Ex-Madigan aide sentenced to 30 months in prison for obstruction of
justice attempt, perjury
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[February 13, 2024]
By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com
CHICAGO – For most of his adult working life, Tim Mapes only had one
boss: former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan.
And for the more than 25 years he served as Madigan’s chief of staff,
Mapes was known for his extreme loyalty to the powerful speaker. His
office décor in the state Capitol in Springfield featured a sign
inspired by the 1939 classic film “The Wizard of Oz” that read: “Nobody
gets in to see the wizard. Not nobody, not no how.”
But federal prosecutors say that instinct toward loyalty in his longtime
role as gatekeeper to the speaker led Mapes to lie to a grand jury in
2021, a few months after Madigan left office amid a growing criminal
probe into his inner circle.
And on Monday, U.S. District Judge John Kness agreed, telling Mapes he
didn’t understand the longtime political operative’s actions before
sentencing him to 30 months in prison for his August conviction on one
count each of perjury and attempted obstruction of justice.
“Perhaps this was out of some sense of loyalty, but if that was the
case, your loyalty was greatly misguided,” Kness said.
Mapes, who didn't testify in his own defense during trial, chose to make
a statement before the judge handed down his sentence, saying he was
proud of the decades he put into public service in Illinois government.
But Mapes was also self-aware, having seen two governors and many other
politicians indicted, convicted and sentenced to prison during his time
in Springfield.
“I also recognize that many people in the state of Illinois have lost
faith in their government,” Mapes said. “And that breaks my heart.”
'Protect the boss’
Flanked by his attorneys, Mapes stood stoically receiving the news of
his sentence, which was preceded by more than 30 minutes of
near-monologue from the judge.
Kness wondered aloud if Mapes was operating under the old mafia logic of
“omertà,” an Italian term for the mob honor code wherein members of
organized crime outfits were pressured to solve disputes among
themselves and to never cooperate with law enforcement. During trial, a
retired FBI special agent testified that Madigan ran his political
organization almost like “the head of a mafia family.”
“I have to say the law of omertà had no place in that grand jury room,”
Kness said. “And now you will pay a price for it.”
Prosecutors have frequently claimed that Mapes could have been a star
witness in the government’s probe but chose to tank his own grand jury
interview instead.
“(Mapes) was evasive, he was non-responsive and he flat-out lied,”
Assistant U.S. Attorney Julia Schwartz said in closing arguments last
year. “He did it to protect the boss and stay in the foxhole.”
Both “protect the boss” and “stay in the foxhole” were nods to phrases
heard throughout trial. Many witnesses who worked alongside Madigan
testified “protect the boss” was a common refrain for those who worked
under the speaker, and it was also heard on wiretapped calls played for
the jury.
Kness said he took Mapes’ age – 69 – into account in sentencing him but
said the other factors in the case played a larger role, including the
message a multi-year sentence would send to elected officials and the
general public.
“The people of this state cry out for accountability,” Kness said. “A
wise person I once knew said, ‘accountability is liberating.’ That may
not mean much to you right now, but I think it might down the road.”
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Former political insider Tim Mapes and his wife Bronwyn Rains exit
the Dirksen Federal Courthouse in downtown Chicago on Monday after
Mapes was sentenced to 30 months in prison for perjury and attempted
obstruction of justice. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew
Adams)
Mapes began working for the Illinois House in 1977, a couple years after
his graduation from Western Illinois University. Madigan wouldn’t become
speaker until 1983, but Mapes continued to climb the ranks within House
staff until Madigan tapped him as chief of staff in 1992.
Mapes built upon his position as chief of staff, taking over as director
of the Democratic Party of Illinois under Madigan’s chairmanship later
that decade, and serving as clerk of the Illinois House for the last
seven years of his career.
But all three roles ended abruptly in 2018 when, at the height of the #MeToo
movement, a House staffer accused Mapes of sexual harassment and
bullying. It was the third accusation made against a member of Madigan’s
top deputies that year, and the speaker responded by demanding Mapes’
resignation.
In the summer of 2020, the prosecutors announced electric utility
Commonwealth Edison had entered into a $200 million deferred prosecution
agreement and agreed to cooperate with the feds’ investigation into an
alleged bribery scheme aimed at currying favor with Madigan.
Several months later, Madigan’s close confidant and ComEd’s longtime top
contract lobbyist Mike McClain was indicted for orchestrating the
alleged bribes, along with the utility’s former CEO and two other
ex-lobbyists. Emails and wiretapped phone calls shown at trial also
established Mapes’ close relationship with McClain, though attorneys for
Mapes attempted to minimize their friendship to the jury.
Against this backdrop, Mapes sat for the grand jury in March 2021 after
having been put under an immunity order, meaning he wouldn’t be charged
with any wrongdoing related to the criminal probe into Madigan’s inner
circle. However, Mapes was warned multiple times that if he lied under
oath, he’d be charged.
Two months later, he was.
On Monday, Kness said Mapes’ case was “very sad,” and especially
“aggravating” because Mapes was placed under immunity.
“Whatever compulsion you felt to protect Michael McClain and the former
speaker of the House, Mr. Madigan, as far as I can tell was not
reciprocated…and was not necessary,” the judge said. “You were
immunized. You had no personal risk in going to the grand jury other
than you didn’t tell the truth. And that’s what you did.”
McClain was convicted along with his three co-defendants in the ComEd
bribery case in May, and also awaits trial alongside Madigan in October
on related racketeering and bribery charges.
Mapes will report to prison on June 11, though a facility assignment was
not immediate. Before Kness gaveled out Monday’s hearing, Mapes’
attorney asked that he be sent to a federal prison in Pensacola,
Florida, as his family would be able to visit him on trips nearby.
Asked for comment as he emerged from the conference room he’d retreated
to after the sentencing hearing, Mapes shook his head and gave a
thumbs-down signal to reporters as he walked across the hall to a men’s
bathroom. He later left the building with his wife, exiting quickly past
cameras waiting in the courthouse lobby.
Capitol News Illinois is
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