Eddie Polec murder case
The Eddie Polec murder case centers on the murder of a 16-year-old Caucasian male named Edward ("Eddie") William Polec.[1] that took place on the front steps of his church in the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania's Fox Chase section on the night of Friday, November 11, 1994. The case drew particular national media attention because it happened in a middle-class residential part of the city not customarily known for such a crime. Adding all the more to its controversy was that it was carried out by a band of mixed-race youth from neighboring Montgomery County's upscale suburban Abington Township that no one ever suspected of being capable of committing such a crime.[1][2] Because of these two factors combined plus others, the Philadelphia 911 emergency phone service and the Philadelphia police were extraordinarily slow in responding that night and proved far from adequate, with that aspect of the case in itself drawing considerable media attention.[1][3]
Inciting incident
The murder of Eddie Polec was the end result of minor hostilities that had developed between some Fox Chase youth and a young female from Abington Township the week before outside a Fox Chase McDonald's Restaurant. A group of Fox Chase teenagers there were alleged to have upset the girl by tossing a plastic cup of soda into her car. This much was later admitted to by the Fox Chase youth.[1] But when word of the incident got back to Abington Township it grew wildly out of proportion to include a false rumor that she had been raped in the McDonald's parking lot.[1][2] In response, a group of Abington teenagers decided to retaliate on her behalf in conjunction with a warning she had allegedly made the night of the initial incident just before departing Fox Chase: "You're all getting [expletive] beat up next weekend.[4]"
According to witnesses, she was seen again in Fox Chase early the following Friday night driving the same vehicle, this time along with Abington youth in another car, the passengers of both cars making threats similar to the one she had made the week before, only this time for later that night. Both vehicles then departed Fox Chase, and around 9:30 P.M. five carloads packed with other Abington teenagers arrived in their wake in what was described as a tightly formed caravan.[1] With music blasting loudly, it first stopped at a Fox Chase 7-Eleven store, and after fully taking over its parking lot, some of its passengers got out and demanded directions to the McDonald's. The one perceived to be the leader was overheard to say, "Come on, we have to do this. We have a job to get done. Let's do this before the police come." Before returning to their cars he was witnessed jumping up and down shouting: "I'm so psyched, I could kill someone.[1]"
Initial assaults
Just before 10:00 P.M.[5] the caravan next arrived to the McDonald's, where its passengers then jumped out and began chasing every Fox Chase youth they saw with broken off hockey sticks[4] and baseball bats. According to one account, they outnumbered the Fox Chase teenagers thirteen to two. They cornered one and began severely beating him with bats until his friends could pull him free. The Fox Chase teenagers then scattered, but the rampage spread out to encompass a much wider portion of Fox Chase.
Startled adult Fox Chase residents and others when witnessing this unfolding melee overtaking their normally peaceful neighborhood began calling Philadelphia's 911 emergency response service in growing number, each caller expecting police to be sent out right away.[4] Some callers described what looked to be as many as 40 to 50 kids shouting obscenities,[4] smashing bottles, hurling rocks, and breaking car windows.[1]
But with no police patrol cars being dispatched, the caravan began racing recklessly throughout Fox Chase until finally zeroing in on one particular young male it saw near to the front steps of his church – Eddie Polec, who had simply been waiting there to walk home with his younger brother when suddenly he found himself being chased down by this loud succession of cars coming straight at him. As the caravan sharply pulled into the church's parking lot cutting him off while simultaneously blocking other Fox Chase youth from coming to his aid, he tried running farther, but the first passenger out threw a baseball bat at his legs causing him to fall. The moment he was down that Abington teenager and others began striking him with baseball bats as he helplessly lay on the ground pleading for his life. He was then brought back to his feet once more so that some in the group could take bat swings directly at his head. After suffering eight forceful blows to the head this way he was then dropped back to the pavement, at which point another, wearing steel tipped boots, kicked him several times in the face.[5] With that final assault, the assailants then quickly fled in their caravan and were said to have been laughing and high-fiving one another as it sped away.[1] Authorities would later describe it as having been one of the most brutal murders in all Philadelphia history.[5]
Arrival of police
It was 40 minutes after the first 911 call was placed that police were finally sent.[4] But by then it was too late. The young Eddie Polec lay bloodied and unconscious on the steps of a church where just a few short years before he had served as an altar boy.[1][6] He was immediately rushed to a hospital. But the following morning, after a full night of intensive medical emergency treatment had failed, Eddie Polec was pronounced dead.[1][4]
As the news of his death broke, it would later come out that while Eddie Polec's friends gathered in mourning outside the church where he had been killed the night before, four teenage girls from Abington who had been part of the caravan the night before attended a party for a friend just a few blocks away from the church, by all accounts totally unfazed by it.[1]
News coverage
