Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

WRONG ARM OF THE LAW

Illinois law enforcemen­t board chief fired after improper certificat­e given to billionair­e’s son

- BY JOHN O’CONNOR

SPRINGFIEL­D — The director of the Illinois Law Enforcemen­t Training and Standards Board was fired this fall after an investigat­ion found that he improperly issued a law enforcemen­t certificat­e to an unqualifie­d local philanthro­pist who’s also the son of billionair­e investor Warren Buffett, according to a report released last week.

The Office of Executive Inspector General for the Agencies of the Governor determined that Brent Fischer, executive director of the standards board since 2015, issued the certificat­e to Howard Buffett, who had served a 14-month appointmen­t as Macon County sheriff and in 2016 had donated land and $15 million for a law enforcemen­t training academy.

Buffett’s name is redacted in the report, but he’s identified by his resume and philanthro­pic activity.

The standards board removed Fischer, who had previously been Adams County sheriff for 17 years, on Sept. 8 from the $156,780 job after receiving the inspector general’s report. Such reports are by law kept confidenti­al unless released by the Executive Ethics Commission, although reports that lead to terminatio­n of employment must be released within 60 days.

The inspector general’s investigat­ion found that three hours after the board accepted a $10,000 donation from Buffett in January 2019 for a canine training program, Fischer issued a training waiver to allow Buffett to serve as a part-time undersheri­ff and a certificat­e to become a part-time law enforcemen­t officer.

“Certificat­ion of law enforcemen­t officer status, especially considerin­g the significan­t public interest in maintainin­g integrity in that process, should not be minimized nor should it be provided based on someone’s ability to financiall­y contribute … to the law enforcemen­t community,” the report said.

The report recommende­d the board develop standards regarding conflicts of interest.

Attempts to contact Fischer on numbers listed in his name were unsuccessf­ul. In a written response to the inspector, he said the report failed “to state any establishe­d rule, regulation, statute, or even norm I somehow violated. My performanc­e should be measured against known, objective and accepted standards.”

Fischer was involved in another incident in January 2020 when he was forced to end a contract with an employee whose name surfaced in an email purporting government cover-ups involving a rape and illegal state hiring. It was sent a decade ago by a powerful lobbyist to a former governor. Current Gov. J.B. Pritzker referred that matter for investigat­ion.

Buffett has completed a substantia­l portion of the training courses but is short of the 560 hours required. He has served in volunteer and auxiliary sheriff ’s office positions in Arizona as well as Illinois.

He was appointed Macon County sheriff in 2017 to fill a vacancy, serving for 14 months. At the time, sheriffs only had to be a U.S. citizen, live in the county for a year and have no felony record to qualify for the job.

Buffett did not run in 2018, but that election was so close it resulted in a nearly three-year legal battle that was just resolved in June.

That same month, Buffett dropped plans to seek the job in 2022 because a policestan­dards overhaul signed into law last winter requires elected sheriffs to have completed the basic training course.

 ?? NATI HARNIK/AP FILE PHOTO ?? Howard Buffett (seated) and father Warren Buffett at a Berkshire Hathaway shareholde­r meeting. Howard Buffett has completed a substantia­l portion of law-enforcemen­t training courses but is short of the 560 hours required.
NATI HARNIK/AP FILE PHOTO Howard Buffett (seated) and father Warren Buffett at a Berkshire Hathaway shareholde­r meeting. Howard Buffett has completed a substantia­l portion of law-enforcemen­t training courses but is short of the 560 hours required.

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