Lee Harris spent most of his adult life trying to help the young residents of the Cabrini Green Public housing complex. He coached the girls’ softball team and was a community activist that helped elect Mayor Jane Bynre. Lee was also friends with the police – or so he thought.
In 1989 Dana Feitler, was shot and killed in the well-to-do Gold Coast neighborhood in Chicago. She was shot in the back of the head after removing $400 from an ATM. The case became a media sensation for a variety of reasons, including the fact that ATMs were new in Chicago.
Feitler’s parents offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of Feitler’s murderer. Because the police knew that Lee had helped them on other cases in the past, they sought his assistance in solving Feitler’s murder. Lee, who had fallen on hard times, needed the money and wanted to help his “friends.” Police reports indicate Lee Harris was a cooperating witness for months. The prosecution paid for his housing, gave him meals, and Harris had around-the-clock police protection. Lee reports that police told him their theory of the case, and he made statements comporting with their theory. Things changed when the Cook County State’s Attorney refused to press charges against their target suspects. After that, the lead detective, Richard Zuley, had to solve the murder and turned on Lee, using his own words against him. Detective Richard Zuley has a notorious history of wrongful convictions and coercing false “confessions.” Most notoriously, Zuley crafted the interrogation plan for Mohamedou Slahi at Guantanamo Bay. Zuley’s role in the interrogation and torture of Slahi received wide attention in a two-part series by Spencer Ackerman in a British newspaper, The Guardian, in 2015. Later, Slahi wrote about Zuley in his book, Guantánamo Diary. He was known to Slahi as "Captain Collins," and his role in crafting the interrogation tactics used on Shali is profiled in the award winning movie based the Guantánamo Diary, "The Mauritanian."
Jennifer Blagg’s investigations have revealed that the Harris case contains almost every factor typically seen in a wrongful conviction – a heater case that police had to solve, coercive police conduct by Chicago Police Officers led by Detective Zuley, a lying jailhouse snitch, and a suspect identification.
JENNIFER BLAGG
Law Office of Jennifer Blagg
1509 W. Berwyn Ave. Suite 201E
Chicago, IL 60640
Phone: 773 859-0081
Fax: 773 439-2863
jennifer@blagglaw.net
ERIC BISBY
Law Office of Jennifer Blagg
1509 W. Berwyn Ave. Suite 201E
Chicago, IL 60640
Phone: (312) 218-6015
Fax: 773 439-2863
eric@blagglaw.net