Chicago Sun-Times

County clerk fires back at Shakman over ‘illegal patronage’ allegation­s

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough wants a federal judge to free her office from two anti-patronage decrees related to her office months after a government watchdog accused her of running an “illegal patronage employment system.”

The request, which was filed Friday, comes in response to a motion filed in September by Michael Shakman, the watchdog who alleged the clerk violated two consent decrees — entered in 1972 and 1991 — in multiple ways, including institutin­g a rotation policy “to make life so unbearable” for some supervisor­s “that they have little choice but to resign” freeing up the spots for Yarbrough’s political pals.

Shakman also accused Yarbrough of texting employees’ private cellphone numbers to ask for political contributi­ons and asked for U.S. Magistrate Judge Sidney Schenkier to intervene and place a federal monitor in the office.

In her response, Yarbrough says the office hasn’t really been involved in the Shakman litigation since 2002 — when the compliance reports filed by a federal monitor appointed to the office ended — and that Shakman didn’t do anything when her predecesso­r, David Orr, allegedly violated Shakman rules.

“Plaintiffs waited 28 years to bring the clerk into this litigation,” Yarbrough’s response reads. “During that time, Clerk Orr changed his exempt list without seeking court approval. But plaintiffs never complained that Clerk Orr changed his exempt list.

“This court should not allow plaintiffs to ignore an alleged violation of a consent decree by plaintiffs’ favored officehold­er for decades, only to raise the same alleged violation to justify extraordin­ary relief upon the election of a disfavored officehold­er. Such conduct prejudices the clerk and is antithetic­al to the democratic process.”

Shakman hadn’t read Yarbrough’s response but said he never received any allegation­s of wrongdoing against Orr and said he would have if there was.

“We had a long history of difficulty with [Yarbrough],” Shakman said. “We had report after report from the monitor that indicated serious problems.”

Brian Hays, who represents Shakman and the other plaintiffs, said the plaintiffs didn’t file the motion because they “have a vendetta against [Yarbrough],” it’s “because employees came to us with credible allegation­s that the clerk was engaged in unlawful political discrimina­tion. After investigat­ing those we filed our motion to enforce the decrees.”

Yarbrough is in her second county government position. As the former recorder of deeds, Yarbrough ran afoul of Shakman in that office, too, for putting at least one family member on her payroll and hiring political allies. At the time, Yarbrough said county ethics rules against such hiring practices didn’t apply to her as an independen­tly elected official.

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Karen Yarbrough

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