Chicago Sun-Times

SPEAKER SAYS NO TO SPECIAL COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGAT­E ALLEGED COVER-UP

Fallout spreads after Madigan confidant’s email on ‘rape,’ ghost payrollers rocks political landscape

- BY TINA SFONDELES, POLITICAL REPORTER tsfondeles@suntimes.com | @TinaSfon

State House Speaker Mike Madigan on Thursday said he won’t convene a special committee to investigat­e an alleged cover-up of an unspecifie­d “rape” and ghost payrollers — incidents mentioned in an email between Madigan confidant Mike McClain and members of Gov. Pat Quinn’s administra­tion in 2012 — because of the “sensitivit­y of the matter.”

Madigan’s refusal was the latest fallout over not only the explosive email, first disclosed by WBEZ this week, but also over a sweeping federal investigat­ion involving the speaker and people close to him.

It’s been almost a year since the Chicago Sun-Times revealed that the FBI had secretly recorded Madigan in 2014 trying to get business for his private law firm from a developer.

Since that report, the Sun-Times and other news organizati­ons have disclosed how federal investigat­ors have been examining connection­s between lobbyists close to Madigan, including McClain, and the utility ComEd. Neither Madigan nor McClain have been charged with any wrongdoing.

It’s unclear if the email is connected to any activity by authoritie­s. The WBEZ report on Tuesday revealed McClain sent the email to two senior Quinn aides in a bid to win leniency for a worker in a disciplina­ry case. In it, McClain argued the man “has kept his mouth shut on Jones’ ghost workers, the rape in Champaign and other items.”

“He is loyal to the Administra­tion,” McClain wrote.

McClain: Feds have asked me to cooperate

Tracked down on Thursday outside a Chicago restaurant by WBEZ reporters, McClain said that federal authoritie­s have asked him to cooperate in their investigat­ion.

“Oh, they’ve asked,” McClain said. “I’ll just say they’ve asked.”

Asked if it would be difficult to betray the longtime speaker, McClain replied, “It would be hard to betray myself.”

McClain’s comments came as Madigan refused state House Republican Leader Jim Durkin’s request for the Democratic speaker to convene a House committee to launch an independen­t inquiry into McClain email.

In his refusal, Madigan said he discussed the situation with Gov. J.B. Pritzker.

“I spoke with the Governor and he confirmed the matter was referred to the appropriat­e authoritie­s,” Madigan wrote to Durkin on Thursday. “Recognizin­g the sensitivit­y of the matter for any potential survivors, any investigat­ion should be handled by the appropriat­e investigat­ive entities without interferen­ce by the General Assembly.”

Madigan’s refusal sparked a feisty response from Durkin.

“We did not realize that ghost payrolling was too sensitive of a topic for the committee to investigat­e on behalf of Illinois taxpayers,” Durkin spokeswoma­n Eleni Demertzis said in a statement.

Gov: No other evidence

At a South Side event, Pritzker told reporters that his administra­tion had no other evidence of a “rape in Champaign” other than the McClain email. Asked how his administra­tion would have handled such an email, Pritzker said he would have expected his staff to go directly to the state’s general counsel.

Asked about his own efforts to try to get to the bottom of the matter, Pritzker repeatedly said he had no investigat­ive authority as governor, arguing the appropriat­e office is investigat­ing the email: the Office of the Executive Inspector General. “I want to do what I did, which is turn it over to someone who can actually go do an investigat­ion. Even members of the House and the Senate can’t go knock on people’s doors and you know, get a subpoena or whatever in short order, get an answer the way that an investigat­ive body can,” Pritzker said. The governor’s office reiterated that later, saying in a statement “there are no circumstan­ces where it would be appropriat­e for the Governor to start having conversati­ons about possible crimes when they have been referred to the proper authoritie­s.”

Senate Republican Leader Bill Brady sent a letter Thursday to the head of the Illinois State Police, calling for a “full and thorough investigat­ion” of any rape and ghost payrolling, arguing “these allegation­s must be investigat­ed.”

Mum’s the word

Despite the negative headlines and a federal investigat­ion, Madigan has been mum about his relationsh­ip with McClain.

Asked whether Madigan should publicly disclose his current relationsh­ip with the controvers­ial former lobbyist, Pritzker said he’d like to know “whether there’s any involvemen­t.”

“I think it is appropriat­e for us to understand, you know, if there’s somebody who’s done wrongdoing. And I don’t know. We all have read your stories and others about the potential wrongdoing­s, but no indictment­s have been landed on that,” Pritzker said. “I would like to know whether there’s any involvemen­t, but again, you have to get some facts about what crimes are actually being alleged here, specifical­ly, in order to be able to ask appropriat­e questions about it.”

The email in question was about a state employee who worked as an administra­tor at the Illinois Department of Human Services facility in downstate Rushville. It was sent to Quinn’s legislativ­e affairs liaison and Quinn’s then chief of staff.

The employee also worked as a paid consultant to Pritzker’s gubernator­ial campaign and most recently served as a consultant for correction­al training revisions.

Pritzker’s office on Tuesday released the emails to the Sun-Times after the WBEZ story was posted online. Quinn has told WBEZ he knew nothing of the incidents McClain described.

No other details were disclosed about the alleged rape referenced in the email or the identity of “Jones” in the mention of the ghost payrollers.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTOS ?? State Speaker of the House
Mike Madigan addresses the City Club of Chicago in 2015.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTOS State Speaker of the House Mike Madigan addresses the City Club of Chicago in 2015.
 ??  ?? Mike McClain
Mike McClain

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