Madigan attorney urges acquittal, accusing feds of ‘shoving misshapen
puzzle pieces together’
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[January 25, 2025]
By Hannah Meisel
CHICAGO – After watching prosecutors spend more than 10 hours over three
days dissecting every element of the racketeering and bribery case
against former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, the defense on
Friday acknowledged the government’s presentation seemed “very
polished.”
“But it’s incomplete,” Madigan attorney Dan Collins said as he began his
own closing arguments summarizing the last three months of trial. “It’s
misleading. And on the most important points, it’s false.”
Collins told the jury that despite the “confident” way prosecutors
portrayed Madigan as having abused his various positions of power for
private gain, the government was relying on their own theories based on
a false persona applied to Madigan by his detractors over decades.
“In this case, ladies and gentlemen, the government sees the myth,”
Collins said after hearkening back to a nickname the jury heard earlier
in trial when a witness acknowledged colleagues called Madigan “sphinx”
after the mythical creature. “They do not see the man.”
And just as the feds depended on their own incomplete picture of the
longtime Democratic powerbroker, Collins claimed, they also “depend on
your cynicism,” he told the jury, referring to “the cynicism we have
around our public officials.”
Madigan had been the nation’s longest-serving legislative leader before
the feds’ swirling investigation helped force him into retirement in
2021. He had served in the General Assembly for five decades, and
reigned as House speaker for 36 years. Along the way, Madigan amassed
power through running his local political organization in his native
13th Ward on Chicago’s Southwest Side and chairing the state’s
Democratic Party for nearly half of his political career.
Outside of public office, Madigan was also the co-founder of a law firm
that specialized in property tax appeals for large commercial real
estate, including some of Chicago’s most recognizable high rises. Under
questioning from a government lawyer last week on the witness stand, the
former speaker’s longtime law partner agreed with the contention that
Madigan was the “rainmaker” for the firm, focused on bringing in new
clients.
Prosecutors allege Madigan abused those three power bases twisting them
into a “criminal enterprise” that served to preserve and enhance his
power as well as enrich both him and his allies.
The feds allege Madigan solicited and accepted bribes in the form of
jobs and contracts for his political allies at electric utility
Commonwealth Edison in exchange for helping several major ComEd-backed
laws along in Springfield from 2011 to 2019. Prosecutors also allege a
similar, albeit smaller scheme involving telecom giant AT&T Illinois in
2017 and 2018.
The feds also allege Madigan both solicited bribes from and offered
bribes to powerful Chicago Ald. Danny Solis’ in an effort to recruit
more real estate developers as clients to his law firm. That scheme ran
from 2017 until Solis was outed as an FBI cooperator by the Chicago
Sun-Times in 2019, the feds allege.
But Madigan didn’t run the alleged racketeering conspiracy by himself,
according to the feds. Prosecutors indicted Madigan’s longtime friend,
retired Springfield lobbyist Mike McClain, saying he acted as Madigan’s
agent and also helped facilitate certain acts of bribery charged in the
case.
“For Madigan and McClain, the corrupt way was the way it was – the way
it continued to be,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Diane MacArthur said as she
wrapped up her marathon closing arguments Friday morning.
“But that is not the way the law says it can be,” she continued, urging
the jury to return guilty verdicts on each of the counts the pair are
charged with.
‘Misshapen puzzle pieces’
Before trial broke for the weekend, Collins left the jury with a parting
thought on Solis, whom MacArthur had characterized as a “walking
microphone” during her presentation – a reference to the hundreds of
hours of secretly recorded conversations he gave feds access to during
his 2 ½ years as an FBI mole. Solis began cooperating with the
government in June 2016 after he was caught accepting bribes and abusing
his campaign funds.
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Former House Speaker Michael Madigan and former state Rep. Eddie
Acevedo are pictured outside the Dirksen Federal Courthouse during
Madigan’s ongoing trial. (Capitol News Illinois photos by Andrew
Adams)
After an out-of-the-blue call to Solis the following summer, the FBI’s
attention turned to Madigan, and the alderman began acting on agents’
orders when interacting with Madigan, Collins pointed out, acknowledging
the government is allowed to use deceptive techniques as part of an
investigation.
“He’s not a walking microphone,” Collins said. “He’s an actor in a stage
production. And he’s getting direction from the government so he can, in
turn, direct others.”
In that way, Collins said, Solis was a “walking crime wave,” and asked
the jury to picture the alderman-turned-FBI mole as “that small little
crack in your windshield that just keeps spreading and spreading and
spreading and won’t go away.”
Collins spent most of Friday afternoon attempting to poke holes in the
government’s presentation, beginning with the alleged AT&T bribery
conspiracy. A related trial that charged the company’s former president
with bribing Madigan ended in a hung jury in September, just weeks
before jury selection in the former speaker’s trial began.
The judge in that case refused to acquit former AT&T Illinois president
Paul La Schiazza and scheduled a retrial for June. But the single
AT&T-related charge – added to the indictment against Madigan and
McClain more than six months after they were initially charged in March
2022 – is still seen as the most vulnerable to defense arguments.
The feds allege that after three failed attempts over six years, AT&T in
2017 was finally able to get relief from a 1930s-era law that required
it to spend millions each year to maintain its aging copper landline
network. Decades earlier in the age of regulated telecom monopolies,
AT&T’s predecessor had been designated the “carrier of last resort,”
obligating the company to provide landline service everywhere.
But by the early 2010s, landline customers began dropping precipitously
while maintaining the old copper line phone system kept getting more
expensive, which AT&T argued put the company at a disadvantage compared
with competitors who could focus on new technologies.
Three former top attorneys in the speaker’s office testified that they’d
blocked AT&T’s COLR relief legislation in 2011, 2013 and 2015 due to
concerns over elderly Illinoisans, those in rural areas and facilities
like power plants and hospitals that relied on landline service.
But in 2017, AT&T had a breakthrough. Though Madigan’s office ultimately
forced a slowdown in the rollback of the company’s COLR obligations and
insisted on combining the bill with a less popular increase on 911 fees
statewide, internal AT&T emails show company execs celebrated after
lawmakers overrode then-Gov. Bruce Rauner’s veto on the bill in July of
that year.
The feds credited the company’s indirect contract with newly retired
Democratic state Rep. Eddie Acevedo – who was brought on for a
nine-month $22,500 arrangement after Madigan referred him to McClain –
as the reason for the bill’s passage. According to prosecutors, the fact
that Acevedo never did any work for his monthly checks should be an
indication that the contract was meant as a bribe to the speaker.
Over and over in his presentation, Collins accused prosecutors of
“shoving” cherry-picked evidence together like “misshapen puzzle pieces”
in order to prove their case.
Collins also said Acevedo’s choice to not do any work under that
arrangement had nothing to do with Madigan, claiming the former speaker
wasn’t even aware of the internal machinations that resulted in
Acevedo’s contract.
“Don’t hold Mike Madigan responsible for Eddie Acevedo not getting
things done,” Collins said.
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