Appeal filed in lawsuit against Thornley that Attorney General Raoul got
dismissed
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[August 03, 2022]
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – An appeal has been filed in the case a member of
the Illinois State Police Merit Board brought against Jenny Thornley,
the former merit board employee at the center of a multipronged case of
alleged worker’s compensation fraud with connections to Gov. J.B.
Pritzker’s office.
In April 2021, Emily Fox, an employee of the merit board, filed a
lawsuit against Thornley in Sangamon County Circuit Court. The case was
filed under seal.
Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul motioned to have the case
dismissed on Dec. 7, 2021.
“The State determined through its investigation that this action is
legally deficient,” the motion said, “and, as such, the costs to the
State and the judicial system of litigating this matter outweigh any
benefits of permitting this action to proceed.”
In March, a Sangamon County judge dismissed the case. Documents were
lifted from the seal on July 29. Those documents showed a worker's
compensation claim form Thornley filed on Jan. 1, 2020, listed at first
“JB Pritzker” as her supervisor and the "Governor’s office" as her
employer. A separate form filed on May 2, 2020, Thornley listed her
employer as “Office of Gov” and her supervisor as Ann Spillane, the
governor's general counsel. Thornley didn't work for the governor's
office, she worked for the Illinois State Police Merit Board.
The claims Thornley made of being the victim of sexual assault were
unfounded, according to an independent investigation that cost taxpayers
$550,000.
On Tuesday, Fox appealed to the Appellate Court of Illinois Fourth
Judicial District.
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The filing “alleges a multi-pronged scheme to defraud the State of
Illinois, including with the active complicity of the General Counsel to
the Governor, perhaps the Governor himself, and other high-ranking
officials.”
An Illinois Central Management Services memo to the AG’s office in
January obtained through a public records request lists disability
payments going to Thornley totaling $63,517 from July 21, 2020, to Sept.
1, 2021. Medical costs during that time totaled $2,586. Other costs
incurred in the case include legal expenses totaling $12,536,
surveillance costs of $8,038, bill review costs of $8,038 and photocopy
costs of $316.
Fox’s appeal “will raise the following questions: (1) whether the
Illinois False Claims Act’s statutory requirement of a hearing by the
Circuit Court prior to dismissal of an Illinois False Claims Act
complaint has any substance; (2) whether the Due Process clauses of the
Illinois and U.S. Constitutions apply to the Attorney General and
require that his decision to move to dismiss a relator’s False Claims
Act case must be rational and not arbitrary; and (3) whether the Circuit
Court properly considered arguments and evidence raised only in reply.”
Separately, Raoul said he referred allegations of worker’s compensation
fraud against Thornley to the state’s appellate prosecutor’s office,
something the appellate prosecutor’s office said in an email to the AG’s
office they don’t have.
“[The appellate prosecutor’s office] has never done – to my knowledge –
any worker's compensation fraud case,” Chief Deputy Director of the
State’s Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor David Robinson wrote in the email
to Raoul's office. “Our experience has been that those issues are
directed to the AG’s worker’s comp fraud division.”
Greg Bishop reports on Illinois government and other
issues for The Center Square. Bishop has years of award-winning
broadcast experience and hosts the WMAY Morning Newsfeed out of
Springfield. |