Ex-Speaker Madigan indicted on 22 public corruption counts
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[March 03, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
PETER HANCOCK
BETH HUNDSDORFER
& GRACE KINNICUTT
Capitol News Illinois
news@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Longtime Illinois House
Speaker Michael Madigan was indicted Wednesday by a federal grand jury
on 22 counts for allegedly using his position as the top House Democrat
to solicit “personal financial rewards” for himself and his associates,
according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Northern District of
Illinois.
The former leader of the Democratic Party served as Illinois House
speaker for all but two years from 1983 until his unseating in January
2021. Throughout that time he was widely viewed as a more powerful
political force than anyone in the state, including its governors.
Now, Madigan, 79, is accused of “nearly a decade” of running “a criminal
enterprise whose purpose was to enhance Madigan’s political power and
financial well-being while also generating income for his political
allies and associates,” according to a news release from the
Chicago-area U.S. attorney’s office.
“The indictment alleges a long-term, multifaceted scheme to use public
positions for unlawful gain, including no-show or low-show jobs for
Madigan's political workers and private gain for Madigan himself,” U.S.
Attorney John Lausch, whose office led the investigation, said at a news
conference. “The schemes describe involvement of a leader of state
government, one of his close confidantes, top management of a large
public utility, consultants and others.”
Madigan’s longtime confidante, Michael McClain, whose home was raided by
the FBI in May 2019 in what was one of the first public acts of a
long-running federal investigation, was also named in the indictment.
McClain, who was at one time a lobbyist for utility giant Commonwealth
Edison, “carried out illegal activities at Madigan’s behest,” according
to Lausch’s office.
Madigan, widely known as the state’s most careful politician, famously
avoided use of electronic communications such as email and cellphones.
Laush did not directly answer a question as to whether wiretaps were
used in investigating the ex-speaker.
“We use all the investigative tools that we can…Those aren't spelled out
specifically in the indictment,” he said. “But what you do have are
words that are used in conversations. You do have words that are used in
documents or on emails that are spelled out throughout the indictment.
And that's the core of our evidence in this case. It's the words that
are spoken by people. It is the things that show up on documents, and
those are the things that actually formed the basis for the charges that
we brought.”
It was July 2020 when Lausch’s office first made clear that Madigan was
the subject of investigative activity without mentioning the former
speaker by name.
At that time, the “the Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives
and the longest serving member of the House of Representatives” was
named as “Public Official A” in a deferred prosecution agreement in
which utility giant Commonwealth Edison admitted to a yearslong bribery
scheme.
While the name “Michael Madigan” didn’t appear in the 38-page DPA, the
court document made clear that ComEd’s bribery scheme involved hiring
close associates of the former speaker to win his support for
legislation that was favorable to the company.
In May 2021, Madigan’s former chief of staff, Tim Mapes, was indicted on
obstruction of justice and lying under oath charges.
Now, Madigan’s name appears atop a 106-page indictment, along with
McClain’s, charging the ex-speaker with 22 counts that include
racketeering and wire fraud charges, counts which by themselves could
lead to up to 20 years in prison, Lausch said.
According to the indictment, Madigan also used his position as
committeeman for Chicago’s 13th Ward, chairman of both the Illinois
Democratic Party and the 13th Ward Democratic Organization, and position
at the Chicago law firm of Madigan & Getzendanner to “further the goals
of the criminal enterprise.”
The U.S. attorney’s announcement that public corruption charges would be
forthcoming hit inboxes just before 2:30 p.m. Wednesday. While a news
conference was scheduled for 4:30 p.m. to announce the charges, Chicago
media began reporting Madigan would be the subject of the indictments
just before 3 p.m.
News quickly circulated throughout the Illinois State Capitol, where the
House was in session but the Senate was not. House business adjourned at
about 4 p.m.
Republicans were all smiles as they left the floor knowing their
longtime antagonist was the subject of the latest investigative
bombshell.
While some Democrats avoided the news media, new House Speaker, Emanuel
“Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, held an impromptu news conference outside his
offices, and a group of 19 House Democrats who refused to support
Madigan’s reelection as speaker in January 2021 met with members of the
news media as well.
House Republicans held their own news conference in the Capitol’s media
room, calling it a dark day in the history of Illinois politics.
“This indictment is the most sweeping public corruption charge and case
to hit Illinois in decades,” said House Minority Leader Jim Durkin, of
Western Springs. “The depth of this corruption that's alleged in the
indictment is truly breathtaking. But this is not just an indictment
against Michael Madigan. But it's an indictment against the Democrat
Party of Illinois that he ran for decades.”
Madigan first arrived in Springfield in 1970 as a delegate to the
constitutional convention that drafted the state’s current constitution.
That same year, he was elected to the Illinois House from what is now
the 22nd District on Chicago’s Southwest side.
He was first elected speaker in 1983 and served in that post for all but
two years in the 1990s until January 2021, the longest tenure of any
legislative leader in U.S. history. He resigned his House seat in
February 2021 and later stepped down as Democratic Party leader.
