Former Sen. Tom Cullerton pleads guilty to embezzlement
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[March 09, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Former state Sen. Tom
Cullerton pleaded guilty Tuesday to one count of embezzlement and could
face more than a year in federal prison.
During a plea hearing in federal court in Chicago, Cullerton admitted
that he received pay and benefits from the Teamsters Joint Council 25
during 2015 while doing little or no work for the union. In addition to
his salary, prosecutors alleged, Cullerton also received bonuses and
health care benefits.
Cullerton, a Villa Park Democrat, was indicted in 2019 on 40 counts of
embezzlement – one for each biweekly paycheck he received from January
2015 through January 2016, a period of time when he also served in the
Illinois Senate.
The indictment was one element of a sprawling federal investigation into
public corruption led by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern
District of Illinois. Other lawmakers indicted in the sweep included
former Sen. Martin Sandoval, who is now deceased, former Rep. Luis
Arroyo and, most recently, former House Speaker Michael Madigan. All
three are Chicago Democrats.
According to court documents, Cullerton, a one-time chairman of the
Senate Labor Committee, had been a member of the Teamsters Union Local
734 when he drove a truck for Hostess Brands until November 2012 when
the company filed for bankruptcy. That was the same year he was elected
to the state Senate.
In March 2013, according to the indictment, John Coli, president of the
Teamsters Joint Council 25, the local union’s parent organization, hired
Cullerton as a union organizer. He received a salary, a car and
telephone allowances and bonuses from the council, which also continued
contributing to his health care and retirement benefits through the
local union.
On July 30, 2019, two days before Cullerton was indicted, Coli pleaded
guilty to other, unrelated federal charges and agreed to cooperate with
other investigations.
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Tom Cullerton, D-Villa Park, is pictured in an
Illinois Senate committee. He pleaded guilty Tuesday to a federal
charge of embezzlement. (Credit: Lee Milner, Illinois Times)
The indictment also alleged that Cullerton “repeatedly failed to respond
to efforts by his supervisors at Teamsters Joint Council 25 to contact
him and routinely ignored their requests that he perform the job
functions of an organizer, as was required of other organizers employed
by Teamsters Joint Council 25.”
After his indictment, Cullerton was removed as chairman of the Labor
Committee, but he continued to serve in the Senate and repeatedly denied
any wrongdoing. His case was delayed for more than two years due to the
COVID-19 pandemic which interrupted many federal court proceedings.
In October 2021, Cullerton’s attorneys filed a motion to dismiss the
charges , but a judge denied that motion in December. Then last month,
Cullerton resigned his Senate seat and his lawyer announced that he
would change his plea.
The charge carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison. But
according to a plea agreement, prosecutors said that based on his lack
of any previous criminal history, sentencing guidelines would call for
12-18 months imprisonment, in addition to any supervised release, fine
and restitution the court might impose.
As part of the plea agreement, Cullerton agreed to pay restitution of
$248,828. That includes $247,179.37 to the Teamsters Local Union 734’s
Health and Welfare fund, plus $1,648.63 for the paycheck he received on
Jan. 15, 2015.
The agreement also calls on Cullerton to pay $25,000 of that amount
within the next 30 days, in exchange for which prosecutors agreed not to
seek forfeiture of his Villa Park residence.
Formal sentencing has been set for June 21.
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
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