Hot Off The Presses

Christopher Bollyn’s Arresting Experience in Hoffman Estates

Arrest pits resident vs. police – Hoffman Estates Review [08-24-06]

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A former mayoral candidate in Hoffman Estates says he was brutally harassed and unjustly arrested by police last week.Christopher L. Bollyn, 49, of Hoffman Estates filed a written complaint against the chief of police and village manager complaining of a false arrest.

But Village Attorney Dick Williams said the papers are merely a summary of his account of the arrest, and have no legal effect.

Hoffman Estates police received a 911 call from Bollyn just after 8 p.m. last Tuesday, complaining of a suspicious vehicle in his neighborhood. The vehicle, according to Lt. Rich Russo, was a normal tactical unit patrolling for gang- and drug-related behavior. Police officers in these semi-marked units are undercover and wear body armor, Russo said.

“They weren’t there for any other reason than to patrol,” Russo said, “doing what they do.”

When officers came to Bollyn’s home at 220 Kingman Lane to explain that the vehicle was an undercover police unit, he allegedly became upset and began yelling and screaming. His actions gave the three officers on the scene reason to believe he was going into his home to get a weapon, Russo said, so they stunned him with a Taser gun in order to handcuff him.

Bollyn was charged with aggravated assault and resisting arrest and was taken into police custody. He was released later that evening after posting $100 bail.

But Bollyn tells a different story of his arrest. An investigative journalist for the American Free Press, Bollyn has published several articles in the last week describing how he was attacked and beaten by undercover police.

He believes the police vehicle was not just driving by his home by chance. Because of his research related to the Sept. 11 World Trade Center deaths, Bollyn said the FBI has been watching him for years. Last summer, he said he discovered that two people he had known for years were actually FBI informants. As a result, he was reluctant to return to his Hoffman Estates home with his wife and two young children.

“I have reason to fear the FBI,” he said. “They’ve been informing on me for years.”

Maundy thursday

There’s more to this story, but not in the way that you might think. Chris and his family are off-and-on members of Holy Moly, and my strongest memory of him is from Easter Vigil two years ago, kneeling at the Altar of Repose for the better part of an hour (last years’ observance is on the church blog here, the photo shows the 2005 Altar). We hadn’t seen them around much since then; he and his family travel a lot, live in Europe
much of the time, and they don’t get back “home” very often.

As in the photo, there is much that is obscure, much that is dark, and only a few points of light.

Chris is a journalist for a publication specializing in the kind of stories that many people would see as “kooky” or hard to believe… or difficult to stomach. He has some unusual views on who bears ultimate responsibility for 9/11, but he has the right to hold them and to publicize them, and I have the right to say “Okay, well… another cup of coffee, Chris?” It’s not right that his personal 9/11 should result
in a bunch of suburban cops in flak jackets jumping all over him in his own front yard while his wife and daughter watched. Whether or not it was actually the FBI, and not the local gendarmery out on a drug reconnoiter, that jumped all over him in his front yard is impossible to say. In my opinion, it probably wasn’t the Feds, although I think it’s entirely likely that his name is on a list or two, based on the kinds of stories he tends to write.

I hope he and his wife and kids are all right. I like them – they’re interesting, colorful people, always good for a story, but there’s always a little edginess to their conversation. The kids are pretty free-range; they’ve been raised all over the world and probably don’t have much in common with most suburban kids their age.

I think his experience will only reinforce his worldview that there’s a vast international conspiracy out there pulling the strings for every major catastrophe and inexplicable malady, and he’ll never believe that his arrest might be a simple failure to communicate. Sadly, there’s no way to disprove it to him now, because of the over-reaction of the local authorities. Their side of the story is by no means the whole truth, either.

iTunes: Wendy Carlos: Two Part Invention in D minor: Switched-On Bach 2000 [0:59]

2 Comments on “Christopher Bollyn’s Arresting Experience in Hoffman Estates

  1. Good to read a balanced description of this story. This is the first time I’ve been able to find the police department’s account of what happened, as Bollyn’s website links flood my google search on the subject. There’s something incredible about his story. Maybe it’s his paranoid delusions…I don’t know. I am inclined to believe his arrest had to do with a combination of Bollyn’s refusal to communicate and the officers’ arrogant refusal to protect the peace by speaking calmly with an obviously paranoid and delusional individual. Another matter of note is that members of gang/drug units are often amped-up and respond forcibly to ANY perceived defiance or threat, including Bollyn’s admitted “running away kind of fast” back into his home after a short exchange with the officers. Unfortunately, his bang-up arrest will only serve to reinforce his view that he is being targeted for his ‘hard-hitting,’ ‘ground-breaking,’ ‘9/11 Commission-report-defying’ work as a journalist. It’s likely that his unneccesarily rough treatment may stem from the perception that he’s the village ‘kook’ in a white, middle-class suburb. I wouldn’t be surprised if some view of Chris as an outsider deviating from the suburban norms of Hoffman Estates shortened the fuses of those law enforcement officials who arrested him. Afterall, he is a known face in Hoffman Estates; he did run for the mayor’s office in Hoffman Estates in 2001, and all too proudly implies that his parents were the sole founders of the township. It’s far more likely that he was roughed up and arrested because he was seen as a defiant kook than because he writes scatching exposés that threaten a corrupt U.S. Government.

  2. Glad to know that someone found the story useful, it looks like the original story link no longer leads anywhere, but the quote gives the gist of it.

    It’s been almost a year since this happened, and we still see Chris and his family at church, even though we’ve closed the Holy Innocents building and merged with a church in Elk Grove. They have problems with the distance, though, and find it difficult to get there without a car.

    He continues to be an interesting person to talk with, although he can be relied upon to turn every conversation to whatever topic he’s currently interested in. As before, these chats generally always end with “Okay, well… I can’t agree with your view of events or the facts of the matter, but can I get you another cup of coffee?”

    I had to fix up the image; this post dates from before a major overhaul, and of course every picture tells a story.

    Also, had to add that Chris had also claimed that his parents were instrumental in founding and helping to build Holy Innocents Episcopal Church, but there’s actually some truth to that – at least, they were there during the earliest years. I have to agree that he’s probably made a name for himself as the village “kook,” although a mostly harmless one.

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