With feds citing ‘extensive cooperation,’ judge gives ex-Sen. Terry Link
3 years’ probation
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[March 07, 2024]
By HANNAH MEISEL
& DILPREET RAJU
news@capitolnewsillinois.com
CHICAGO – On an August day in 2019, then-Democratic state Sen. Terry
Link stood outside of a suburban Wendy’s and solicited a bribe from his
colleague in the Illinois House.
“What’s in it for me, though?” Link asked then-state Rep. Luis Arroyo,
who’d asked to meet up to discuss a type of video gaming machine that
Arroyo had been lobbying to legalize.
But Link – the two-decade veteran of the General Assembly and former
poker buddy of then-state Sen. Barack Obama – was wearing a wire. He’d
been acting as a cooperating witness after the feds accused him of
illegally spending campaign money on personal expenses and filing false
tax returns to cover it up. He wasn’t officially charged until August
2020 and pleaded guilty to the single count the following month.
Because of that cooperation, a federal judge on Wednesday handed Link a
lenient sentence of three years’ probation, matching what prosecutors
recommended last week. The feds had advised probation due to Link’s
“extensive cooperation,” prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memorandum,
and asked that he pay nearly $83,000 in restitution, which U.S. District
Judge Mary Rowland ordered.
During the brief sentencing hearing at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse,
the 76-year-old Link made a public apology. Speaking slowly and with a
tremor borne of a neurological condition that has worsened since he left
office in 2020, Link said he’d made a mistake and “did not intend to
cheat the government.”
“I accept responsibility for what happened,” Link said tearfully. “Do I
feel bad about it? I feel horrible about it.”
He went on to say he’d never been “an affluent person” and never would
be, casting himself as a generous person.
“If I had a dollar in my pocket, I'd give you the dollar,” Link said.
Rowland said she’d agreed to the government’s recommendation for
probation and restitution, but she wondered aloud how to “send a message
to the next generation” of public officials that corruption “is not how
we do business.”
“While I appreciate your tax crime was not directly related to your
duties, it's a terrible message to hear that someone in public service
is not paying their taxes,” Rowland said.
In June, Link was the government’s star witness in the trial of Jimmy
Weiss, a politically connected businessman charged with bribing both
Link and Arroyo. Weiss had been pushing for the legalization of
“sweepstakes machines,” a close cousin of the heavily regulated and
taxed video gaming terminals found in bars, restaurants and standalone
video gambling cafes across Illinois.
Arroyo is currently serving a 57-month prison sentence after eventually
pleading guilty to both bribing Link and accepting bribes from Weiss,
who’d been paying him to “lobby” for the machines beginning in 2018. But
Weiss proceeded to trial and a jury convicted him of all seven counts of
bribery and lying to the FBI. In the fall, he was sentenced to 66 months
in prison.
On the stand, Link told the jury that he’d agreed to become a
cooperating witness after being approached by the FBI about his taxes.
He was concise when a prosecutor asked him to explain his crime.
“Underreported my income tax,” Link said, adding that he did so “I wanna
say (from) 2012 or 2013 to about 2016.”
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FBI surveillance footage shows then-state Sen. Terry Link, D-Vernon
Hills, speaking with then-state Rep. Luis Arroyo, D-Chicago, outside
a Wendy's in Highland Park in August 2019. Link had been wearing a
wire when Arroyo offered him a bribe. (Photo submitted as evidence
in federal trial of James Weiss)
Some of the money Link had illegally used from his campaign account went
to help a longtime friend who had been in the throes of family and
business problems, he said in June. But not all of it.
“I used some of it for gambling,” Link admitted at the time, although it
was not mentioned Wednesday.
Link’s attorney did note Wednesday that the friend to whom Link loaned
money has since died, never having repaid the money.
After Arroyo’s arrest in late October 2019, Link falsely denied reports
that he was the unnamed cooperating witness described in his colleague’s
charging documents.
Earlier that year, Link had finally achieved his decadeslong ambition to
bring a casino to his native Waukegan as part of a long-fought expansion
of Illinois’ gambling industry. Link got emotional on the Senate floor
before his colleagues’ final vote to approve the massive piece of
legislation.
The gambling expansion law, however, did not include any language about
the sweepstakes machines, which operate in a legal gray area and have
been neither outlawed nor regulated in Illinois.
Arroyo made a last-minute play to include the sweepstakes machines in
the larger bill. But Link rebuffed him, testifying during trial last
year that he’d told Arroyo to “get the f--- out of here” after his
colleague approached him on the Senate floor.
A few months later, at the FBI’s behest, Link called Arroyo and
apologized for blowing up at him in the waning days of legislative
session. With the FBI listening in, Link suggested the two meet to talk
about the sweepstakes machines.
When Link met with Arroyo at a Highland Park Wendy’s a couple weeks
later, Weiss was in tow to explain his sweepstakes machine business and
make the case for legalizing the devices. Link then asked Arroyo to step
outside the restaurant to talk. Despite assuring him that it was “you
and I talking,” Link was secretly wearing an FBI recording device, with
agents sitting in vehicles nearby taking photos of the interaction.
When Link asked what was in it for him, Arroyo responded that Weiss had
been paying him as a consultant and implied Link could receive a similar
payout. At a subsequent meeting, Arroyo gave Link a $2,500 check, which
was to be the first in a series of monthly installments, saying “this is
the jackpot.”
Arroyo was arrested two months later.
In sentencing Link on Wednesday, Judge Rowland noted the bevy of
corruption trials the federal courthouse has seen in recent years, which
will continue this year with the trial of former Illinois House Speaker
Michael Madigan.
She said Link’s case painted a picture of Springfield as a place where
someone can walk up to an elected official and ask for a bill to be
passed “and on a dime you could say, ‘What’s in it for me?’ and we’d be
off to the races with a federal case?”
“That’s despicable,” Rowland said.
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