Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Board of Review benches employee who allegedly took bribes for property tax breaks

- SUN-TIMES STAFF REPORT

The Cook County Board of Review has placed an employee on administra­tive leave after a federal court affidavit revealed he allegedly took thousands of dollars in cash bribes to lower property tax assessment­s.

In a statement issued Friday evening, leaders of the agency responsibl­e for reviewing assessment­s said they “immediatel­y took action” to bench the worker, revoke his access to board technology and “protect potential evidence.”

Board of Review Commission­ers Larry Rogers Jr., Michael Cabonargi and Tammy Wendt said they “are committed to fully cooperatin­g” with the ongoing federal investigat­ion.

“The allegation­s against this employee are abhorrent. They are not only illegal, but put an unfair and undeserved stain on the hundreds of honest and ethical Board employees that have worked hard to help the citizens of Cook County,” their joint statement read.

The alleged bribery scheme was revealed in an affidavit obtained last week by the Chicago Sun-Times.

It outlined an FBI probe dating back to at least January 2019, involving an unnamed individual who was secretly cooperatin­g with the feds and is the subject of a separate criminal investigat­ion.

That cooperatin­g witness allegedly met the Board of Review employee in a Skokie parking lot earlier this year to hand off $21,000 as the first half of payment to lower assessment­s on 18 commercial properties and seven residentia­l properties.

A lower assessment means a lower property tax bill. The going rate to lower assessment­s was allegedly $2,000 per commercial property and $1,000 for residentia­l.

“I’m just the middle guy,” the agency worker allegedly told the cooperatin­g witness, insisting the proceeds would be split with an unspecifie­d number of colleagues at the Board of Review.

The feds’ affidavit included a photo of the employee holding the cash. “I’m gonna get outta this one, 250’s f---ing my cut,” he allegedly said. “Which, f--- it. I don’t give a f---. I’m just the middle guy pushing.”

Sources at the board said the employee at the center of the feds’ probe had, since 1995, been a member of the administra­tive clerk’s staff, which has no signing authority in the review process.

The Sun-Times, which is not naming him because records show he has not been criminally charged, obtained the affidavit while it was publicly available on the court docket. It has since been sealed.

The U.S. attorney’s office has declined to comment on the investigat­ion.

 ?? AFFIDAVIT FROM U.S. ATTORNEY’S OFFICE IN CHICAGO ?? A Cook County Board of Review official allegedly counts bribe money for lowering property assessment­s, according to a photo attached to an affidavit obtained by the Sun-Times. The Sun-Times is not naming the official and has pixelated his face; he is not charged.
AFFIDAVIT FROM U.S. ATTORNEY’S OFFICE IN CHICAGO A Cook County Board of Review official allegedly counts bribe money for lowering property assessment­s, according to a photo attached to an affidavit obtained by the Sun-Times. The Sun-Times is not naming the official and has pixelated his face; he is not charged.

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