Richard Elrod
Richard J. Elrod was an American jurist, sheriff, and legislator.
Biography
Born to a Jewish family in Chicago, Illinois, Elrod received his bachelor's and law degrees from Northwestern University.Elrod's father was Arthur X. Elrod, a Democratic Party operative who served as a Cook County Commissioner and Chicago's 25th ward's committeeman.
Elrod was Chicago's assistant corporation counsel from 1958 through 1970, and its chief city prosecutor from 1960 through 1970.
Elrod served in the Illinois House of Representatives, in 1969, as a Democrat. While serving in the Illinois General Assembly, Elrod was seriously injured and left paralyzed while helping a Chicago police officer capture Brian Flanagan during the Days of Rage conflict in 1969. Flanagan and two witnesses maintained that Elrod sustained his injury after attempting to tackle Flanagan and instead impacting the corner of a building, while Elrod and several police officers claimed that Flanagan repeatedly kicked him in the neck with construction boots. Flanagan went to trial for several charges related to the incident, including attempted murder, but was acquitted of all of them.
Elrod was elected sheriff of Cook County, Illinois in 1970, defeating Republican nominee Bernard Carey. He would serve four terms. He was reelected three times, first in 1974, then in 1978, then in 1982. In 1986, he lost reelection to Republican James E. O'Grady.
From 1986 until 1988, he worked as the senior assistant attorney general, working under Illinois Attorney General Neil Hartigan.
Elrod was appointed as a judge on the Circuit Court of Cook County in August 1988, where he continued to serve until his death in 2014. He died of cancer in Chicago, Illinois.