Emails shown at trial detail Madigan world’s response to 2018 sexual
harassment scandal
Send a link to a friend
[August 17, 2023]
By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com
CHICAGO – In early 2018, longtime Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan
was facing a sexual harassment scandal that his closest advisors worried
could doom his political future.
A 28-year-old Democratic campaign operative named Alaina Hampton had
publicly accused Madigan of mishandling complaints that another top
political staffer within the speaker’s close orbit had made unwanted
advances and sent her inappropriate text messages. Hours before
Hampton’s story went public, Madigan fired the staffer, who was the
brother of Madigan ally and Chicago 13th Ward Ald. Marty Quinn.
It was the height of the #MeToo movement, and members of Madigan’s inner
circle were worried Hampton’s allegations would jeopardize his ability
to get re-elected as House speaker.
“If we want to protect and save MJM we cannot play punchy bags above the
belt,” influential Springfield lobbyist and longtime Madigan confidant
Mike McClain wrote in a February 2018 email to four people close to the
speaker, using the initials for Michael J. Madigan. “It is time to be
offensive.”
McClain’s email, written eight days after Hampton called a press
conference to make her allegations public, suggested Madigan’s inner
circle feed stories to reporters about three others in Springfield who
had rumored #MeToo issues of their own. The three names were redacted
when the email shown to a federal jury on Tuesday, but they included a
lawmaker who had allegedly used his “open marriage” to hit on women.
“We cannot lose him,” McClain wrote of Madigan. “We cannot give Illinois
to these guys. So, we have to play sort of by their rules.”
‘What do we do with this panel?’
The email was introduced as evidence in the trial of longtime Madigan
chief of staff Tim Mapes, who was charged with perjury and obstruction
of justice after allegedly lying to a grand jury investigating Madigan
and his inner circle. Prosecutors say Mapes’ answers that he didn’t
recall or didn’t know that McClain had been informally doing
“assignments” for Madigan were implausible given the closeness of the
three men – at least until Mapes was forced to resign after his own
sexual harassment allegations in June 2018.
Madigan and McClain will stand trial on bribery and racketeering charges
in April. In May, a federal jury convicted McClain and three others for
their roles in orchestrating a bribery scheme in which electric utility
Commonwealth Edison offered jobs and contracts for Madigan associates in
exchange for favorable legislation.
On the witness stand Tuesday, lobbyist and longtime Madigan staffer Will
Cousineau – one of the four recipients of McClain’s email – confirmed
the speaker’s inner circle spent a lot of time in 2018 strategizing
about how to mitigate harm to Madigan in the wake of Hampton’s
accusations. Cousineau said those around Madigan were afraid he’d lose
his speakership.
As dire as the situation was, however, Cousineau said Tuesday that he
didn’t believe Madigan’s advisors “ever took up any of these ideas.”
Instead, shortly after Hampton made her allegations public, Madigan was
forced to oust another longtime operative after female Democratic House
members and former candidates accused him of bullying.
Facing a growing issue, Madigan – in his capacity as chair of the
Democratic Party of Illinois – appointed three women to head up the
party’s “Anti-Harassment, Equality and Access Panel.” The panel was
tasked with making recommendations for campaigns, which pose unique
human resources issues due to their small staff sizes and seasonal
nature.
Madigan critics questioned the panel’s independence from the outset. So
early on, the three women – U.S. Rep. Cheri Bustos, D-17, Comptroller
Susana Mendoza and state Rep. Carol Ammons, D-Urbana – sent a public
letter to Madigan saying they needed to be “completely independent from
any oversight,” which included rejecting any resources the party
offered.
“To that end, we will establish an independent funding mechanism to pay
for the staff, research, legal and human resources expertise necessary
to develop an effective and fact-based set of recommendations,” the
letter read. “We will hire our own staff without input from the
Democratic Party of Illinois.”
Despite that request for independence, an email from McClain sent in
March 2018 showed he had a gameplan for how to exert influence over the
panel, including sending a letter offering fundraising, support and
ideas for how the panel should operate.
It’s unclear whether McClain’s ideas gained traction, but in an early
May 2018 call played for the jury on Monday, Madigan expressed
frustration that Bustos – acting on legal advice at the congressional
level – resigned from the panel, and without the speaker’s input, the
other two women appointed then state Sen. Melinda Bush, D-Grayslake.