The news coverage of Eddie Polec's murder quickly went national, with the failure on the part of Philadelphia's 911 operators receiving special emphasis, much of the blame being placed directly on them. Fox Chase residents and others had complained about them being insensitive and unresponsive, and even expressing resentment as the callers tried to make clear the matter's urgency. The head of the union representing the operators stated that the reason for their questionable performance was because they had been working with outdated equipment, were underpaid, and had not been trained properly by the city. Nonetheless, Philadelphia's Mayor Ed Rendell took immediate disciplinary action against them, saying, "Flaws in the system in no way, shape or form give anybody license to be abusive to citizens calling to report a crime.[4]" In their own defense the operators soon after appeared on ABC's The Oprah Winfrey Show,[1][7] where they tried to argue that they had done a good job that night. But 911 tapes that had been released by the police and that were getting extensive airplay nationally by that point only confirmed the callers' accusations.[4] The 911 operators themselves, meantime, believed that because they were all African American they were being made political scapegoats.[1][4] But that claim was denounced by the president of Philadelphia's branch of the NAACP, Thornhill Cosby, who said: "This is not a racial issue. It is a human issue.[3]" The 911 workers appealed the city's disciplinary action and were eventually exonerated. The mayor, meantime, created a commission to explore ways the 911 system could be improved upon[4]
The investigation of Eddie Polec's murder led to the arrest of seven Abington teenagers, aged 16 to 18, with six of them charged with murder, and the seventh for supplying the bats used in the crime. All of them were found to have some school disciplinary records.,[5] in some instances for violent behavior,[1] and one had been expelled for bringing a gun into school. Several of them were on probation for various offenses. Four of them were students at Abington High School, another had graduated from there, and two attended other schools.[1][5] The investigation also revealed that many other youths from Abington had been involved as well. But those others were never charged. The reason why, it was argued, they had to be ruled out to keep the case manageable, given the extraordinary extent of it. As one Philadelphia police officer put it, when youths from Abington were brought into Philadelphia's police headquarters for purposes of establishing witnesses they all acted like suspects. All the females were described as being defiantly untruthful while all the males showed no signs of sympathy towards the victim.[1]
When the news emerged that teenagers from Abington were behind it, Abington declared the week "Nonviolent Conflict Resolution Week",[1] while fellow students at Abington High School were reported to be in shock, having a great deal of difficulty comprehending how this crime could have originated from what they had perceived to be an idyllic suburbia totally free of such type behavior. The mother of one of the perpetrators, speaking on condition of anonymity, said, "These are suburban kids – you don't figure them to go bad. It's not their character to be a rough group of kids."[3]
Nonetheless, the news media attacks on Abington's newly acquired bad image continued, with the Daily News in its front-page headline calling Abington High School "MURDER HIGH" alongside a graphic of the school's crest, with a subhead reading: "They're suspects in Fox Chase beating – and they're walking the halls in Abington." This particular report drew strong criticism from Eddie Polec's younger brother, who in a local TV news spot insisted it totally mischaracterized Abington kids as he knew them to be. For despite the crime and a strong desire among many to seek revenge, all the members of the Polec family showed extraordinary restraint. This especially came to light when they appeared on local television pleading for calm and to allow the courts to handle the matter. This plea on their part proved effective. Following it not a single retaliation attempt was reported, although news media attacks on Philadelphia's 911 system continued unabashed. These criticisms grew so intense that they threatened to fully derail the mayoral administration of Ed Rendell, who up till then had been praised as a fast rising star on the U.S. political stage and had been hailed as "America's Mayor" by The Wall Street Journal. In his defense he appeared on Larry King Live and other national broadcasts in efforts to distance himself from what he summarized as a defective carryover from previous administrations that he vowed to amend. Still, the bad publicity regarding Philadelphia's 911 system remained strong, with NBC-TV's Saturday Night Live doing a comedy sketch with Roseanne Arnold in the role of an indifferent Philadelphia 911 operator refusing to take any callers seriously.[1]
As for Eddie Polec, he had been a well-liked high school senior with no apparent ties to the Fox Chase youth said to have initially sparked the hostilities. His popularity was such that when a memorial service for him was held at his church, his entire high school senior class was in attendance, the church itself was packed to near double capacity, and a thousand more people stood outside in the rain where a loudspeaker was set up so all could hear the service. At his viewing over four thousand people came, waiting in line for hours to pay last respects, and his funeral procession when traveling from the funeral home to the cemetery was reported to be a mile long.[1]
Murder trial
The Eddie Polec murder trial began on January 2, 1996.[5] at the Philadelphia Criminal Justice Center with Judge Jane Cutler Greenspan of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas presiding. Joseph Patrick Casey of the Philadelphia district attorney's office served as the prosecuting attorney, and Angelo Charles Peruto, Sr., in addition to his personally representing one of the defendants, served as the lead defense attorney. Other defendants under his representation also had their own personal defense attorneys. Famous for never having lost a murder case, and notorious for representing major Philadelphia organized crime figures, the Eddie Polec murder trial would prove to be one of Peruto's greatest challenges[1]
