Chicago Sun-Times

LONGTIME AIDE TO MADIGAN FIRED FOR ‘ INAPPROPRI­ATE CONDUCT’

- BY TINASFONDE­LES Political Reporter Email: tsfondeles@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ TinaSfon | Contributi­ng: Tom Schuba, Fran Spielman

She sent Mike Madigan a letter last year warning the House speaker that a top political aide — and brother of Madigan’s own handpicked alderman — had made “unwanted advances.”

Repeated text messages asking the woman if she wanted to go out on a date or have drinks.

That letter, the speaker alleges, prompted the powerful Southwest Side Democrat to launch an investigat­ion and announce the firing on Monday of Kevin Quinn, a younger brother of Ald. Marty Quinn ( 13th).

Madigan hailed the accuser as a “courageous woman.”

And now the woman, a political consultant, plans to hold a news conference in Chicago on Tuesday morning to tell her side of the story. A press release about the news conference calls the firing “pro- active but a cover up”— showing the woman is not pleased about how her allegation­s were treated.

The woman, identified as Alaina Hampton, told the Chicago Tribune she came forward “not once, but twice.” The Tribune notes the firing came a day afterHampt­on filmed an interview.

“I basically lost everything I worked for because some guy could not control himself,” Hampton said in the interview, while revealing repeated unwanted texts from Kevin Quinn. Hampton, too, said when she told Ald. Quinn about the allegation­s, he asked her whether she would want to be a precinct captain. Kevin Quinn’s behavior, she said, prompted her to leave the political organizati­on.

Hampton — who now has her own political consulting firm — is currently a campaign manager for Bridget Degnen, a Cook County Commission­er candidate. In a statement, Degnen thanked Hampton for coming forward: “By demanding accountabi­lity, Ms. Hampton is sending a message that discrimina­tion has no place in our culture.”

Hampton has also filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission, alleging discrimina­tion, a source confirmed.

After receiving Hampton’s letter to the speaker in November, Madigan’s attorney Heather Wier Vaught conducted an investigat­ion including numerous interviews. Wier Vaught, according to a statement Madigan released Monday, “recently came to the conclusion that the individual engaged in inappropri­ate conduct.”

Wier Vaught said Kevin Quinn beginning in August 2016 sent “about a dozen” text messages that were “personal in nature” to the woman, who worked for “various political committees.”

“The contents of those were generally Mr. Quinn asking her if she would go on a date with him, or if she wanted to get drinks,” Wier Vaught said. “Shemade it clear that she was not interested in anything but a profession­al relationsh­ip.”

Wier Vaught said the woman was empowered by the national and local # MeToo movement to come forward and did so a year later in November 2017. That’s when Wier Vaught opened an investigat­ion, reviewing the text messages and conducting interviews.

“As a result, long- time aide Kevin Quinn is no longer an employee of any of my political committees,” Madigan wrote, saying he had worked within his political offices for nearly 20 years.

“She was very brave to send a letter to the speaker advising him that therewas inappropri­ate action going on within the political committee, and I think that’s directly related to what’s happening at the national and local level,” Wier Vaught said.

An arrest — and an order of protection sought by his estranged wife — also played a factor in Kevin Quinn’s dismissal. Wier Vaught said a “culminatio­n of the events” led to the decision to oust him.

The arrest happened on July 6, 2017, about 4 a. m after a 34- yearoldwom­an reported to Chicago Police that she fell to the groundwhen Kevin Quinn grabbed her arm during an argument in the 10300 block of South California, police said. He was charged with a misdemeano­r count of domestic battery.

A source told the Sun- Times the woman in the July incident was Kevin Quinn’s estranged wife.

That day, a judge issued a protective order for thewoman in the case, and Kevin Quinn was released from custody after posting a $ 200 cash bond, according to court records.

The charge against Kevin Quinn was amended Jan. 11 to a misdemeano­r count of disorderly conduct, which he pleaded guilty to that day, court records show. As part of his plea agreement, Quinn was sentenced to probation and court supervisio­n and ordered to pay $ 420 in fines and fees. Another protective order was issued for the woman that day, court records show.

Kevin Quinn had worked for the state between mid- March 2016 until June 30, 2016, before working for the political side between July 2016 and Nov. 8, 2016. The text messages were sent during that time period, according to Madigan spokesman Steve Brown.

Kevin Quinn returned to his state work on Nov. 9, 2016, until July 31, 2017, and again moved to the political side on Aug. 1, 2017, until he was dismissed, Brown said.

Since September of 1999, Kevin Quinn received $ 513,379.40 in salary, insurance and other expenses, mostly from political funds controlled by Madigan, according to campaign finance records.

Lawmakers approved bills inNovember aimed at changing the way the state handles sexual harassment allegation­s. There are no requiremen­ts for political employees. Wier Vaught said there will be immediate changes to those working forMadigan’s political committees.

 ??  ?? Mike Madigan
Mike Madigan
 ?? JUSTIN L. FOWLER/ THE STATE JOURNAL- REGISTER VIA AP ?? Illinois Speaker of the House Michael Madigan said in a statement that a “courageous woman” came forward to detail claims against a longtime political employee.
JUSTIN L. FOWLER/ THE STATE JOURNAL- REGISTER VIA AP Illinois Speaker of the House Michael Madigan said in a statement that a “courageous woman” came forward to detail claims against a longtime political employee.
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