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NewsFebruary 19, 2003

CHICAGO -- City officials demanded that a judge jail the owner of the E2 nightclub for at least a year Tuesday, saying he was illegally operating the place when 21 people were killed in a stampede. The city said Dwain Kyles had ignored a court order from last July to shut the place down because of building code violations that included failure to provide enough exits. City officials asked Circuit Judge Daniel Lynch to find Kyles in criminal contempt of court and put him behind bars...

By Mike Robinson, The Associated Press

CHICAGO -- City officials demanded that a judge jail the owner of the E2 nightclub for at least a year Tuesday, saying he was illegally operating the place when 21 people were killed in a stampede.

The city said Dwain Kyles had ignored a court order from last July to shut the place down because of building code violations that included failure to provide enough exits. City officials asked Circuit Judge Daniel Lynch to find Kyles in criminal contempt of court and put him behind bars.

"You don't have a right to disobey a court order until someone catches you or until a disaster happens," Mayor Richard M. Daley said.

Andre Grant, an attorney for the owners of the E2 nightclub, contended a deal had been reached in October to keep the place open.

City officials disputed that.

"There is absolutely no such agreement, either written or oral," said Mara Georges, the city's chief attorney. "Obviously, these people were intent on breaking the law, and they broke the law."

She said the city had done everything in its power to keep the nightclub closed in civil housing court.

However, police superintendent Terry Hillard said Tuesday that police had been unaware of any order to shut down E2. He said he had even told officers to pay special attention to the location after crowd-control help was requested there.

The city also asked the judge to fine Kyles and his company, Le Mirage Inc., which owns the nightclub, and to fine a second company, Lesly Motors Inc., which owns the building.

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The judge did not immediately act on the request. He said he would give the two companies 10 days to respond. Kyles appeared at the city's legal office late Tuesday and accepted a summons to appear in court on March 7.

Jenny Hoyle, a spokeswoman for the city Law Department, said judges have wide discretion on what penalties they impose for criminal contempt. Lynch said acts of contempt considered minor have a jail limit of less than six months; major offenses can lead to much longer sentences.

Twenty-one people were killed early Monday in a stampede down a stairwell that began when security guards broke up a fight by spraying pepper spray. A lawyer for the club operators suggested someone might have shouted a warning about a terrorist attack.

Police have begun interviewing hundreds of witnesses who were in the crowded second-floor nightclub on the near South Side. The Rev. Jesse Jackson said Kyles was the son of a longtime friend and had submitted to police questioning Monday.

In the panic, club-goers who had been partying moments earlier found themselves squashed in the stairway. Bodies were trampled and flattened against the glass doors.

Some witnesses said the door at the bottom of the stairwell became blocked by the mass of people. Others claimed security guards closed it shortly after the stampede began, trapping people inside.

Police officials said they are trying to locate promoter Marco Flores of Envy Productions & Entertainment Co., which promoted the event. Hillard said Flores has left the state. Envy had rented the club and provided security guards for the event.

E2 has featured such performers as R. Kelly and the rapper 50 Cent.

Le Mirage also owned the Epitome restaurant downstairs. Both the nightclub and the restaurant were voluntarily closed Tuesday, said Thomas Royce, an attorney for the two businesses.

Kyles and a co-operator, Calvin Hollins, have run the popular club under various names since the early 1980s. Kyles is a lawyer who once served as special counsel to former Mayor Harold Washington. His father, the Rev. Samuel Billy Kyles, was a close associate of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and longtime friend of Jackson.

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