Chicago Sun-Times

Ex-Van Dyke lawyer on verge of winning county Board of Review seat

- BY RACHEL HINTON, PAGE 6

Board The of sole Review might Republican lose on the his seat. Cook County

Ten days after the final votes were cast, Democrat Tammy Wendt was leading Republican Dan Patlak by 3,695 votes — or about 0.5% — in the race for a seat on the three-member board that reviews and potentiall­y modifies property assessment­s in Cook County.

Frank Calabrese, a campaign adviser for Wendt, said Friday the lawyer is “in a very good position” to win the seat.

“The results should be much clearer later today, but I expect Tammy Wendt’s numbers to grow — she’s been consistent­ly winning about 60% of mail ballots in every batch” that election officials have counted, Calabrese said.

Patlak is a former Wheeling Township assessor who has been on the Board of Review since 2010. Wendt is a former assistant Cook County state’s attorney best known for being part of the defense team that represente­d former Chicago Police Officer Jason VanDyke in the shooting death of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald.

A spokesman for Patlak did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

“Tammy’s really excited,” Calabrese said. “She ran a kind of grassroots campaign, and she wasn’t really supported by a lot of the big money interests that are associated with running campaigns.”

That includes the county’s Democratic Party, which Calabrese said did not support Wendt after her primary win over Abdelnasse­r Rashid, who worked on Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi’s campaign and later in Kaegi’s office.

Wendt’s campaign was made up of a “very supportive family and friends network that helped her get the word out” and overcome a significan­t money gap between herself and Patlak, Calabrese said.

Wendt helped defend Van Dyke, who was convicted of second-degree murder and 16 counts of aggravated battery for the shooting death of the 17-year-old McDonald in 2014. That was just one case in a long legal career, she told the Chicago Sun-Times in January.

Wendt said during a sit-down with the Sun-Times’ Editorial Board earlier this year that she’s practiced real estate law, which involves property taxes, for almost 30 years and mostly did residentia­l appeals.

“We can talk about the thousands of other cases that I’ve had too, if you want to, but what does that have to do with property taxes?” Wendt asked a Sun-Times reporter questionin­g her about the Van Dyke case. “This is about who is the qualified candidate, and I think everyone can agree it’s the person who’s got the 27 years [of] experience.”

 ?? ANTONIO PEREZ/POOL/CHICAGOTRI­BUNE ?? Jason Van Dyke listens to closing statements with defense attorney TammyWendt in 2018 during his murder trial in the shooting death of Laquan McDonald.
ANTONIO PEREZ/POOL/CHICAGOTRI­BUNE Jason Van Dyke listens to closing statements with defense attorney TammyWendt in 2018 during his murder trial in the shooting death of Laquan McDonald.

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