Chicago Sun-Times

Legislativ­e inspector to look into 10 ethics cases

- BY TINA SFONDELES Political Reporter Email: tsfondeles@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ TinaSfon

A newly appointed interim legislativ­e inspector general will further investigat­e 10 of 27 ethics complaints that had piled up since 2015, but can’t investigat­e two of them because they involve former members of the Illinois General Assembly, according to a memo sent to lawmakers on Thursday.

While legislator­s have already approved legislatio­n to expand the statute of limitation­s on cases, the exclusion of some may spur them to make additional changes, according to one member of the Legislativ­e Ethics Commission.

A memo to lawmakers from members of the Legislativ­e Ethics Commission on Thursday offered a glimpse into what Julie Porter — appointed interim legislativ­e inspector general Nov. 4 — has reviewed so far. Between December 2014 and Nov. 3, 2017, her office had received 27 written requests for investigat­ion. That gap is because there hasn’t been a legislativ­e inspector general for more than two years.

“Based upon her review of these written requests, LIG Porter has determined that 10 requests involve matters that appear to be within the jurisdicti­on of the Office and warrant further considerat­ion,” the memo says.

Those have received only a preliminar­y review, the memo says. And there is still a chance those won’t be investigat­ed.

Of the 17, 13 did not fit the jurisdicti­on of the legislativ­e inspector general’s office, and “two involve matters where the subject of the complaint is no longer a member of the General Assembly.” Another complaint was “too vague,” and another “would be a matter for investigat­ion,” but the complainan­t didn’t want to proceed and told the office the case has been dealt with earlier this year.

The memo also notes that Porter has tried to reach out to all non- anonymous complainan­ts and also to those who filed cases she’s not planning to investigat­e. And the office has also received new complaints, which will also be considered, the memo says.

State Sen. Karen McConnaugh­ay, a member of the Legislativ­e Ethics Commission, said she applauded Porter’s work so far but noted there may be more changes ahead.

“I think you’re going to see a flurry of introduced legislatio­n directed at making changes at both the function of the ethics commission as well as the inspector general,” said McConnaugh­ay, R- St. Charles.

That would include “taking the power for the investigat­ion away from the General Assembly and making it more independen­t,” she said.

“The whole point about you can’t investigat­e because the person is no longer a member of the General Assembly is yet another example of the statutory changes that are going to need to take place as it relates to this order,” McConnaugh­ay said.

Porter was appointed interim legislativ­e inspector general in the wake of allegation­s by a victim- rights advocate against state Sen. Ira Silverstei­n, D- Chicago. The accusation­s of unwanted advances led to Silverstei­n’s ouster from his leadership post as majority caucus chair.

Denise Rotheimer was the first to publicly name a legislator as allegation­s of sexual harassment have run rampant amid a Facebook campaign and open letter detailing years of alleged sexual harassment in Springfiel­d.

Gov. Bruce Rauner in November signed both a measure that will require all lawmakers, lobbyists and state employees to undergo sexual harassment training every year beginning next year, as well as a bill that extends the statute of limitation­s on cases pending before the Legislativ­e Ethics Commission. The signings came about a week after legislator­s quickly passed both measures amid pressure over the lack of action when it comes to potential ethical complaints involving lawmakers.

 ??  ?? Interim Legislativ­e Inspector General Julie Porter.
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Interim Legislativ­e Inspector General Julie Porter. | FACEBOOK

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