Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

John Doe prosecutor receives $800,000 pension perk

- No Quarter Daniel Bice Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WIS.

It’s not been all bad news for Milwaukee County Assistant District Attorney David Robles, one of the lead prosecutor­s in the lengthy John Doe investigat­ions of Gov. Scott Walker.

State Attorney General Brad Schimel recently recommende­d disciplina­ry action against Robles, among others, in a recent court filing on leaks in the lengthy and complicate­d secret probe.

In his 91-page report, Schimel argued nine individual­s associated with the John Doe investigat­ions should be held in contempt for not following court orders. Robles is the only Milwaukee prosecutor called out by the Republican attorney general, even though both probes of the GOP governor and his allies started with Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm, a Democrat.

What the report doesn’t say is that Robles recently retired from his job with the county.

As part of his retirement package, he received a lump-sum payment of $811,148 from the county — the second highest socalled “backdrop” bonus paid out in Milwaukee County this year. The check went out on Sept. 7.

No other public workers in Wisconsin are eligible for these payments.

The highly controvers­ial backdrop program, initially pitched as costing little or nothing, pays bonuses to county workers

who agree to work past their retirement date. In exchange for taking the upfront payment, retirees see a small reduction in their monthly retirement checks.

The political fallout from the lucrative pension deals forced out former Milwaukee County Executive Tom Ament, who was replaced by Walker in 2002. Now Robles — who spent years investigat­ing Walker — benefits from the program that helped lead to Walker’s political ascent.

Along with his lumpsum payment, Robles is also receiving monthly retirement checks totaling $59,805 a year. The county credited the senior assistant prosecutor with nearly 35 years of government service.

Robles declined to say how he spent or plans to spend the cash from the one-time payment, saying it’s a “personal matter” between him and his family. He was paid nearly $122,000 in his job as a prosecutor.

“I’m appalled at two levels,” said state Sen. David Craig, a Big Bend Republican.

The conservati­ve politician said he opposed the backdrop program because of its abuse of government resources. The Journal Sentinel reported in January that since its inception in 2001, this pension perk has been paid out to more than 2,200 former county bureaucrat­s to the tune of $294 million.

Another $19 million more has been paid to nearly 100 retirees so far this year.

The largest payout in 2017 was a $1.15 million check to a former accounting supervisor with nearly 41 years of government employment.

At least four others have received lump-sum checks for more than $1 million under the program.

Craig, one of the chief critics of the John Doe probes, said he was upset that one of these backdrops was going to Robles. He said all the prosecutor­s in the cases showed, at a minimum, poor judgment throughout the case and ended up violating the constituti­onal guarantee of free speech.

Calling the secret investigat­ions a partisan witch hunt — something Chisholm and others dispute — Craig said he believes the whole team of prosecutor­s, not just Robles, should be held in contempt. And Robles, he added, shouldn’t be walking away with any pension bonus.

“It’s ludicrous,” Craig said.

Reached earlier this month, Robles held his tongue when asked about Craig’s comments. He was also mum, for now, about Schimel’s report recommendi­ng that he be held in contempt.

“I can’t comment at the present time,” said the retired prosecutor.

The first John Doe investigat­ion led to charges against six individual­s with links to Walker. No criminal charges were filed in the second John Doe case.

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