Daily Southtown

Cook County clerk Karen Yarbrough dies at 73

- By A.D. Quig and Ray Long Chicago Tribune’s Jeremy Gorner contribute­d. aquig@chicagotri­bune.com rlong@chicagotri­bune.com

Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough, a fixture in state and local Democratic Party politics who successful­ly championed legislatio­n to ban the death penalty in Illinois, died Sunday. She was 73.

For decades, Yarbrough and her husband, Henderson, were political mainstays in west suburban Maywood, where he previously served as mayor, and Proviso Township. She represente­d the area for years in the Illinois House, eventually serving on thenSpeake­r Michael Madigan’s leadership team.

Her alliance with Madigan, a longtime Illinois Democratic Party chair, accompanie­d her rise in state and local Democratic parties and continued through her successful runs first for Cook County’s recorder of deeds and then county clerk. Yarbrough was elected in 2018 as the county’s first African-American and female clerk.

A spokespers­on for the county clerk’s office announced on April 2 that Yarbrough was hospitaliz­ed with a “serious medical condition,” and confirmed her death Sunday evening.

Tributes from colleagues poured in Sunday, describing Yarbrough as a dedicated public servant who fought for veterans, homeowners and civil rights.

Cook County Commission­er Stanley Moore met Yarbrough in Springfiel­d when he was a budget analyst.

Later at the county, they worked together on a program to record military service records for free, and the two “would host property after death seminars all over the county teaching people to protect their most valuable assets,” Moore said in a written statement. “She will be truly missed.”

Yarbrough was a native of Washington, D.C. Her family came to Maywood in the early 1960s. She studied business management at Chicago State University and received her master’s in Inner City Studies from Northeaste­rn Illinois University.

She became a licensed real estate broker and founded Hathaway Insurance Agency in Maywood in 1975. It followed a path charted by her father, the late Don Williams Sr., who establishe­d the first African-American-owned pharmacy in the village in the 1960s and branched out into

home building, real estate and insurance, according to his Tribune obituary.

Williams, who was active in the local NAACP and a contempora­ry of activist Fred Hampton, was elected to one term as mayor of Maywood, and headed up its chamber of commerce. Yarbrough herself later led the chamber starting in 1993.

She first ran for the House in 1998 against incumbent Rep. Eugene Moore but lost by 544 votes in a fourway primary. In 2000, after Moore left the legislatur­e to become recorder of deeds, Yarbrough won the seat.

Yarbrough and Moore often clashed. She lost to him in a 2002 race for Proviso Township Democratic committeem­an but beat him four years later. When Moore retired as recorder, Yarbrough succeeded him in the county post and left the House position she held for more than a decade.

Her most high-profile accomplish­ments in Springfiel­d included successful­ly working on legislatio­n to make Illinois the 22nd state to ban indoor smoking in 2008, but she also secured money for basic local projects ranging from repaving a library parking lot to redoing local alleyways and streetscap­es.

Yarbrough garnered her

biggest accolades for her House sponsorshi­p of the ban on executions in Illinois, culminatin­g in the dramatic passage of the legislatio­n on the second of two votes taken during one of the closing days of a lame-duck session in January 2011.

After the bill fell short by one vote in the first round, Yarbrough brought it back a second time and passed the historic measure. It was the first time a death penalty ban passed the House since executions were reinstated in Illinois in 1977. The proposed ban was heavily criticized by some lawmakers and prosecutor­s who argued violent criminals could murder multiple victims without fear of being killed themselves.

The measure quickly passed the Senate, and Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn signed the bill in a private ceremony in his Capitol office with Yarbrough and then-Sen. Kwame Raoul, now the attorney general, looking on with other supporters.

The approval came more than a decade after Republican Gov. George Ryan unilateral­ly placed a moratorium on the death penalty following revelation­s that several people sent to death row were not guilty.

Once a supporter of capital punishment, Yarbrough later said the exoneratio­ns served as a “painful and stirring reminder that death is an absolute penalty. Once imposed, there is no second chance, no reversal and no way to correct a mistake.”

“She’s got a strong legacy in Springfiel­d,” State Rep. LaShawn Ford, a Chicago Democrat from the West Side who served with Yarbrough in the Illinois House, told the Tribune Sunday.

