Madigan trial delayed until October for SCOTUS review of bribery statute
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[January 04, 2024]
By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com
CHICAGO – Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan won’t be
spending his 82nd birthday in a federal courtroom this spring after a
judge on Wednesday granted his request to delay his bribery and
racketeering trial originally set to begin April 1.
Madigan claimed the small victory while appearing in court for the first
time since he was indicted nearly two years ago, opting to show up in
person to a hearing at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse Wednesday
afternoon despite having been granted permission to appear via
videoconference. Sporting a black suit and royal blue tie, the former
speaker spoke only once during the hearing.
“Yes I do, your honor,” Madigan said in reply to U.S. District Judge
Robert Blakey’s question as to whether he consented to the trial’s
rescheduling to Oct. 8.
The trial is now scheduled for several months after the U.S. Supreme
Court is expected to weigh in on the case of a northwest Indiana mayor
convicted under the same federal bribery statutes at play in Madigan’s
case. Attorneys for the former speaker and his codefendant argued the
high court’s ruling could affect the outcome of Madigan’s case.
Blakey agreed during the hourlong hearing, likening the risk of going to
trial prior to the Supreme Court’s expected June ruling to stepping on a
Lego brick.
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“I’d go, ‘George! I thought I told you to pick up the Legos!’” Blakey
said, recounting telling his then-young son to clean up his toys. “And
he’d say, ‘Eh, I picked up most of them.’”
Blakey acknowledged that while only a third of the 23 charges Madigan is
facing could be affected by the high court’s ruling and posited that no
parties involved want to “walk into a dark room with no shoes on” and be
thrown a Lego by the Supreme Court.
Most critically, Blakey said, delaying the trial until after the Supreme
Court’s ruling would avoid the possibility of having to redo the entire
trial, which he said would be a waste of everyone’s resources.
Government prosecutors opposed the delay, but in a filing Tuesday
evening offered that they’d be willing to reevaluate jury instructions
if the high court had not ruled by the time the case was nearing a close
in late spring.
But Blakey rejected that solution, saying the “critical juncture” for
clarity on what the federal bribery statute says does not occur during
jury instructions. Rather, he said, it occurs even before opening
statements begin, as attorneys on both sides prepare for trial.
“You’re absolutely right: there’s a bunch of the case that won’t be
affected,” he said. “But there’s enough of the case that’s going to be
affected that it might require retrial.”
The case at issue on the Supreme Court’s docket is a review of a 2021
conviction of a northwest Indiana mayor who accepted $13,000 from a
company that had recently won contracts to sell garbage trucks to the
city. The high court accepted the case last month and is expected to
clarify whether “gratuities” are the same as bribes, even if there’s no
quid pro quo agreement in place.
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Former House Speaker Michael Madigan exits the Dirksen Federal
Courthouse in Chicago Wednesday afternoon. A judge granted Madigan’s
motion to delay his bribery and racketeering trial from April 1 to
Oct. 8, after the U.S. Supreme Court’s review of another bribery
case. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew Adams)
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Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu pointed out that prosecutors in
the Northern District of Illinois are overseeing that case, which stems
from Portage, Indiana, about 20 miles east of the Illinois border.
“When you corruptly solicit a payment…an actual quid pro quo isn’t
required,” Bhachu maintained during Wednesday’s hearing.
But Federal appeals courts have split on the issue, and Madigan has
already attempted to have the case dismissed on similar grounds, though
Blakey has yet to rule on that motion from last year.
Madigan was forced out of his 36-year reign as House Speaker in early
2021 as pressure grew from his own Democratic caucus after he was cited
as “Public Official A” in federal charging documents against electric
utility Commonwealth Edison and former top lobbyists and executives at
the company.
Prosecutors alleged ComEd bribed Madigan with jobs and contracts for his
political allies in exchange for favorable legislation in Springfield.
ComEd agreed to pay a $200 million fine as part of its resolution of the
legal action against it, while the company’s former CEO and three
ex-lobbyists fought the charges in a seven-week trial last spring. All
were ultimately convicted by a jury.
The four are still awaiting sentencing, which was originally scheduled
for January before being delayed due to court scheduling conflicts. Also
awaiting sentencing is the former ComEd executive who wore a wire
against his colleagues and became the government’s star witness in last
year’s trial
Madigan wasn’t indicted until March 2022, more than a year after he’d
stepped down from nearly every public office he’d held, including as
head of the state’s Democratic Party and the legislative seat he’d kept
for 50 years representing Chicago’s southwest side.
The indictment was largely a repackaging of allegations from the ComEd
cases, claiming Madigan and his codefendant – ComEd’s longtime top
outside lobbyist Mike McClain – ran a “criminal enterprise” via the
power Madigan had accumulated from his positions as both a political
power broker and name partner in a Chicago-based property tax law firm.
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In October 2022, the feds added an additional count alleging
telecommunications giant AT&T Illinois had been part of a bribery scheme
similar to ComEd’s, wherein the company allegedly gave jobs and
contracts to Madigan allies in exchange for favorable treatment in
Springfield. |