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Former House Speaker Michael Madigan, who was
indicted on 22 counts Wednesday by a federal grand jury, is pictured
in a file photo from the Illinois Democratic County Chairs
Association brunch in 2019. (Capitol News Illinois file photo by
Jerry Nowicki)
Throughout the recent controversy and investigative activity that led to
his indictment, Madigan has fiercely denied wrongdoing.
In July 2020, after being named in the ComEd court documents, Madigan
said in a statement he “accepted subpoenas” to his office but denied
wrongdoing.
“He will cooperate and respond to those requests for documents, which he
believes will clearly demonstrate that he has done nothing criminal or
improper,” according to the statement distributed by Maura Possley of
the BoycePossley firm at the time.
“The speaker has never helped someone find a job with the expectation
that the person would not be asked to perform work by their employer,
nor did he ever expect to provide anything to a prospective employer if
it should choose to hire a person he recommended. He has never made a
legislative decision with improper motives and has engaged in no
wrongdoing here. Any claim to the contrary is unfounded,” Possley said
in the emailed statement.
Republicans in the General Assembly tried unsuccessfully to use evidence
outlined in the ComEd documents to begin proceedings to oust him in
2020. The investigative committee in charge of deciding whether to bring
a formal complaint, led by Welch, a Madigan loyalist who is now House
speaker, deadlocked on the question.
While he wasn’t ousted by the committee, when the House met to choose
its new speaker for the General Assembly beginning in 2021, Madigan
failed to gain the requisite support in his caucus for another term.
Democrats ultimately decided on Welch as his replacement from a handful
of challengers.
On Wednesday after the indictment, Welch began his public remarks by
addressing his role as the chair of that committee.
“Let me begin by first saying that, as the former chair of the Special
Investigating Committee, I said all along, during the course of that
process, that I thought that there was a more appropriate forum to deal
with the things that we had been hearing in the public domain,” he said
in a news conference outside his Capitol office. “And I thought that
forum was the United States Attorney's Office. The United States
Attorney's Office has all the resources that it needs to properly and
thoroughly investigate allegations of corruption. I knew that all
along.”
Welch said the House has passed ethics reforms since he became speaker
and hired a new legislative inspector general. He said he believed he
led the investigating committee “openly, honestly and fairly.”
“And we're going to continue to do that,” he said. “And I think here in
the last 13 months, you can speak to our colleagues on both sides of the
aisle. I've done it my way. The Chris Welch way. The only way I know
how. And it's a new day in Springfield.”
Rep. Stephanie Kifowit, D-Oswego, one of the first Democratic
challengers to announce her bid to unseat Madigan as speaker toward the
end of 2020, held her own news conference on the Capitol rotunda.
She said she made up her mind to challenge Madigan when he was named
Public Official A in the ComEd document. She said the justice system
“will do what it has to do” when Madigan has his day in court.
“I was honored to build and to be a part of a coalition of 19
individuals that did not support him,” Kifowit said. “The Democratic
Party put Illinois first when we voted in a new speaker, when we voted
in Emanuel “Chris” Welch as our speaker of this General Assembly.”
The other 18 House Democrats who stood against Madigan joined Kifowit
for a Capitol news conference late Wednesday as well.
“The possibility that this day was coming and would distract us from our
work on behalf of the people we serve was top of mind for many of us as
we took this position, even as we faced intense pressure to maintain the
status quo,” Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago, said at the news conference.
Gov. JB Pritzker called the indictment “a condemnation of a system
infected with promises of pay-to-play.”
“The era of corruption and self-dealing among Illinois politicians must
end,” he said in the statement. “The conduct alleged in this indictment
is deplorable and a stark violation of the public’s trust. Michael
Madigan must be held accountable to the fullest extent of the law.”
The governor called the indictment an “important step to cleaning up
Illinois” and said he has faith in the justice system.
“When I ran for office, I made clear that I would be beholden to no one,
and that I would serve the best interests of the people of Illinois,” he
said. “I have upheld that vow. For the past three years, my
administration has made clear that such abuses will not be tolerated,
and we’ve tightened our ethics laws. I will continue to work with the
General Assembly to restore the public’s trust.”
U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly, who was chosen as Madigan’s successor as the
state’s Democratic Party of Illinois chair, urged Madigan to step down
as a state central committeeman from the 3rd Congressional District.
“The DPI is committed to building a party that is more transparent, more
diverse, and more inclusive in everything we do,” she said in a
statement. “Today’s announcement is a stark reminder that elected
leaders must hold themselves to the highest ethical standards. We will
observe the legal process as it unfolds, but there can be no tolerance
of anyone guilty of violating the public trust.”
Senate President Don Harmon issued a short statement calling the
allegations “disturbing.”
“I have confidence in our system of justice. Like everyone else, I will
be watching to see how this unfolds,” he said.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering
state government and distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide.
It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
R. McCormick Foundation. |