Chicago Sun-Times

Suit: Rahm tried to hide racist email scandal at water department

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s administra­tion was accused Monday of providing “soft landings” for seven Department of Water Management bosses forced out for exchanging racist, sexist and homophobic emails and violating the Freedom of Informatio­n Act to cover up the severity of the scandal.

In a lawsuit filed in Circuit Court, six people who are current or former water department employees, all African-American, are seeking to compel City Hall to release every one of the offensive emails exchanged between the fired employees.

The suit, filed late Monday, also seeks hefty fines against the city and details of the “post terminatio­n payments” made to former Water Management Commission­er Barrett Murphy and six of Murphy’s ousted underlings: William Bresnahan; Paul Hansen; Michael Dwyer; Jennifer Izban; Irene Caminer and Lucy Pope Anderson. Personnel files for all seven and Anthony Nguyen were also sought.

Plaintiffs’ attorney Victor Henderson accused the Emanuel administra­tion of stonewalli­ng his Freedom of Informatio­n requests and heavily redacting the personnel files he sought in a cover-up he called “Laquan McDonald all over again.”

That’s why he’s pursuing the same legal strategy that forced Emanuel to release the McDonald shooting video in November 2015, hours after Chicago Police Officer Jason Van Dyke was charged with first-degree murder for shooting the black teenager 16 times.

Henderson’s lawsuit accusing the water department of creating a “hostile and abusive work environmen­t based on race” is still pending in federal court. Now, in state court, he is trying to get the city to release informatio­n he hopes will bolster that federal case and force the city to settle.

“It’s the same thing as Laquan McDonald. They didn’t want that video out because they knew the public would be in an uproar. And I guarantee that, when black people see the full scope of these emails, they’re gonna go ballistic. That’s why they’re hiding them,” Henderson said.

“They allowed these high-ranking officials to call black people [the N-word], make these racist jokes. And then, instead of firing them, they gave them soft landings. The message to people in the Water Department and the message to black people all over the city is that, you can call black people [the N-word], treat them like [the N-word] and it’s OK. No big deal. We’re gonna protect you.”

Water Management spokespers­on Megan Vidis branded Henderson’s claim that former employees were provided a soft landing “intentiona­lly misleading and without merit.”

“There are only certain circumstan­ces in which an employee may be denied his or her pension, and resigning under inquiry does not meet the standards,” Vidis wrote in an email to the Sun-Times.

Vidis also denied the lawsuit’s claim that the city stonewalle­d Henderson’s request for all of the hate-filled emails.

“The Department of Water Management has been in regular contact with the law firm that filed this FOIA request, which only asked for personnel records and did not include a request for emails, and the records will be provided as soon as possible,” she wrote.

To underscore his claim about “soft-landings,” Henderson produced documents and worksheets obtained from the Municipal Employees pension funds.

They show Murphy, whose wife is a close friend of the mayor’s wife, Amy Rule, resigned on June 2, 2017, but the effective date was delayed until Dec. 25 of that year.

He received $5,644 in retroactiv­e pay and a lifetime annuity of $5,644 a month.

Bresnahan resigned on May 12, 2017, and his resignatio­n took effect the following day. He received $14,094 in retro pay and a monthly annuity check of $7,047.

Caminer resigned Oct. 31, 2017, and her resignatio­n took effect the following day. She received $14,437 in back pay and a lifetime annuity of $7,218 a month. City Hall insisted she played no role in the email scandal.

“They can terminate you. Or they can give you a soft landing, a full pension and let you ride off into the sunset. Instead of being terminated for abhorrent behavior, they were protected,” Henderson said.

Last year, a houseclean­ing in the water department — which also was at the center of the Hired Truck and city hiring scandals — swept out Murphy, Bresnahan and Hansen. Other high-level supervisor­s followed them out the door.

Veteran City Hall insider Randy Conner, who is African-American, replaced Murphy and was given carte blanche to clean house.

Sources said it was during the course of an eight-month-long investigat­ion into allegation­s that Hansen was using his city email account to sell guns that Inspector General Joe Ferguson stumbled upon the hate-filled emails that triggered the houseclean­ing.

In a follow-up report, Ferguson said a highrankin­g deputy — whom sources identified as Hansen — called African-Americans “wild animals” and sent an email with the subject line “Chicago Safari Tickets” to multiple high-ranking Water Management colleagues.

“If you didn’t book a Chicago Safari adventure with us this 4th of July weekend, this is what you missed,” the email states, listing the number of people shot in Englewood, Garfield Park, Austin, Lawndale, South Shore, Woodlawn and other neighborho­ods plagued by gang violence.

“We guarantee that you will see at least one kill and five crime scenes per three-day tour. You’ll also see lots and lots of animals in their natural habitat.”

“THE MESSAGE TO PEOPLE IN THE WATER DEPARTMENT AND THE MESSAGE TO BLACK PEOPLE ALL OVER THE CITY IS THAT, YOU CAN CALL BLACK PEOPLE [THE N-WORD], TREAT THEM LIKE [THE N-WORD] AND IT’S OK. NO BIG DEAL. WE’RE GONNA PROTECT YOU.”

VICTOR HENDERSON, attorney representi­ng the plaintiffs in the suit

 ??  ?? Mayor Rahm Emanuel
Mayor Rahm Emanuel

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