logo
Jury deliberating in sex abuse case against former CPS dean

Jury deliberating in sex abuse case against former CPS dean

Chicago Tribune02-07-2025
Cook County prosecutors on Wednesday asked a jury to hold a former Chicago Public Schools dean accountable for allegedly using his position of power to coerce a student into a sexual relationship.
One day earlier, jurors began hearing testimony on Tuesday in the case against Brian Crowder, 43, who is facing multiple felony sex charges that allege he had a relationship with the student from around 2013 to 2016. The conduct allegedly took place while her was serving as an associate dean at the Social Justice High School, a part of Little Village Lawndale High School.
In their final pitch to the jury at the Leighton Criminal Court Building, the state displayed a smiling photograph of a girl and asked the jury to remember that she was a child.
'She was young. She was vulnerable,' said Assistant State's Attorney Sarah Kofoed. 'The defendant saw that saw a young impressionable girl was looking for love, and he moved in on that.'
The Tribune is not naming the woman because she is alleged to be the victim in a sexual assault case.
During closing arguments, though, Crowder's attorneys called the relationship a 'friendship' and said the case was a matter of 'he said/she said.' They argued that she sought money from Crowder.
'You're not called upon to decide whether Brian Crowder should be employed at Chicago Public Schools,' attorney Barry Sheppard said. 'Bad judgment doesn't make you a criminal.'
The jury began deliberating around 4 p.m.
The woman, who is now 26, testified for hours on Tuesday, describing how Crowder first approached her in the school's lunch room when she was around 15 and asked her for her SnapChat username. She was initially confused, she said, but he reassured her he wouldn't add her as a friend.
'That makes sense in my head because he was my school dean,' she testified.
But he did connect with her on the app, and began sending her inappropriate messages, she said. They soon developed a relationship.
The woman told the jury that Crowder forced her to get abortions when she got pregnant twice.
She wept as she watched the closing arguments a day after she testified.
'He wasn't just a teacher. At that point he was the dean of discipline,' Kofoed said, adding that he controlled whether she received punishments at school. 'He controlled the relationship because he was in power.'
During the state's rebuttal, Assistant State's Attorney John Sviokla addressed the defense's argument of a financial motivation.
'She looked to be made whole in some capacity,' he said.
The case went before a jury as CPS' handling of sexual abuse allegations has been the subject of scrutiny in recent years and as Crowder is also named in a 2024 lawsuit that accuses CPS of failing to protect its students.
In 2018, the Chicago Tribune's 'Betrayed' investigation revealed failures in how the nation's fourth largest school district handled allegations of abuse, including neglecting to report accusations to police or child welfare investigators and failing to conduct effective background checks.
The civil complaint filed by the woman against Crowder and the school district heavily references the Tribune's investigation and alleges that CPS at the time 'did not track child abuse by its employees or agents in a publicly available format.'
The suit also accuses employees at Little Village Lawndale High School of failing to act when an inappropriate relationship between Crowder and the student was noticed by others who 'would joke about how much time was spent alone' between Crowder and the student.
At one point, the suit alleges, the student told a teacher about her relationship with Crowder, but the teacher never took steps to report or stop the abuse.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wife of convicted Delphi murderer breaks her silence: 'My husband's not a monster'

time7 hours ago

Wife of convicted Delphi murderer breaks her silence: 'My husband's not a monster'

