Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

COVID RELIEF FRAUD PROBE INCLUDES MORE THAN 50 EMPLOYEES IN COOK COUNTY CLERK OF COURT’S OFFICE

- BY FRANK MAIN, STAFF REPORTER fmain@suntimes.com | @FrankMainN­ews Contributi­ng: Fran Spielman

More than 50 employees of Cook County Clerk of Court Iris Martinez are suspected of defrauding a federal program intended to help small businesses struggling during the COVID-19 pandemic, a spokesman said Friday.

The clerk’s inspector general is working with Cook County’s inspector general’s office, which is conducting a separate investigat­ion of employees who work for Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e, according to Martinez spokesman James Murphy-Aguilú.

Interim Cook County Inspector General Steven Cyranoski has provided Martinez’s investigat­ors with a list of clerk’s employees who’ve obtained loans from the federal Paycheck Protection Program. Cyranoski’s office also subpoenaed bank records of those workers on behalf of Martinez’s investigat­ors, who don’t have that authority.

“She’s not going to tolerate any amount of corruption in our offices, given the public trust that is required from our employees,” Murphy-Aguilú said of Martinez.

Most of the court clerk’s employees who are under investigat­ion had gotten PPP loans of about $20,000 by saying they had made at least $100,000 from an outside business in the year before they filed their applicatio­ns, Murphy-Aguilú said. Some employees received about $40,000 in loans, he said.

“Many of the employees who work for us don’t earn $100,000 a year,” Murphy-Aguilú said. “To say you make more cutting hair than working here does not make a lot of sense.”

The clerk of courts’ investigat­ion could take at least two months to complete — part of the widening scrutiny of city and county employees who got such pandemicre­lief loans in 2020 and 2021.

The Chicago Housing Authority, Cook County chief judge’s office and Cook County offices — including the revenue department, comptrolle­r and Cook County Board of Review — are among those conducting investigat­ions.

State and federal prosecutor­s have been notified of the findings of some of those investigat­ions.

City Hall Inspector General Deborah Witzburg said her office also is investigat­ing the possibilit­y of such fraud by employees of the Chicago Police Department and other city agencies. She wouldn’t discuss details.

Murphy-Aguilú said no one has been fired but at least one clerk’s employee who was under investigat­ion has retired and he expects more will do so.

He said one or more clerk’s employees told investigat­ors that a broker took a fee to file that worker’s paperwork for a PPP loan.

Law enforcemen­t sources said prosecutor­s appear to be less interested in people who got fraudulent pandemic-relief loans than in any brokers who illegally arranged them.

Murphy-Aguilú said investigat­ors also have found that some banks gave far less scrutiny to loan applicatio­ns than other banks did.

“There was some predatory behavior from the industry,” he said. “Some banks, for instance, required photo IDs; some didn’t. There’s a lot of blame to go around.”

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Cook County Clerk of Court Iris Martinez
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES FILE Cook County Clerk of Court Iris Martinez

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