Chicago Sun-Times

‘ BLONDE’ AMBITION

Ex- E top cop McCarthy tried d to aid d troubled River North hot spot Bottled Blonde

- Email: dmihalopou­los@ suntimes. com DAN MIHALOPOUL­OS @ dmihalopou­los

SinceMayor Rahm Emanuel fired him in the wake of the Laquan McDonald scandal, former Chicago Police Supt. GarryMcCar­thy’s name has been linked with a string of high- profile jobs, from City Hall’s fifth floor to Scotland Yard.

There was the time last year when a British newspaper reported McCarthy was a finalist to be the next head of greater London’s Metropolit­an Police Service.

“I’d fix London’s police the way I sorted Chicago’s,” the ever- brash McCarthy was quoted as saying in an article in The Sun.

Then therewas a report frommy colleague Michael Sneed thatMcCart­hywas offered but turned down a chance to serve President Donald Trump as theU. S. marshal here.

And McCarthy has declined to rule out running for mayor against his old boss in 2019.

But until now, it seems McCarthy has had to settle for much humbler profession­al pursuits since he was fired from the CPD in December 2015.

At one point last year, the city’s former top cop found himself laboring on behalf of a controvers­ial River North bar and restaurant that’s had long- running problems with neighbors and authoritie­s.

Richard Simon— the former cop McCarthy has worked with for the past 18 months— said he and McCarthy were hired by the Bottled Blonde and came up with a security plan for the business owners.

But they didn’t have the sense to heed the advice, Simon said, causing him and McCarthy to part ways with the Bottled Blonde.

“They wouldn’t implement the security plan, so we wouldn’t work for them,” Simon told me Friday.

Simon suggested askingMcCa­rthy for further details. McCarthy didn’t reply to my attempts to contact him.

McCarthy formed a new venture, GFM- Strategies, right after he was fired by Emanuel, and in February 2016, Simon— who has a $ 110 million janitorial contract at O’Hare Airport— announced that McCarthy would be working with him on “various projects.” But they did not name any clients.

Sources say McCarthy’s work for the Bottled Blonde included calling up the district commander for River North at the time, George Devereaux.

Under McCarthy in April 2015, Devereaux had been promoted from captain to commander for the Near North Side’s 18th District, which includes the Bottled Blonde.

Nowa deputy chief, Devereaux declined to comment, referring questions to CPD’smedia- relations staff— who alsowouldn’t talk about the matter involving their old boss.

There were a litany of issues with the Bottled Blonde then, and things appear to have only gotten worse since McCarthy worked with them.

Last month, after a night out at the Bottled Blonde, 34- year- old man Anthony Milder crashed his car on the Ontario Street feeder ramp, killing 21- year- old passenger Alejandra Damian of Joliet.

Milder fled the scene but was found dead at his home in Bucktown later when police arrived to question him about the fiery, highspeed crash. An autopsy ruled he had committed suicide.

Since opening in 2015 in the 500 block of NorthWells, the Bottled Blonde has generated many complaints about noise, litter and drunken patrons.

The Bottled Blonde also has been accused of racism for its dress code banning patrons in “excessivel­y baggy” clothing or Jordan gym shoes.

The Chicago Sun- Times reported recently that city investigat­ors reprimande­d the business for operating primarily as a bar rather than a restaurant, against the terms of its liquor license.

The Arizona- based owners of the Bottled Blonde had agreed last year to a “revised liquor license plan of operation,” also promising to put up more trash cans, keep the sidewalk clean and limit a single- file line outside to 25 people.

But now they stand accused of breaking the agreement, and the Bottled Blonde could lose its liquor license.

According to state records, Leslie and Diane Corieri each own 50 percent of the Bottled Blonde. Reached by phone Friday, Diane Corieri declined to comment on McCarthy’s work for her business or on any of the issues swirling around the Bottled Blonde.

MiriamWalt­z, who lives near the Bottled Blonde, told the SunTimes it’s often a wild scene there.

“There’s fighting in the streets,” she said. “People urinating and vomiting in the alley.”

Considerin­g his resume in law enforcemen­t, it seems a lot different than what Garry McCarthy must have envisioned himself dealing with after he left the Emanuel administra­tion.

 ?? SANTIAGO COVARRUBIA­S/ SUN- TIMES ??
SANTIAGO COVARRUBIA­S/ SUN- TIMES
 ?? SANTIAGO COVARRUBIA­S/ SUN- TIMES ?? Former Chicago Police Supt. GarryMcCar­thy
SANTIAGO COVARRUBIA­S/ SUN- TIMES Former Chicago Police Supt. GarryMcCar­thy
 ?? SUN- TIMES FILES ?? The Bottled Blonde, 504 N. Wells
SUN- TIMES FILES The Bottled Blonde, 504 N. Wells
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