Ford admired Yarbrough’s “love for family” and how she and her husband stuck together as a political power couple for so long. The partnershi­p served as a strong example for the Black community, he said. “Karen Yarbrough and her husband actually showed us about how to be a couple in the Black community and how to love one another and be strong together through a lot of adversity.”

He also noted her loyalty to local Democrats and how she worked her way up to be influentia­l within the party. Yarbrough served both on the state’s central committee and was the Cook County Democratic Party’s treasurer.

“She’s a giant in Cook County and in Illinois,” said Ford. “I think, many times, people don’t understand just your value until you’re gone. People will now see her value to the Democratic Party.”

State Rep. Will Davis, a Democrat from south suburban Homewood who also served with Yarbrough in the House, called Yarbrough “a strong advocate, particular­ly for the African American community.”

“Certainly being in Springfiel­d with her, she was always firm, she was always fierce, she was always decisive,” said Davis, who has served in the House since 2003. “She knew exactly what she wanted to accomplish.”

When Yarbrough won the recorder’s office in 2012, she inherited a federal court anti-patronage monitor ordered to oversee the office under Moore’s tenure, but she could not shake it during her time in that office.

For years, reformers pushed for the recorder’s office, which oversees land transactio­ns, to be combined with the clerk’s office, which oversees suburban voting and records like birth certificat­es, and voters approved the merger in 2016.

Despite her early opposition to consolidat­ion, Yarbrough got on board when elected clerk.

Former Cook County Commission­er Ed Moody, then a close Madigan associate who now is expected to testify in the ex-speaker’s upcoming federal corruption trial, was appointed as interim recorder until the merger was complete.

Yarbrough sprinkled her offices with Madigan allies, and served as interim chair of the state Democratic Party when Madigan lost his speakershi­p and gave up the party post amid a burgeoning ComEd lobbying scandal in 2021.

As county clerk, she once was accused of “running an illegal patronage operation” by Michael Shakman, the attorney whose lawsuit filed half a century ago against Democratic machine politics led to a series of anti-patronage decrees and eventually federal monitors overseeing several offices,

including hers.

Despite frequently being dinged over defying best employment practices, Yarbrough consistent­ly denied the allegation­s and eventually took advantage of a federal appellate court decision that lifted the oversight of Illinois government.

As a result, Yarbrough’s county clerk’s office, the last public office under a federal monitor, was able to end the Shakman case first launched to fight the stubborn and unfair use of Democratic politics to decide most hiring, firing and promotion in state and local government.

A federal judge officially released her from that oversight last year despite some reservatio­ns from watchdogs that she hadn’t fully addressed problemati­c personnel practices.

Yarbrough briefly considered a run for secretary of state in 2021 when Jesse White announced he would not seek reelection.

She ultimately decided against running statewide, in part, because her husband, Henderson, was being treated for prostate cancer.

“He is my rock,” the county clerk said of her spouse, according to the Sun-Times. “There’s nothing I have done in the past 30 years that he hasn’t been by my side for. He’s quiet, soft-spoken, but he’s got a lot of wisdom — especially as it relates to this rough and tumble business I’m in — and he’s the head of our family.”

 ?? ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Yarbrough reacts as she presides over the first marriage of 2020 of bride and groom Jasmin Blackman and Demarco Johnson as they kiss during the brief marriage ceremony at the Cook County Clerk’s office in Chicago on Jan 2, 2020.
ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Yarbrough reacts as she presides over the first marriage of 2020 of bride and groom Jasmin Blackman and Demarco Johnson as they kiss during the brief marriage ceremony at the Cook County Clerk’s office in Chicago on Jan 2, 2020.
 ?? BRIAN CASSELLA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough speaks after conducting the first official wedding ceremony of the year marrying Daniel Ferguson and Mandy Fila of Brookfield on Jan. 3, 2023.
BRIAN CASSELLA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough speaks after conducting the first official wedding ceremony of the year marrying Daniel Ferguson and Mandy Fila of Brookfield on Jan. 3, 2023.
 ?? ZBIGNIEW BZDAK/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Yarbrough, left, and Betty Boleattend a memorial service for Latoya Jackson at Victory Apostolic Church in Matteson on July 30, 2015.
ZBIGNIEW BZDAK/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Yarbrough, left, and Betty Boleattend a memorial service for Latoya Jackson at Victory Apostolic Church in Matteson on July 30, 2015.

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