The wife of convicted Delphi, Indiana, double murderer Richard Allen is breaking her silence on the shocking crime that catapulted her small town into the national spotlight. A new three-part series, "Capturing Their Killer: The Girls on the High Bridge," is a deep dive into the mysterious case, with interviews from key players including the victims' friends and relatives. The series also reveals exclusive, behind-the-scenes footage of defense attorneys as they verdict came in, and an interview with Richard Allen's wife, Kathy Allen, who opens up for the first time about her marriage and her perspective on the killings that captured the nation's attention. A big crime in a small town On Feb. 13, 2017, best friends Abby Williams, 13, and Libby German, 14, were enjoying a day off from school and decided to walk along a hiking trail in their hometown of Delphi. They were near the Monon High Bridge when they were attacked; their throats were slit and they were dumped in the nearby woods. When they didn't come home, their frantic families called the police, who launched a massive search. Their bodies were found the next day. "The whole town was devastated," Kathy Allen said. "I felt so badly, especially for the mothers." "I don't know how we got through it," Libby's grandmother and guardian, Becky Patty, said. "I do remember we learned how Libby died because the funeral director told us we needed to bring in clothes, and he said, 'You need to make sure you have a scarf.'" No arrests were made, but police did have a major clue. Moments before the murders, Libby posted a photo of Abby on Snapchat showing her on the Monon High Bridge. After crossing the bridge, the girls saw a man behind them -- who became known as "bridge guy" -- and Libby started a recording on her phone. As police looked for the suspect, they released footage from Libby's phone to the public: a grainy image of "bridge guy" and an audio clip of him telling the girls to go "down the hill." "The first time I saw the picture of 'bridge guy,' it could've been anybody," Kathy Allen said. 'My husband's not a monster' Richard and Kathy Allen married right after high school and their daughter, Brittany, was born in 1994. "He is a family man," Kathy Allen said. "Ricky is a wonderful, caring, compassionate father. Non-judgmental, very giving. He has good morals." In 2006, the family moved to Delphi, where Richard Allen worked at the local CVS. On Feb. 13, 2017, Richard Allen had the day off. Kathy Allen said when she got home that evening, her husband was on the couch. When she saw on the news that night that two girls were missing, she said her husband seemed surprised. Richard Allen told her he was out on the trail that day. When Kathy Allen asked him if he saw the girls, he said no, she recalled. "Ricky called the police department to speak to the officers -- he was more than willing to help," she said. Richard Allen met with an officer, she said -- and "then we heard nothing." As the Allens' lives went on, Abby and Libby's families worked through their grief and pleaded for answers. More than five years ticked by. Each year, police said they were continuing to follow leads in the mysterious slayings. Then on Oct. 13, 2022, Kathy Allen said officers knocked on their door and took Richard Allen to the police station for an interview. When officers descended on their home with a search warrant, she said her husband consoled her as they waited outside. "Ricky said something like, 'Well, it's over, it doesn't matter anymore,'" she recalled. On Oct. 26, 2022, Kathy Allen joined her husband in a police interrogation room. She said Richard Allen told her, "You know I'm not capable of something like this." "Capturing Their Killer: The Girls on the High Bridge" is the first streaming documentary to feature newly-released interrogation footage. On Halloween 2022, police announced Richard Allen's arrest in the double homicide. He admitted he was on the trail that day, but he denied being involved. "I was floored, quite honestly," Abby's mom, Anna Williams, said. "We really had somebody living amongst us that had done this and never let on." Kathy Allen was also in disbelief, but adamantly believed her husband. "My husband's not a monster. He's not the monster that people think he is," she said. The case against Richard Allen Police said they zeroed in on Richard Allen after discovering a misfiled statement. In the days after the killings, Richard Allen did self-report being at the crime scene -- but that statement "fell in the cracks," Carroll County Sheriff Tony Liggett testified at Allen's trial. A volunteer file clerk who arranged boxes of information and tips in the case testified that in September 2022 -- weeks before Allen's arrest -- she came across a file folder that was not with the others she was managing. The sheet said that three days after the murders, a person listed as "Richard Allen Whiteman" self-reported being on the trails between 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. on the day of the crime. The self-reporter listed seeing three girls. The volunteer testified that she wrote a lead sheet and changed the name to Richard Allen. Allen lived on Whiteman Drive, so she said she believed the names were transposed and it was misfiled. At Richard Allen's fall 2024 trial, the prosecution's key physical evidence was a .40-caliber unspent round discovered by the girls' bodies. Prosecutors argued that police analysis determined that the unspent round was cycled through Richard Allen's Sig Sauer Model P226. Even though the girls were stabbed, authorities believed their killer used a gun to intimidate them. Prosecutors also focused on multiple confessions Richard Allen made in jail to his psychologist, corrections officers and his wife. In one call, according to testimony, he told his wife, "I did it. I killed Abby and Libby." "No, you didn't," Kathy Allen said. He replied, "Yes, I did." "Why would you say that?" Kathy said. "I know you didn't. There's something wrong." One psychologist testified that Richard Allen confessed to her that he ordered the girls "down the hill" and intended to rape them, but then he saw something -- either a person or a van -- and was startled. An Indiana State Police trooper testified that he believed that van belonged to a man who lived near the crime scene; the trooper said the time it would've taken the man to drive home from work fits with the timing of the murders. The defense argued Richard Allen's mental health deteriorated rapidly while in solitary confinement, which lasted 13 months, and that he was in a psychotic state during the confessions. Despite the emotional pain of hearing the details of the case, Libby's mom, Carrie Timmons, said, "I was there for the entire trial, every day.' "I did that for her," Timmons said. "It was the least I could do." When the case went to the jury, Timmons said the four days of waiting for a verdict "were excruciating." Kathy Allen said, "I felt pretty positive that [the jury is] gonna make the right decision, because reasonable doubt was written all over the place. ... On my phone conversations with Ricky, I heard some joy in his voice." 'The girls are still gone' In November 2024, Richard Allen was found guilty on all charges: felony murder for the killing of Abby while attempting to commit kidnapping; felony murder for the killing of Libby while attempting to commit kidnapping; murder for knowingly killing Abby; and murder for knowingly killing Libby. Kathy Allen sobbed when the verdict was read. "Ricky looked confused, and I wanted to stand there and scream for him," she said. The convicted double murderer was sentenced to 130 years in prison. Judge Fran Gull said to him at sentencing, "I've spent 27 years as a judge and you rank right up there with the most heinous crimes in the state of Indiana." After sentencing, prosecutor Nicholas McLeland thanked Abby and Libby for helping catch their own killer. Libby had the "wherewithal to pull out her phone ... to know that something wasn't right" and record the suspect as he walked across the bridge, McLeland said at a news conference, calling it "arguably the biggest piece of evidence that we had -- that recording." He praised Abby for hiding the phone from the killer so law enforcement could find it. As Richard Allen begins his life sentence, his wife is still in his corner. "I want true justice for Abby and Libby, but it should not be at the expense of an innocent person," Kathy Allen said, holding back tears. "I'm very hopeful for an appeal," she said in February. "It was definitely our dream to grow old together, and it still is. I'm looking forward to that. I'm not giving up." But for Abby and Libby's families, the pain persists. "It still feels much like it did the first day the girls were gone," Abby's mom, Anna Williams, said.