Another defendant, the grandson of a retired Philadelphia police officer, was not under Peruto's representation because he had struck a deal with the prosecution to be the star witness in exchange for leniency.[1]
Before the trial got under way, although the defendants would be tried as adults,[3] the Philadelphia's district attorney ruled out the death penalty because under Pennsylvania law there weren't enough aggravating circumstances to make it a capital offense. So the prosecution sought convictions for first-degree-murder life sentences instead. This concurred with the Polec family, who strongly opposed the death penalty on moral grounds.[1]
Throughout the trial all members of the Polec family were in attendance along with many others from the Fox Chase community. All the defendants, meantime, were allowed to freely walk around outside the courtroom and immediately outside the Criminal Justice Center whenever the trial was not in session. Ofttimes the Polec family and others from Fox Chase saw them in passing. And although this became questionable when one of the defendants turned violent out in the courtroom hallway and had to be quickly restrained by a police detective, the practice was allowed to continue.[1]
After several weeks of exposure to powerful arguments made by the prosecution, with graphic medical photos being shown of the extent of the brutality to Eddie Polec, countless witness testimonies, arguments made by the defense team – which primarily questioned the validity of the star witness – and six days of deliberation, on February 5, 1996 at 5:00 P.M. the jury announced the verdict. It found three of the defendants guilty of third-degree murder and conspiracy, another of voluntary manslaughter and conspiracy, and two of conspiracy.[1][6] The immediate reaction to the verdict was mixed, with the prosecuting attorney Joseph Casey overheard to whisper, "Eddie Polec is dead, and so is justice in the city of Philadelphia." As the Polec family exited the Criminal Justice Center following the announcement, the father of Eddie Polec told reporters that they accepted the verdict, although they didn't understand it.[1]
Sentencing took place on March 19, 1996. Just before it got underway the defendants were asked if they wanted to make any last statements. Only one agreed to, and in doing so was the only one to express any remorse. In response he became the only one shown any mercy by the court. His maximum sentence of fifteen to thirty years for third-degree murder and conspiracy was reduced by six months. Of the other three defendants found guilty of the same charge, one received ten to twenty years for murder and a consecutive five to ten years for conspiracy, and the third was sentenced to fifteen to thirty years. The one found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and conspiracy received eight to twenty years, and the two found guilty of conspiracy were sentenced to five to ten years.[1]
Legacy
In the trial's aftermath, the father of Eddie Polec, through a determined letter-writing campaign and intense lobbying effort, tried to sway Pennsylvania's legislators to change how the law defined first-degree murder. And because some members of the defense team had made false and misleading statements during the trial, he hoped for a possible re-ruling. But all these efforts failed, and the Philadelphia District Attorney's office officially closed the case in September 1996. During this same period he turned down the chance to sue the city for $50 million, choosing instead to dedicate himself to ensuring that Philadelphia's Mayor Ed Rendell made good on his promise to upgrade the city's 911 system. And that effort paid off. In exchange for his agreeing not to sue, in September 1998 Philadelphia officially dedicated its all-new 911 Emergency Communication Center, along with far better training for operators. In addition, the father of Eddie Polec became a much-in-demand speaker at church groups and high schools, and he did extensive voluntary work for the non-profit Lost Dreams on Canvas organization that commissions artists to do portraits of children who were killed violently to be displayed at area schools, shopping malls, etc.[1]
The Eddie Polec murder case also spurred the formation of the Fox Chase Town Watch Association.,[1] with one of the first callers to Philadelphia's 911 system the night of the crime eventually becoming its leader[8]
And in 1999 the Los Angeles-based journalist team of Bryn Freedman (the official reporter who covered the Polec murder trial)[9] and William Knoedelseder published a book titled In Eddie's Name: One Family's Triumph over Tragedy, which intimately explored every aspect of what the Polec family went through, with in-depth insights about the murder, investigation, and trial.[1]
Since 1994 there has not been another incident in Fox Chase in any way similar to the Eddie Polec murder case.[10] But several decades later many questions still remain how it could have happened[4] and also with regards to how it was handled by the courts.[1]
References
- In Eddie's Name: One Family's Triumph over Tragedy, by Bryn Freedman and William Knoedelseder, Faber & Faber Publishing, © 1999. Library of Congress catalog # ISBN 0-571-19924-0
- The Los Angeles Times, "3 Face Firing Over Mishandled 911 Calls in Boy's Beating Death," from Associated Press, November 29, 1994
- The New York Times, "The 'Why' of Youth's Fatal Beating In Philadelphia Is Elusive," by Michael Janofsky, December 5, 1994
- The Washington Post, "Disturbing Questions Haunt Philadelphia After Teen's Violent Death," by Debbie Goldberg, December 13, 1994
- The New York Times, January 1, 1996
- The Chicago Tribune, "4 Convicted In Teen's Beating Death," by Gary Borg, February 06, 1996
- ABC TV's The Oprah Winfrey Show, January 18, 1995
- Stephen Phillips, President, Fox Chase Town Watch Association, 2017
- Marty Moss-Coane interview with journalist Bryn Freedman and parents of Eddie Polec, National Public Radio (NPR) broadcast, 1996
- Philadelphia police blotter reports, November 1994 – 2017