On March 14, 2005, 19-year-old Antonio Haywood was hanging out with a friend who lived in the Ida B. Wells public housing development in Chicago, Illinois. He went into the lobby to use the bathroom and heard the sound of people running.
Suddenly the lobby was swarmed by Chicago police officers under the command of Sgt. Ronald Watts. Some of the officers threw Haywood to the floor.
“Eventually, they took me upstairs and held me in a stairway,” Haywood later said. “After some time, the officers took me outside the building. While there, an officer I now know is Sgt. Watts showed me a ziplock bag of heroin. He said I threw it out the window. I told them that was not true and they shouldn’t claim it was. None of them would listen.”
Haywood was charged with possession of 195 baggies of heroin. On July 18, 2005, Haywood pled guilty in Cook County Circuit Court to possession of a controlled substance. He was sentenced to four years in prison.
In 2012, Watts and fellow officer Kallatt Mohammed were caught on tape stealing money from a man they believed was a drug courier, but who was in fact working as a confidential FBI informant. In 2013, Watts and Mohammed pled guilty in U.S. District Court to taking money from the informant. Mohammed was sentenced to 18 months in prison, and Watts was sentenced to 22 months in prison.
Federal prosecutors said Watts “used his badge and his position as a sergeant with the Chicago Police Department to shield his own criminal activity from law enforcement scrutiny. He recruited another CPD officer into his crimes, stealing drug money and extorting protection payments from the drug dealers who terrorized the community that he [Watts] had sworn to protect.”
In 2006, Ben Bakerr was convicted twice—once alone and a second time with his wife, Clarissa Glenn, on charges of narcotics possession based on false testimony from Watts. In 2015, Joshua Tepfer, an attorney at the Exoneration Project at the University of Chicago Law School, filed a petition to vacate Baker’s first conviction, citing the corruption of Watts and his unit. The Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office’s Conviction Integrity Unit agreed in January 2016 that Baker’s first conviction should be vacated, and the petition was granted. Later in 2016, a petition filed on behalf of Baker and Glenn also was granted.
Beginning in December 2016, Tepfer and attorney Joel Flaxman filed motions for new trials on behalf of dozens of men and women who claimed they were falsely convicted based on the corruption of Watts and his team. “The full known scope of the corrupt, more-than-decade-long criminal enterprise of Sergeant Watts…shows that Sergeant Watts led a tactical team of Chicago police officers that engaged in systematic extortion, bribery, and other related crimes…from as far back as the late 1990s through 2012,” their motions said.
The Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office’s Conviction Integrity Unit (CIU) began investigating the cases and agreed that the convictions should be vacated and dismissed. By February 2022, more than 100 convictions tainted by Watts and members of his unit had been dismissed.
On February 8, 2022, following an investigation by the CIU, Haywood’s conviction and the convictions of 13 others framed by Watts and his fellow officers were vacated, and the charges were dismissed. Haywood was granted a certificate of innocence in April 2022 and subsequently was awarded $80,000 in state compensation. He filed a federal lawsuit in December 2022.
– Maurice Possley
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