Former Arsenal footballer Thomas Partey to appear in court charged with rape
Former Arsenal footballer Thomas Partey to appear in court charged with rape

Yahoo

time18 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Former Arsenal footballer Thomas Partey to appear in court charged with rape

Former Arsenal footballer Thomas Partey is due to appear in court charged with raping two women. The midfielder faces five counts of rape and one count of sexual assault following alleged offences between 2021 and 2022, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said. The 32-year-old is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates' Court on Tuesday. Partey's lawyer Jenny Wiltshire previously said he 'denies all the charges against him', adding he welcomed 'the opportunity to finally clear his name'. The Ghanaian international was charged four days after leaving the North London club when his contract expired at the end of June. Partey, of Hertfordshire, is accused of two counts of rape against one woman and three counts of rape against another. The sexual assault allegation relates to a third woman, according to the CPS. The Metropolitan Police said it first received reports of an allegation of rape in February 2022. Partey joined Arsenal from Atletico Madrid in 2020 in a transfer worth around £45 million. The defensive midfielder signed for the Spanish club in 2012 and made 188 appearances, as well as going out on loan to Mallorca and Leganes. He played 35 games for the north London club in the Premier League last season, scoring four goals. Partey has also made more than 50 appearances for Ghana – including at the World Cup and the Africa Cup of Nations. An Arsenal spokesperson previously said: 'The player's contract ended on June 30. Due to ongoing legal proceedings the club is unable to comment on the case.'

Teenager arrested and charged after boy 'stabbed in leg' at bus station
Teenager arrested and charged after boy 'stabbed in leg' at bus station

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Teenager arrested and charged after boy 'stabbed in leg' at bus station

A 17-year-old has been charged after another teenager allegedly suffered a stab injury to his leg in Blackburn. Police said they were called to Blackburn bus station shortly before 8.30pm on Saturday (August 2) to reports of an assault. The injury is not thought to be life threatening or changing, but he was taken to hospital for treatment. Officers attended the scene, and a 17-year-old boy from Blackburn was arrested. Following consultation with the Crown Prosecution Service, the 17-year-old has now been charged with wounding with intent, possession of a knife or bladed article in a public place, common assault of an emergency worker and possession of a class B drug. As the boy is under 18, he cannot be named. Officers are appealing for any information or footage that could assist their enquiries. If you have any CCTV, dashcam or mobile phone footage from near the bus station in the town centre between 8.15pm and 8.45pm on August 2, contact the police on 101 quoting log 1290 of August 2, 2025.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store