Thaddeus Jimenez Arrested For The Second Time This Month

 Thaddeus "TJ" Jimenez has been arrested yet again, this time for scuffling with a Rosemont public safety officer. Jimenez was driving his 2000 Dodge Durango on I-90 near the River Road toll plaza and became upset when a Rosemont public safety officer asked him to move his vehicle to allow an ambulance to get by. Jimenez apparently threatened to beat up the officer and was arrested. He was charged with aggravated assault, resisting a peace officer, and possession of marijuana. Jimenez was arrested earlier this month at his Park Ridge home on drug and weapons charges - see the prior blog post. 

Recently Exonerated Thaddeus "TJ" Jimenez Arrested On Felony Drug Charge

 Thaddeus "TJ" Jimenez, who was released from prison last year after serving 16 years for a murder conviction, has been arrested again. According to Rummana Hussain at the Chicago Sun-Times, police officers armed with a search warrant found 13 grams of suspected LSD, along with 3 loaded weapons - a 12 gauge Charles Daly shotgun, a Rock Island Armory 45 caliber semiautomatic, and a Glock 40 caliber semiautomatic - inside Jimenez's home.  Apparently, the police also recovered 6 stolen GPS devices, six boxes of ammunition, two digital scales, and numerous plastic baggies. Jimenez was convicted in 1994 of murdering 19 year old Eric Morro. Jimenez was only 13 years old at the time. Jimenez received a new trial and was found guilty again in 1997. In 2006, lawyers from the Northwestern University Center on Wrongful Convictions undertook his case and convinced the Cook County State's Attorney's Office to re-investigate the case after they claimed one of the eyewitnesses in the case was recanting his testimony. Jimenez wound up being released from prison last summer. He has since filed a civil lawsuit against numerous Chicago police officers claiming they violated his right to a fair trial. The police officers are being represented by the law firm of Andrew M. Hale & Associates.

Thaddeus Jimenez Conviction is Vacated After 16 Years of Custody. Jimenez Was 13 When He Was Arrested

          The Chicago Tribune is reporting: 

"A man who was 13 when arrested in 1993 and convicted of murder has been freed because Cook County prosecutors now believe another man committed the slaying. State's Atty. Anita Alvarez didn't say what evidence prompted her office to push for a judge to vacate Thaddeus Jimenez's 50-year prison sentence on Friday, but said it was the right decision. "I'm happy to be alive today," Jimenez, now 30, said at a press conference at the Cook County Criminal Courthouse, "after spending a little over 16 years in the Department of Corrections." 

Prosecutors have charged a Hammond, Ind., man with the Feb. 3, 1993 murder of Eric Morro. Juan Carlos Torres, 30, is awaiting extradition to Illinois and was mentioned as a potential suspect at the time of the shooting, authorities said. Witnesses had told police they saw Jimenez fire the fatal shot. A man with Morro initially told police Jimenez was not the gunman, but after a lengthy interrogation, changed his story and pointed the finger at Jimenez, authorities said. The case came to the attention of the Northwestern University Center on Wrongful Convictions in 2005. The center conducted an investigation and, in September 2007, sent its findings to the state's attorney's office. The office launched its own review and, along with Jimenez's attorneys, asked a judge on Friday to vacate Jimenez's sentence. The judge agreed. The decision to drop the case was "a powerful example of a prosecutor's office living up to the highest ideals of what a prosecutor should be," said Steven Drizin, one of Jimenez's attorneys and a law professor at Northwestern. Jimenez "would still be locked up today if not for the Cook County state's attorney's office."

Alvarez said her office found no evidence of official misconduct in the original investigation against Jimenez. "This is a situation where we don't see any police misconduct or prosecutorial misconduct," she said, noting the evidence initially appeared to point to Jimenez. She said the case is an example of why there needs to be continued training of police and prosecutors on how to interrogate witnesses and verify witness accounts. During a brief statement Jimenez thanked his lawyers and his mother, saying that because she didn't give up hope, he had the strength to persevere."I survived because of the love and support I received from my mother, who battled cancer and other illnesses while I was away," he said."

You can also read Maurice Possley's article in Chicago Sun-Times 

The Center on Wrongful Convictionsat Northwestern University has published a video on Thaddeus Jimenez's release.