Bush had been outspoken in her criticisms of Madigan, and as a member of
the state Senate, was further from the speaker’s influence.
[to top of second column]
|
Former House Speaker Michael Madigan
(middle), confidant Mike McClain (left) and longtime chief of staff
Tim Mapes are pictured in Capitol News Illinois file photos. Email
exchanges between Mapes and McClain pertaining to Madigan were shown
to a federal jury Tuesday in Mapes' perjury trial. (Capitol News
Illinois photos by Andrew Adams and Jerry Nowicki)
“I had wanted to talk this afternoon about well, what do we do with this
panel?” Madigan said on a conference call with five close advisors,
including Mapes and McClain. “What do we do with it? Do we do anything
with it? Do we just let it go and go and go?”
Later in the call, longtime Madigan spokesman Steve Brown warned the
media would pick up on any clues that the speaker was interfering with
the panel’s work, and the sexual harassment allegations against
Madigan’s organization would be rehashed.
“I’m trying to get my head around the idea that some other entity crops
up and it's not portrayed as an effort to supplant, derail whatever
Mendoza's supposed to be doing,” Brown said.
In the end, the panel established itself as a 501(c)4 nonprofit and held
a series of hearings around the state. In September 2018, the panel
produced a final 36-page report detailing suggestions for political
campaigns, including a model anti-harassment policy, intertwined with
anonymized quotes and anecdotes from campaign staffers.
“The women we heard from on our statewide listening tour confirmed the
old boys’ club culture, a product of decades of institutionalized sexism
and racism, is alive and well in Illinois politics,” the report began.
Contradictory tapes
Also on Tuesday, prosecutors played nearly half of Mapes’ more than
two-hour testimony in front of the grand jury in 2021.
Government attorneys were seeking to show the jury the direct
contradictions between what Mapes said in testimony and what he said on
phone calls with McClain that neither of the men knew were wiretapped.
In a pair of calls from 2018, Mapes and McClain spoke about state Rep.
Bob Rita, D-Blue Island, who had been getting assistance from McClain in
the yearslong effort to massively expand gambling in Illinois.
“Did you talk to Rita today, this week?” Mapes asked McClain in August
2018.
“I talked to him this week, yeah,” McClain replied.
Prosecutors immediately followed that recording by playing a section of
Mapes’ grand jury testimony where he denied knowing that McClain was in
contact with Rita at any point after McClain’s retirement from lobbying
in late 2016.
Asked if McClain knew Rita, Mapes demurred.
“Oh, I’m sure he did,” Mapes told the grand jury. “He was a member of
the House for 15 or 20 years.”
And asked directly whether he was “aware of any contact between” McClain
and Rita, Mapes said he wasn’t.
“I don’t recall any at all,” Mapes said. “Any dialogue.”
Mapes was also asked whether he knew of anyone close to Madigan who was
on friendly terms with John Hooker, a lobbyist for ComEd.
“I don’t recall any today,” Mapes said.
In the so-called “ComEd Four” trial this spring, Hooker and McClain were
co-defendants. Hooker even testified that after three decades of
friendship with McClain, he called him his “brother from another
mother.”
Mapes also denied to the grand jury knowing that McClain was in contact
with former state Rep. Lou Lang in the three years after McClain
officially retired as a lobbyist.
“You don’t recall any information that would suggest that Mr. McClain
and Mr. Lang were in contact during that time period, is that fair to
say?” Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu asked Mapes.
“Correct,” Mapes replied.
Lang, who’s expected to testify on Wednesday, also testified in this
spring’s ComEd case and vehemently denied sexual harassment allegations
that were lobbed against him nearly five years earlier.
During his testimony in March, prosecutors played a wiretapped phone
call in which McClain suggested he was speaking on Madigan’s behalf when
he asked Lang to consider retiring.
“So this is no longer me talking,” McClain said in that November 2018
call. “I’m an agent of somebody that cares deeply about you, who thinks
that you really oughta move on.”
The trial continues at 9 a.m. Wednesday.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to hundreds of
print and broadcast outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the
Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along
with major contributions from the Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and
Southern Illinois Editorial Association
|