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Jury finds against Chicago in police beating trial

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Ekl said the onus was now on Mayor Rahm Emanuel to end the culture of protection and silence.

"The question now becomes, what are they going to do about it?" he said. "If there's going to be change, it has to come from the mayor's office."

After the verdict, Emanuel's spokeswoman, Sarah Hamilton, said in a statement that the mayor is confident that the superintendent he selected, Garry McCarthy, and his leadership team "would not approve of, let alone participate in a code of silence."

At the same time, the city's law department issued a statement that the city strongly disagreed with the verdict and all but promised an appeal.

"We believe Mr. Abbate alone should be held accountable for his actions," said Roderick Drew in a prepared statement, adding that the city plans to "challenge the verdict through post-trial motions in the trial court and, if necessary, on appeal."

During the civil trial, Obrycka's attorneys alleged that police sought to downplay and cover up the beating, in part out of an ingrained but shadowy culture among police of protecting their own. They said that culture created an environment that led to the beating.

City attorneys countered by telling jurors there was no evidence that such a secret code existed. The fact that Abbate was eventually charged and convicted, they said, proved that the system worked.

But some police officials who testified contradicted each other, which Obrycka's attorney said proved their point about alleged cover-ups.

Debra Kirby, who headed the department's internal affairs division at the time, testified that she recommended during a phone call three days after the beating to a Cook County prosecutors that Abbate be charged with a serious felony.

But Joseph Stehlik, who was an internal affairs detective under Kirby's command, said he was next to his boss at the time of the call. Stehlik testified Kirby recommended the lesser charge.

Then the prosecutor in question, Tom Bilyk, told jurors the call never happened and that he never talked with Kirby about charges.

Because Abbate was off-duty during the beating, Obrycka's attorneys needed to persuade jurors that the silence code exists, that it was sanctioned by the city and that it led to the beating and an attempted cover-up.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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