Chicago Sun-Times

Now SEC is also investigat­ing Exelon, ComEd

- BY JON SEIDEL, FEDERAL COURTS REPORTER jseidel@suntimes.com | @SeidelCont­ent

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has opened an investigat­ion into the lobbying activities of Exelon and ComEd, further escalating the companies’ legal troubles shortly after the sudden retirement of Exelon’s top executive.

Exelon and ComEd have already acknowledg­ed receiving two grand jury subpoenas from the U.S. attorney’s office in Chicago. One, received Oct. 4, sought records revolving around state Sen. Martin Sandoval.

Now, the companies say they were notified Oct. 22 that the SEC “has also opened an investigat­ion into their lobbying activities.” That could signal an even broader probe.

“Exelon and ComEd have cooperated fully and intend to continue to cooperate fully and expeditiou­sly with the U.S. attorney’s office and the SEC,” the companies said in a report filed Thursday with the SEC. “Exelon and ComEd cannot predict the outcome of the subpoenas or the SEC investigat­ion.”

When federal agents on Sept. 24 raided Sandoval’s office at the Capitol Building in Springfiel­d, among the many items they were seeking were “items related to ComEd, Exelon” and any of their employees, including four Exelon officials identified simply as “Exelon Official A,” “Exelon Official B,” “Exelon Official C” and “Exelon Official D.”

The feds were also interested in “any issue supported” by ComEd and Exelon, “including but not limited to rate increases.”

Sandoval’s daughter, Angie, has listed herself online as a senior account manager in government affairs at ComEd.

Exelon then announced that Anne Pramaggior­e would be retiring as senior executive vice president and CEO of Exelon Utilities, effective immediatel­y. She previously ran ComEd. Exelon made that announceme­nt Oct. 15, one week before it learned of the SEC investigat­ion.

Now, the companies appear to have been drawn into a series of federal public corruption probes that have so far led to charges against Ald. Edward M. Burke (14th), state Sen. Thomas Cullerton and, most recently, state Rep. Luis Arroyo.

 ??  ?? State Sen. Martin Sandoval
State Sen. Martin Sandoval

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