Chicago Sun-Times

Puerto Rican community seeks answers on probe into parade finances

- BY MANNY RAMOS, STAFF REPORTER mramos@suntimes.com | @_ManuelRamo­s_ Manny Ramos is a corps member in Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster Sun-Times coverage of issues affecting Chicago’s South and West sides.

Community organizers and politician­s are demanding answers about an investigat­ion into the finances of the group that for years staged the annual Puerto Rican Day Parade downtown.

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan’s office has been investigat­ing the Puerto Rican Parade Committee of Chicago — which organized the June parade downtown along with a festival in Humboldt Park. The parade had been held downtown for decades until 2013, when it combined with the Puerto Rican People’s Parade, which is held along Division Street in Humboldt Park. The downtown parade was relaunched this summer, and two parades were again held.

On Tuesday, state Sen. Iris Martinez, D-Chicago, and the Puerto Rican Agenda — a nonprofit group that advocates for the Puerto Rican community in Chicago — sought an update from the attorney general on its investigat­ion.

“We are asking Lisa Madigan for an immediate meeting with her to actually discuss this and see where we are going with this,” Martinez said at a press conference outside Casa Puertorriq­ueña, 1237 N. California. The organizati­on has operated out of the 7,000-square-foot Casa Puertorriq­ueña, which also has served as a community center for Humboldt Park residents.

In a letter sent to the committee last month, Barry Goldberg — deputy bureau chief of the AG’s charitable trust bureau — said his agency was looking into “whether and to what extent violations of Illinois Charitable Organizati­on Laws have occurred.”

Goldberg wrote that the investigat­ion was prompted by an ABC7 news report about the group’s finances.

The letter said the office needed documentat­ion of more than $210,000 in expenses it said were listed in financial reports but not detailed. It also asked about back taxes owed on any property owned by the committee.

Madigan’s office sought the parade committee’s books, records, documents and papers dating back to Jan. 1, 2010. The organizati­on complied and submitted the informatio­n by the Aug. 7 deadline, AG officials said.

In addition to the AG, the committee has faced a series of questions from the community and politician­s since it announced it planned to sell Casa Puertorriq­ueña this summer. The group had earlier filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in February 2017; it said it needed to sell the building to resolve its debts of more than $900,000. Much of the debt stems from mortgage and tax liens on the property, records show.

In a bankruptcy court hearing last week, the organizati­on said it had several offers for the building ranging from $800,000 to $950,000.

Neither the former president of the committee, Angel Medina, nor its interim president, Abel De Jesus, could be reached for comment Tuesday.

Both were named in the records demand from Madigan, along with other committee members, including Jackie Baez, the group’s secretary from 201214. She said in an interview that she hasn’t been involved with the group since 2014 and is yet to speak with anyone from the attorney general’s office.

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Iris Martinez

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