North Side Fire Brigade
6240 W. Addison Street, Chicago Illinois 60634 773-545-3883
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Official 1995 C.F.D. Processed Candidate Information Site 1/3/2008 - Our process is moving forward quickly. Please email us at info@cfd1995lawsuit.com as soon as possible so we can inform you of recent developments. As many of you may now know, processing has started for those who took the 2006 exam. Please email the above address for further information. Thank you and good luck.
Welcome to the official page for those who took the 1995 Chicago Firefighters Exam and started significant processing in 2006. Since that time, the city has halted processing on this group, has not had a class in the CFD Academy since August 2006 and has not answered any "official" questions as to their status. The purpose of this site is to gather information from this group, notify the public of the city's processes and misinformation and to identify what recourse this group has. Please submit your information using the tab on the left. Thanks you. Let's hope for employment and work processes in the CFD that are fair and accountable to all. UPDATES - 9/19/2007 - Please check the update section.
Please email any questions to info@cfd1995lawsuit.com
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In "Law and Order," convicted
serial arsonist Jeffrey "Matches" Boyle would have served at least
half of his 6-year prison sentence.
Instead, he served only a year and 9 months, after pleading guilty
to setting eight fires, including one of a house in the suburbs and
a Catholic school on the North Side. And now he's out.
Before his arrest -- which was
front-page news back in 2005 -- Boyle wasn't just your average
serial arsonist. He was a special serial arsonist
John Kass of the Chicago Tribune Bio | E-mail | Recent columns
"Convicted Arsonist, & Merit Promoted Chicago Fire Department Lieutenant"
Jeffrey Boyle (Chicago Police Department photo / February 10, 2005)
Chicago Fire Department Lieutenant Jeffrey
Boyle.
He also was political, receiving a worse than mediocre score on the
lieutenant's exam, yet magically jumped over 200 candidates
with higher scores to get a "meritorious" promotion at City Hall.
The "Matches" part came later. His little brother has a nickname
too. Surely my loyal readers haven't forgotten the legendary John
"Quarters" Boyle, a leader in the Coalition for Better Government, a
political patronage army of tough guys and felons on the city
payroll getting out the vote for Mayor Richard Daley and Gov. Rod
"The Unreformer" Blagojevich.
"Quarters" Boyle is a twice-convicted felon who stole millions
in quarters from the state tollway, came out of prison and
got a city job, and was protected by the mayor when I started
writing about him, until "Quarters" got caught taking more
than $200,000 in bribes in the scandal-plagued Hired Truck program.
"Quarters" went to federal prison on the bribe charge and kept his
mouth shut. How do they reward such silent loyalty?
"Matches" Boyle reportedly set the fires because he was
drinking a lot and was distraught over his love life, his
gambling and his brother's legal problems. I don't know how torching
things makes your love life better, but I'm not a judge.
"Arson is a terrible crime," said Cook County Judge Dennis Porter,
in one of the lectures "Matches" Boyle received during his March
2006 sentencing. "And there is a considerable amount of punishment
in the court's sentence."
Porter handed down a 6-year term out of a possible 7 years -- a
sentence that matched an earlier and more disappointing term.
Because "Matches" Boyle tried to set fire to a home in Park Ridge --
the home of a family he was arguing with -- he had faced a more
severe sentence in the courtroom of Cook County Judge Garritt
Howard, a sentence up to 15 years.
On Thursday, I spoke to the now-retired prosecutor, Richard Lovell,
who asked for the 15-year sentence.
"Here is a guy, Boyle, who is supposed to be out protecting people,
a fire lieutenant. He's setting fire to a school building. ... And
to a home with a family -- people were in the house but the
fire didn't take. I asked for 15 years. That's the argument I made."
But Howard sentenced "Matches" Boyle to a paltry 6 years.
How did "Matches" Boyle get out so early?
"Your guess is as good as mine," said Lovell, who spent 40 years in
law enforcement, first as a cop, then a prosecutor.
Rather than guess, we called the Illinois Department of Corrections.
Officials said that Jeffrey Boyle's sentence was reduced because he
was a model prisoner who took classes to improve himself. His lawyer
-- James Tunick, who probably deserves much credit for good
lawyering -- outlined the reduction.
"He received one day off for every day served. And there were nine
months taken off for the successful completion of a drug program,
and he's still involved with the program," Tunick said. "This
reduction has nothing to do with any influence, patronage,
whatsoever. His brother had nothing to do with this situation."
Perhaps.
By brother he means "Quarters," a fascinating fellow with
fascinating connections, like the one reaching into Chinatown,
playland of Outfit bookie and juice loan collector Nick "The Stick"
LoCoco.
Like "Matches" and "Quarters," LoCoco also lived a charmed life,
working for the city, getting shot in the head by a fellow city
worker angry about being leaned on for money, surviving, not
pressing charges, your usual stuff. Then Nick and "Quarters" got
indicted in the Hired Truck scam.
Nick, a bookie and avid horseman, decided to go for a horseback ride
on a bridle trail in Will County. It was Sunday afternoon, during
the NFL season, a busy time for bookies. But in November 2004, Nick
decided he had to go for that horse ride, football or no football.
Something happened, an accident, he hit his head and later died.
Before he died, "Quarters" visited him in the hospital. "Matches"
and "Quarters" and the Stick family reportedly owned property
together, and now that "Matches" is out, he'll likely seek help from
his friends.
Officials say there's nothing remarkable about all this. Lawyers and
judges will point to reductions and classes and credits. The way
they explain their math, 6 years equals less than 2. But it
sure feels strange that an admitted serial arsonist, a fire
lieutenant with clout, is sentenced to 6 years and serves only a
year and 9 months.
It's not Hollywood's "Law and Order." It's "Law and Order: The
Chicago Way."
























