Jury selection begins next week in corruption trial of former Speaker
Madigan
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[October 05, 2024]
By Hannah Meisel
CHICAGO – Jury selection will begin next week in the corruption trial of
former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, whose half-century career
and status as Illinois’ most powerful politician ended nearly four years
ago as the feds circled ever-closer to his inner circle.
The 82-year-old ex-speaker faces 24 counts of bribery and racketeering —
along with his longtime friend and powerful Springfield lobbyist Mike
McClain — in a case that frames Madigan’s power in government, politics
and as a partner in his law firm as a criminal enterprise.
The trial, which is scheduled to last through mid-December, is the
culmination of more than a decade of digging by the FBI and prosecutors,
and it’s the final in a series of related cases that have played out in
Chicago’s federal courthouse over the last few years.
The feds have already won convictions and guilty pleas from many in
Madigan’s orbit, including McClain. He and three former executives for
electric utility Commonwealth Edison were found guilty last year in a
case accusing them of bribing Madigan with jobs and do-nothing contracts
for the speaker’s political allies in order to grease the wheels for
legislation favorable to ComEd.
Some of those political allies who got contracts at ComEd and
telecommunications giant AT&T Illinois have faced tax evasion charges
and are either serving or have already completed prison sentences.
Also last year, the former speaker’s longtime and extremely loyal chief
of staff Tim Mapes was convicted on two counts of perjury and attempted
obstruction of justice for lying to a grand jury investigating Madigan
and his inner circle.
Most recently, however, a jury last month deadlocked in the trial of
former AT&T Illinois president Paul La Schiazza, who was accused of
bribing Madigan via a do-nothing job for the speaker’s political ally in
2017. Arguments for his acquittal are scheduled for next month.
Though that trial’s outcome was a hopeful development for Madigan, it’s
unclear if it will have any bearing on the former speaker’s own case,
which is much larger and more complex.
Madigan’s trial, which was originally scheduled for this past spring,
was delayed while the U.S. Supreme Court considered a case that dealt
with federal bribery statute. That decision, issued in June, narrowed
the definition of “bribery” in federal criminal law to exclude
“gratuities” — a gift given to a politician after an “official act” —
and said that the “timing of the agreement is the key, not the timing of
the payment.”
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Former House Speaker Michael Madigan exits the Dirksen Federal
Courthouse in Chicago on Jan. 3. (Capitol News Illinois photo by
Andrew Adams)
In response to the ruling, Madigan’s lawyers asked U.S. District Judge
John Blakey to dismiss some of the bribery charges in the case, claiming
prosecutors failed to allege a “quid pro quo” occurred between the
former speaker and entities like ComEd and AT&T.
But Blakey this week sided with prosecutors, who have pursued a
so-called “stream of benefits” legal theory, wherein a pattern of
corrupt exchanges over a long period of time is proof enough of a quid
pro quo, even if there’s no smoking gun evidence of a handshake deal.
“Contrary to Defendants’ characterization, the indictment does not
merely allege that ComEd hired certain individuals recommended by
Madigan and that, during the same time period, Madigan happened to vote
in favor of certain legislation affecting ComEd,” Blakey wrote in his
order Wednesday. “Rather, it explicitly alleges that Madigan performed
official acts related to legislation affecting ComEd in exchange for
ComEd’s hiring of certain individuals.”
Blakey this summer made a series of pretrial decisions for the Madigan
case, which will be one of the most high-profile political corruption
cases this century, along with last year’s trial of Chicago Ald. Ed
Burke and former Govs. Rod Blagojevich and George Ryan.
Because of the high-profile nature of the case, Blakey has laid out a
schedule for jury selection that will take at least four days, beginning
with an extensive questionnaire for the 180 prospective jurors. And when
questioning of the jury pool begins on Wednesday, no names will be used
and news media will be barred from the courtroom, only able to watch via
an overflow room elsewhere in the courthouse.
Opening statements in the case are likely to begin on Monday, Oct. 15,
though Blakey this week said jury selection should take as long as it
needs. The trial is scheduled through Dec. 13.
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by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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