still treating the case as a homicide, saying that theory is supported by "the facts and the evidence."

Authorities have said they found Gliniewicz's .40-caliber service weapon near his body, but have not said if he was shot with his own gun. Covelli declined Monday to say whether any other weapons were found at the scene.

Sources close to the investigation have told the Tribune, speaking on the condition of anonymity, that suicide is another theory under consideration, but Covelli made no mention of that Monday at the news conference.

He said it was not yet clear how long the investigation would take.

Earlier, tensions rose after Coroner Thomas Rudd told reporters that Gliniewicz died from a single shot to his torso — information that Lake County Major Crime Task Force officials said could jeopardize the case.

Rudd raised the possibility that the shooting was self-inflicted, saying he could not make a determination on the manner of the officer's death — whether homicide, suicide, accidental or undetermined — until he received further information from police.

But on Monday, Rudd described a morning meeting with task force members as "cordial."

"We are now working together on solving this case," Rudd said. "We agreed to work together in finding the manner of death on this individual."

He said officials have reached no conclusions on manner of death, but met only to share information.

Authorities have withheld details about the shooting death but have said they are awaiting ballistic and forensic testing results.

Police have shared limited details because they don't want to compromise a potential prosecution by giving out information that only the gunman or a witness would know, said George Filenko, commander of the Lake County Major Crime Task Force.

Authorities have revealed that multiple gunshots were fired at the scene but gave no details as to who fired the shots or how many there were.

Rudd said he hopes to review results from tests of DNA found beneath Gliniewicz's fingernails, as well as any gunshot residue on the body.

Investigators also found and interviewed three men whose images were caught in a surveillance video but said they ruled them out as suspects.

Gliniewicz, a 30-year police force veteran who was well known in the community of about 10,000 residents, formerly served in the Army and was the longtime leader of the local Explorer youth police training program. He grew up in nearby Antioch.
 
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2015/11/04/fox-lake-illinois-cop-manhunt-ruled-suicide/75145690/

Ill. police officer's death that spurred big manhunt to be ruled a suicide

After months of treating the death of a popular cop who died while on patrol in a quiet town north of Chicago, investigators are set to reverse course on Wednesday and announce that they believe Fox Lake, Ill. police officer Lt. Charles Joseph Gliniewicz's death was, in fact, a suicide.

The Lake County Sheriff's Department will announced the death of Gliniewicz, whose Sept. 1 death spurred a massive manhunt along the Illinois-Wisconsin border, died of self-inflicted wounds, Fox 32 Chicago and WLS-TV report.Both outlets cited anonymous sources as saying that the death would be ruled a suicide .

The sheriff's department said in a statement that they would announce "conclusive results of the investigation" on Wednesday morning, but declined to comment on the reports. Authorities scheduled at 10 a.m. CT news conference to announce their findings.

Investigators said at the time of Gliniewicz's death that he was patrolling in an industrial area in Fox Lake, when he radioed dispatch to say that he was going to check on suspicious activity he had spotted.

He described the suspects as two white men and a black man to dispatchers. Gliniewiciz called for backup, saying he was in a foot chase, but was not heard from again.

Officers responding to his call found his body. An intense manhunt involving hundreds of law enforcement officials failed to produce any arrests or identify the suspects. Authorities viewed surveillance video from several homes and businesses in the area and had said they hoped to develop clues that would lead them to the suspects.

Gliniewicz's death came in the midst of a spate of high-profile killings of police officers throughout the country, including the Aug. 28 shooting death of Harris County, Texas Sheriff's Deputy Darren Goforth, who was fatally shot while was refueling at a Houston-area gas station. Shannon Miles, 30, has been charged with capital murder.

On Aug. 26, police officer Henry Nelson was gunned down in Sunset, La. Two days earlier, Senior Trooper Steven Vincent, of the Louisiana State Police, was shot in the head and then taunted after he stopped to provide aid to a man whose truck was stuck in a ditch. Police said a witness to the fatal shooting heard the suspect tell the trooper after he shot him, "You're lucky, you are going to die soon."

The manhunt would disrupt train service and school in the area was cancelled on the day following the shooting as officers went about hunting for three men.

Days after Gliniewicz's death, Lake County Coroner Thomas Rudd said he couldn't rule out suicide as a possible cause of the officer's death. About a month after he died, investigators said he'd been shot once in his protective vest and once in the upper left area of his torso. Investigators determined that Gliniewicz's weapon was used in the shooting.

But until now, investigators continued to treat the case as a homicide investigation.

Gov. Bruce Rauner and hundreds of police officers from across the nation were among thousands who paid their respects to Gliniewicz at a viewing and funeral service.


Gliniewicz had been an officer for more than 30 years and was nearing retirement at the time of his death.

supporter-lieutenant-charles-joseph-gliniewicz.jpg


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http://www.mediaite.com/online/lt-j...icide-investigators-say-he-stole-from-police/

Lt. Gliniewicz’s Death Determined a ‘Staged Suicide,’ Investigators Say He Stole From Police

Lieutenant Charles Joseph Gliniewicz became a national discussion point when his death September triggered a full-scale manhunt around Fox Lake, Illinois. Early speculations were that Gliniewicz was murdered while pursuing a group of suspects, but during a press conference from the sheriff’s office today, the police stated that his death was actually a “carefully-staged suicide,” and that he shot himself with his own gun.

The supposed murder came during a period of discussion about violence against police officers, and his funeral was met with an outpouring of grief from his family and the community. During the Lake County Sheriff’s Office’s conference, they said that their findings determined that not only was the death a suicide, but that Gliniewicz had been forging signatures on official documents for years, and that he was embezzling and laundering money he took from the police for personal uses.

For years, Gliniewicz helped manage the Fox Lake Police Explorer Post, a program for aspiring teenage police officers, where he allegedly took the funds from. His usage of the money included personal loans, adult website subscriptions, gym memberships, and travel expenses.

Police said that evidence and tips on the incident led to no other plausible conclusions, and that Gliniewicz used his training in order to stage a scene and appear as a hero when he died. They determined that he took his own life due to the stress and scrutiny of his activities, noting that his death occurred after an audit of police funds was launched that potentially could have traced him.


“Gliniewicz committed the ultimate betrayal to the citizens he served and the entire law enforcement community,” said George Filenko, commander of the Major Crimes Task Force for Lake County. “The facts of his actions prove he behaved for years in a manner completely contrary to the image he portrayed.”

Filenko also said that the ongoing investigation indicates at least two other policemen were involved in criminal activity.

This man was a true good cop all the way until the end...
 
I wonder how many people were stopped, harassed, arrested and beat up behind this bullshit. Fuck that dead ass, lying, stealing ass coward. Fuck him and all the other "good cops". #PigLivesMatter
 
Dirty? Yes. I don't believe he committed suicide though. I know people that went to that rally for him, they're shocked.
 
Ghostdenithegawd;8487661 said:
So what deep dark,secret was about to come out that made him merk hisself?

Ima go with he liked little boys Thats seems to be there thing

He was stealing
 
obnoxiouslyfresh;8487623 said:
twizza 77;8487339 said:
Dirty? Yes. I don't believe he committed suicide though. I know people that went to that rally for him, they're shocked.

He was shot with his own gun at close range. He killed himself.

No...can't be....people are shocked
 
Inb4 the black suspect was immune to the cops tazer and firearm. The superhuman negro must have sprouted wings and flew away after shooting the officer
 

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