Former state Sen. Thomas Cullerton
was sentenced June 21 to one year in federal prison for embezzling nearly
$250,000 from Teamsters Local 734.
Cullerton, 52, plead guilty in March to accepting payments for a fraudulent job
entailing little to no work for the union. He was also a sponsor of the bill
asking voters Nov. 8 to put union power guarantees in the Illinois Constitution.
Prosecutors wanted 18 months, but Cullerton’s attorney John Collins requested
probation and community service. U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman settled
for a year.
“Every time you took that paycheck from the Teamsters without working for it,
you knew that you were doing something wrong,” Gettleman told Cullerton in
court.
The Villa Park Democrat must also pay back the Teamsters his full earnings in
restitution. He’s paid back $26,000 of the $248,000 he owes.
Cullerton in court apologized to the Teamsters, telling Gettleman, “I’m not
going to say I didn’t take advantage of the situation. I did.”
Cullerton will still collect a $2 million pension even after spending time in
federal prison for embezzlement. He’s one of eight former General Assembly
members to face federal charges in the past three years.
Cullerton sponsored a bill pushed by government worker unions to guarantee union
dominance by outlining union power in the Illinois Constitution. If voters Nov.
8 approve Amendment 1, also known as the “Workers Rights Amendment,” it would
guarantee a $2,100 property tax hike for the typical Illinois homeowner.
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The amendment would cement four new provisions into the
constitution that no other state allows. It would give unions a permanent right
to collective bargaining over not just benefits, but any topic they choose – a
power the Chicago Teachers Union has tried to wield to pursue its social agenda
on housing, immigration, “restorative justice,” wealth redistribution and
defunding the police.
Gettleman said the amount of public corruption in Illinois is “depressing” and
hopes the sentence sends a message to elected officials throughout the state.
Cullerton can still legally run for office after completing his sentence. State
Rep. Curtis Tarver II, D-Chicago, tried to change that by introducing
legislation barring state officials with felony convictions from seeking office.
In the past 20 years, corruption has cost taxpayers over $10.6 billion in lost
economic growth, or more than $830 per Illinoisan. Illinois is ranked as the
nation’s second-most corrupt state.
State elected leaders and their cozy relationship with government unions have
driven much of the corruption, including empowering indicted former House
Speaker Mike Madigan. Amendment 1 would return much of the power government
unions lost when Madigan fell.
Cullerton was ordered to begin his sentence Sept. 13.
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