Chicago Sun-Times

FORMER DOROTHY BROWN DEPUTY PLEADS NOT GUILTY IN LYING CASE

- BY ANDY GRIMM Staff Reporter Email: agrimm@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ agrimm34

A former top deputy to Cook County Circuit Court Clerk Dorothy Brown on Thursday pleaded not guilty to charges alleging she lied to federal investigat­ors in a long- running probe of Brown’s office.

Beena Patel, 55, was released on $ 5,000 bond after a brief hearing in front of U. S. District Judge Amy St. Eve. Patel is charged with three counts of lying in front of a grand jury that has been investigat­ing allegation­s that Brown solicited campaign donations from her staff and traded promotions for cash.

Patel’s lawyer, Walter Jones, said Patel intends to fight the charges.

“We expect to go through a trial and let a jury decide what we believe to be the truth,” Jones said outside the courtroom. Asked if Patel, who retired from Brown’s office last year, would try to cut a plea deal with prosecutor­s, Jones said, “that is not our expectatio­n.”

Prosecutor­s claim Patel lied under oath about selling tickets for Brown fundraiser­s to other employees and for helping another employee get a raise based on a family member’s contributi­on to Brown’s campaign fund.

The U. S. Attorney’s office last week announced the federal indictment. Each count carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison.

Brown has not been accused of any wrongdoing by federal prosecutor­s, though the FBI seized her cellphone in 2015.

Patel allegedly lied about knowing whether a high- ranking employee in Brown’s office had talked to law enforcemen­t, lied about whether she sold tickets to fundraiser­s to employees of the clerk’s office and lied about whether she knew that other employees of the clerk’s office sold tickets to and collected money from employees for Brown’s fundraiser­s.

“Have you ever asked any of the employees who work for you if they wanted to buy tickets to any of these events?” Patel was asked while testifying before the grand jury. She answered, “No.”

She told authoritie­s employees got tickets through a website or at meetings and denied having collected money or handing out tickets.

One count alleges Patel asked Brown’s chief of staff to help another employee obtain a promotion because that employee’s brother had donated money to Brown’s campaign fund.

When asked whether she told the chief of staff that the employee should be promoted because her brother had “done a lot” for the clerk’s office, Patel said, “No, I would never do that.” The indictment alleges she knew about the “merit raise” and that she told the employee to “keep mum” and “act surprised” when told about the raise.

Patel’s brother is Narendra Patel, a suburban businessma­n who is now dead but had run a medical testing lab, Medstar Laboratory. In all, Narendra Patel donated more than $ 85,000 to Brown over 10 years, according to a Better Government Associatio­n investigat­ion. Medstar workers had also donated another $ 15,000 to Brown, records indicate.

Another Brown employee, Sivasubram­ani Rajaram, was sentenced in February to three years probation after admitting he lied twice to the FBI and bought his job in Brown’s office with a $ 15,000 “loan” to a company controlled by Brown’s husband.

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Dorothy Brown

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