Chicago Sun-Times

Preckwinkl­e purges campaign cash linked to Burke soirée

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e has purged $33,250 from her campaign coffers, the last remaining contributi­ons that her team tracked down from a fundraiser hosted by embattled 14th Ward Ald. Edward Burke.

Nine contributi­ons were returned in April, May and June ranging from $250 from Citizens for Accountabi­lity to $20,000 from the Chicago Journeymen Plumbers’ Local Union 130, according to a disclosure report that was filed Monday with the Illinois State Board of Elections.

Scott Kastrup, Preckwinkl­e’s political director, said the campaign reached out to people whose checks hadn’t been cashed and reissued some of them to make sure “everyone who wanted their money back got their money back.”

Some declined to take the money back. That money, estimated at a few thousand dollars, will be donated to four charities: Response Now, South Suburban PADS, Ford Heights Community Service and the Black Ensemble Theater, Kastrup said.

Preckwinkl­e was tied to the veteran alderman earlier this year, when it was revealed in a 37page criminal complaint that Burke leaned on a pair of Burger King franchise executives to attend a fundraiser for her.

She vowed to give back the $116,000 from that fundraiser. Though Preckwinkl­e was not accused of wrongdoing, the allegation stymied the Hyde Park Democrat’s bid to succeed former Mayor Rahm Emanuel and became part of her opponents’ attacks on her record and ability to run the city.

A senior adviser to Preckwinkl­e previously told the Chicago SunTimes that the fundraiser, held at Burke’s Southwest Side home in January 2018, was “the result of a friendship between Preckwinkl­e and Burke’s wife, Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke” and their “shared passion” for criminal justice reform.

That comment dragged Justice Burke into the fundraiser fallout. Jeffrey Orr, the son of former Cook County Clerk David Orr, filed a complaint with the state’s Judicial Inquiry Board, arguing that that adviser’s comments “implicated Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke in potential violations of the Code of Judicial Conduct.” Justice Burke was later cleared in that complaint.

 ??  ?? Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e
Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e

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