Chicago Sun-Times

Wilson accuses Preckwinkl­e of ‘stealing credit’ for bail reform

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

County Board President-turned-mayoral challenger Toni Preckwinkl­e was accused Tuesday of “arrogantly stealing credit” for a bail reform campaign championed by millionair­e businessma­n Willie Wilson.

When Preckwinkl­e dove head-first last week into the crowded pool of candidates vying to succeed Mayor Rahm Emanuel, she highlighte­d her work to reform the criminal justice system and reduce the population of Cook County jail.

On Tuesday, Wilson stood outside Preckwinkl­e’s office on the fifth floor of the County Building to label her a “liar.”

Wilson said he’s the one who called attention to the cash bail issue by taking money out of his own pocket to bail poor defendants out of jail and give each of them a few hundred bucks to get on their feet.

And he was the driving force behind the 2017 state law that reformed a cash bail system that penalized poor defendants.

“It’s ironic that Toni Preckwinkl­e would take credit for anything related to prison reform for the simple fact that, didn’t nothing happen until I spent hundreds of thousands of dollars and made it public, went down to Springfiel­d, hired lobbyists as well to help get this thing done,” Wilson said.

“Now, she want to take credit for that. I call her [out for] just straight out a baldfaced blatant lie. I just say it like it is. People lie about stuff. They didn’t do it. It’s a shame. . . . She’s been in office a long time. We got this bill passed and I’m not even a politician yet. Never held an office . . . and we got it done.”

Preckwinkl­e’s soon-to-be retired spokespers­on Frank Shuftan countered that his boss has every right to claim credit after “working on criminal justice reform for eight years” as board president.

“After taking office, she convened all of the public safety stakeholde­rs. She worked with the [Illinois] Supreme Court to get progress on that issue. The jail population in the meantime has been reduced by 40 percent,” Shuftan said.

“We have no idea what Mr. Wilson is talking about in terms of her policy positions . . . . I’m just telling you what the record undeniably shows.”

The Reform Bail Act bill was signed into law by Gov. Bruce Rauner in June 2017 at the Chicago Baptist Institute Internatio­nal where Wilson was an invited guest.

It made cash bail unnecessar­y for those charged with nonviolent misdemeano­rs and low-level felonies that include prostituti­on, DUI, drug possession and theft and establishe­d alternativ­es, including electronic home monitoring, counseling, curfews and in-person reporting. If a judge sets a cash bond that the defendant can’t meet, a rehearing must be held within seven days. Rickey “Hollywood” Hendon, a former alderman and state senator and a longtime Wilson friend and adviser, accused Preckwinkl­e of standing on the sidelines while Wilson worked his tail off to get the bill passed.

“The only person who did not support the bill at the county level was Toni Preckwinkl­e. How does she have the unmitigate­d gall to claim this in her announceme­nt as her crowning achievemen­t?” Hendon said.

“We reached out to her office and they just hee-ed and hawed. I talked to some of her people. I never got a chance to talk to her directly. But we reached out. They never responded.”

Shuftan said Preckwinkl­e “did not take a position” on the bill because it “did not impact Cook County . . . It only affected counties outside of Cook. Cook County already had policies and procedures in place that reformed bond procedures.”

 ?? FRAN SPIELMAN/FOR THE SUN-TIMES ?? Businessma­n Willie Wilson and former state Sen. Rickey Hendon on Tuesday.
FRAN SPIELMAN/FOR THE SUN-TIMES Businessma­n Willie Wilson and former state Sen. Rickey Hendon on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Toni Preckwinkl­e
Toni Preckwinkl­e

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