Chicago Sun-Times

MADIGAN’S INNER CIRCLE GETS TRIAL DATE, BUT FEDS MUM ON MORE CHARGES

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

Four members of former House Speaker Michael Madigan’s inner circle could face trial late in 2022 for their alleged roles in the ComEd bribery scandal.

What’s still not clear is whether new allegation­s might surface in the case by then.

U.S. District Judge Harry

Leinenwebe­r on Tuesday scheduled a Sept. 12, 2022, trial for Madigan confidant Michael McClain, former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggior­e, onetime ComEd lobbyist John Hooker and ex-City Club President Jay Doherty. All four have pleaded not guilty in response to a 50-page indictment filed last November that accused them of a long-term bribery scheme designed to curry favor with Madigan.

But Leinenwebe­r also asked Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Streicker about the ongoing possibilit­y of a supersedin­g indictment — which could add new allegation­s and defendants to the case. Streicker insisted she had “no further informatio­n about whether there will be a supersedin­g indictment” and told the judge, “the investigat­ion is ongoing.”

When the judge pressed her to clarify, Streicker said she was “not at liberty to publicly discuss the status of grand jury matters.”

The indictment filed in November alleged that McClain, Pramaggior­e, Hooker and Doherty arranged for Madigan’s associates and allies to get jobs, contracts and money — even while doing little or no work — “for the purpose of influencin­g and rewarding” Madigan.

Madigan has not been charged and has denied wrongdoing. But the fallout from the investigat­ion finally ended his record-setting tenure as Illinois House speaker earlier this year. He has repeatedly been referred to in court documents as “Public Official A.”

Lawyers for members of his inner circle sought in June to persuaded the judge to toss part of the case, arguing the indictment suffers from a series of “fatal” gaps — including the lack of a clear quid pro quo.

Instead, the defense attorneys wrote, it “loosely strings together an assortment of events over a tenyear period of time — largely hiring decisions made by ComEd … at the recommenda­tion of Public Official A — and alleges that, because such recommenda­tions were made in the same decade that legislatio­n affecting ComEd was passed, a crime must have been committed.”

They wrote that, if the prosecutio­n were to move forward as it stands, it would give prosecutor­s “essentiall­y unlimited discretion to prosecute anyone who has provided a benefit to a public official, and convict them on evidence that the public official took some official act that the defendant favored.”

The judge has not ruled on the matter.

Federal prosecutor­s first implicated Madigan when they separately charged ComEd with bribery in July 2020. ComEd struck a deal with the feds in which it agreed to pay a $200 million fine — believed to be the largest criminal fine ever in Chicago’s federal court. If it abides with that and other terms of the deal, the bribery charge filed against it could ultimately be dropped.

Another former ComEd executive, Fidel Marquez, pleaded guilty to a bribery conspiracy in September 2020 and agreed to cooperate with prosecutor­s. Then, last May, a federal grand jury charged former Madigan chief of staff Timothy Mapes with perjury and attempted obstructio­n of justice as part of the same investigat­ion.

 ??  ?? Onetime ComEd lobbyist John Hooker
Onetime ComEd lobbyist John Hooker
 ??  ?? Former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggior­e
Former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggior­e
 ??  ?? Madigan confidant Michael McClain
Madigan confidant Michael McClain
 ??  ?? Ex-City Club President Jay Doherty
Ex-City Club President Jay Doherty

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