Chicago Sun-Times

CTA chairman shown supporting gangster

Signature on letter lobbying for Hoover’s release from prison

- BY ROBERT HERGUTH AND ALDEN LOURY Robert Herguth and Alden Loury are investigat­ors with the Better Government Associatio­n.

Battling gang violence has been one of Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s top priorities.

But one of Emanuel’s top appointees, CTA Chairman Terry Peterson, appears to have taken a different tack in the mid-1990s: Lobbying for the early release of the imprisoned leader of the Gangster Disciples — one of the largest and deadliest street gangs in Chicago, the Better Government Associatio­n has learned.

In 1993, Peterson was the chief of staff to then-Ald. Allan Streeter (17th), and Gangster Disciples boss Larry Hoover Sr. was in a Downstate Illinois prison, serving a 150to 200-year sentence for murdering a man suspected of stealing drugs from the gang.

Hoover had already served 20 years of his term and was up for a crucial hearing in front of the Illinois Prisoner Review Board, the government agency that has the power to grant or deny parole.

The BGA recently obtained a letter — on City Council letterhead and bearing the names of Peterson and Streeter — that asks the chairman of the prisoner review board for Hoover’s release on parole and that portrays Hoover in glowing terms.

Peterson, who is in the process of being reappointe­d to the CTA board by Emanuel, declined an interview request. But in a statement, he denied writing or even signing the letter.

The letter, provided by the review board, states: “I am writing to you as a concerned citizen to support the release of Mr. Larry Hoover who has demonstrat­ed a sincere desire and effort in working for the improvemen­t of the African American Community.”

“For example, Mr. Hoover was one of the first to sign the Peace Treaty to stop the killings in the African American Community, which has been very successful. Also Mr. Hoover has been very instrument­al in working for the capture of the Chatham Community Rapist and working to assist in the apprehensi­on of a serial killer in the Chatham area.”

“I strongly urge you as Chair- man of the Illinois Prisoner Review Board to use your legal and executive powers to work for the release of this servant of the community.”

The review board turned down parole for Hoover.

In response to a BGA inquiry, Peterson released a brief statement through a CTA spokesman in which he denied authoring the letter — or even knowing of its existence until now, even though Streeter’s push for Hoover’s parole was widely reported in the mid-1990s, just before Streeter himself ended up in prison as part of an unrelated bribery scandal.

“Mr. Peterson had nothing to do with the letter in question,” according to the CTA statement. “He neither wrote the letter nor was aware of its existence. The signature on the letter is not Mr. Peterson’s — it was a facsimile apparently placed there by a staff member at the time. Chairman Peterson has never met and does not know Mr. Hoover, and had no involvemen­t with the subject addressed in the letter.”

Peterson wouldn’t answer any more questions. He was appointed to the CTA by now-former Mayor Richard M. Daley and retained by Emanuel. Previously, Peterson has served as an alderman, the head of the Chicago Housing Authority and a campaign manager for Daley.

Streeter, however, said in an interview Peterson’s explanatio­n almost defies logic. Nobody in the office back then was signing paperwork for others without consent, and as chief of staff, Peterson was involved in every significan­t issue and action, Streeter said.

To Streeter, it sounds as if Peterson is trying to “disassocia­te himself ” with the past, Streeter said.

Tom Alexander, a spokesman for Emanuel, referred questions to the CTA.

At the time the letter was sent, Hoover and his allies were in the midst of a massive public-relations campaign to try to recast the Gangster Disciples as a group dedicated to peace, black empowermen­t and community renewal — and Hoover as an agent of progress, a changed man.

Several black leaders, including former Mayor Eugene Sawyer, spoke or wrote in favor of Hoover’s release.

Many cops and prosecutor­s were skeptical, believing the gang was trying to sanitize its public image, so it’d be easier to fulfill its real mission of making money by selling drugs.

That skepticism turned out well founded when, in 1995, federal prosecutor­s unleashed indictment­s accusing Hoover and reputed associates of engaging in a “continuing criminal enterprise.” Hoover and his underlings hadn’t changed their drug-dealing behavior at all, authoritie­s found. They were simply changing tactics while continuing their violent ways.

Hoover ended up in a federal prison, sentenced to life. He could not be reached for comment.

It is believed that Hoover’s grip on the Gangster Disciples has been greatly diminished because of his imprisonme­nt at a maximum-security Colorado correction­al facility and because the gang no longer possesses the rigid organizati­onal structure he had installed.

 ?? | FILE PHOTO ?? CTA Chariman Terry Peterson’s signature is shown on a letter supporting the early release from prison of a gang member.
| FILE PHOTO CTA Chariman Terry Peterson’s signature is shown on a letter supporting the early release from prison of a gang member.
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