Chicago Sun-Times

BURKE’S HALF-CENTURY OF UPS AND DOWNS

-

1972:

Freshman Ald. Edward M. Burke joined with another so-called “young Turk,” Edward R. Vrdolyak. They thought Mayor Richard J. Daley had too much power, so they launched what became known as “The Coffee Rebellion,” an attempt to break the iron-fisted control exercised by Daley and his Finance Committee Chairman Thomas Keane.

1984:

Burke and Vrdolyak teamed up again for the tumultuous “Council Wars,” with Burke filing a lawsuit against Mayor Harold Washington alleging he was not legally allowed to hold office because he failed to file required financial disclosure­s before the deadline. The suit was dismissed, but for years, the two “Eddies” were remembered for their opposition to the city’s first black mayor.

1989:

Burke was the stateregis­tered licensee and secretary of a security firm coowned by ex-Ald. Pat Huels (11th) and Huels’ family. From June 1989 to May 1997, Burke’s Finance Committee made annual payments totaling $474,162 to Michael Pedicone, the executive in charge of the fledgling firm.

1995:

Marie D’Amico, daughter of former Ald. Anthony Laurino (39th), pleaded guilty to doing no work while on Burke’s committee staff from 1991 to 1993. Burke famously blamed it on a dead man, accusing the late Horace Lindsay, a former aide, of scheming with D’Amico.

1997:

Former Ald. Joseph Martinez (31st), who worked in Burke’s law office, admitted in federal court that he was a ghost payroller for City Council committees. Martinez’s lawyer alleged that Burke got him the no-show jobs.

1997:

Burke changed the record of four past City Council votes involving clients of his law practice after the Sun Times raised questions about possible conflicts of interest. He used a rare parliament­ary maneuver to remove four “yes” votes regarding leases for Midway and American airlines — votes that the alderman cast as far back as 1990. He changed the yes votes to abstention­s. Burke resorted to the blame-it-ona-dead-man excuse again, attributin­g the yes votes to former Ald. Thomas Cullerton (38th), who chaired the Aviation Committee. Cullerton had died four years earlier.

2006:

Two weeks after a Sun-Times investigat­ion, a federal grand jury issued subpoenas to the Burke-chaired Finance Committee — which has sole authority to settle injury claims filed by city of Chicago employees and controls a $100 million annual budget — for records related to injury claims. The Sun-Times found that one in five patronage workers listed on the once-secret clout list kept by Mayor Richard M. Daley’s former patronage director had filed workers’ compensati­on claims — far outpacing those for any occupation tracked by the U.S. Department of Labor.

2011:

Federal prosecutor­s filed a motion saying Saul Rodriguez, a drug trafficker, believed he paid $15,000 to two attorneys to bribe Burke to get the zoning on his Southwest Side property changed in order to build apartments. Rodriguez told federal agents he made the payment to those attorneys and then met briefly with Burke, who said the rezoning would be no problem. The City Council approved the rezoning in 2000. Burke wasn’t identified in the filing — only referred to as “Official A” — but he was later named in court. Burke was never charged with wrongdoing in that case.

2012:

Chicago Inspector General Joseph Ferguson attempted to audit the city’s workers’ compensati­on and duty disability programs, which fall under the control of the Finance Committee. Burke’s office claimed Ferguson didn’t have the authority to investigat­e the programs.

2016:

A Sun-Times investigat­ion found that Burke’s law firm had saved President Donald Trump nearly $14 million after appealing property tax bills over seven years. Burke’s firm would stop representi­ng Trump’s Chicago interests in 2018. But the Trump ties helped fuel the defeat of Burke’s brother, state Rep. Dan Burke, in the 2018 Democratic Primary, and sparked rivals to put a political bulls-eye on Ed Burke as well.

2016:

A report from the city inspector general’s office found that the 3900 block of West 51st Street, where Burke lives, was plowed far more often than other streets in the city after a record 19.2-inch snowfall in February 2015. Snow removal crews hit the street 46 times in five days.

—Sam Charles

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Ald. Edward Burke (left) with then-presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump at the City Club of Chicago in 2015.
AP FILE PHOTO Ald. Edward Burke (left) with then-presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump at the City Club of Chicago in 2015.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States