Chicago Sun-Times

Sentencing­s of 4 in ComEd bribery postponed; bid for Madigan trial delay expected

- BY JON SEIDEL, FEDERAL COURTS REPORTER jseidel@suntimes.com | @SeidelCont­ent

The sentencing­s of four people convicted of a lengthy conspiracy to bribe then-Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan for ComEd will not go forward as planned next month, but a judge declined Monday to put all proceeding­s on hold as defense attorneys hoped.

Meanwhile, a defense attorney for Madigan’s co-defendant said he will be making a similar request to stay proceeding­s in Madigan’s case, which is set for trial in less than four months.

The developmen­ts come in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision to take up a corruption case out of Northwest Indiana, in which questions revolve around a law central to the ComEd and Madigan cases.

Defense attorneys say the Supreme Court’s decision in the Indiana case could prove “fatal” to the verdict last May against the ComEd bribery defendants: Madigan confidant Michael McClain, ex-ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggior­e, former ComEd lobbyist John Hooker and onetime City Club President Jay Doherty.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu argued in court Monday that the Indiana case “doesn’t have any effect upon the verdict” in the ComEd case and “there is a need to bring this case to an end.”

U.S. District Judge Manish Shah handled questions in the ComEd case as emergency judge Monday. He declined to enter a stay of proceeding­s but told attorneys the sentencing dates for the four defendants, which had been set for January, weren’t going to work.

He said new sentencing dates would be set. The case is assigned to U.S. District Judge Harry Leinenwebe­r.

Meanwhile, Madigan himself is set to face trial in April on a separate racketeeri­ng indictment. McClain is also charged in that case and set to go to trial with him. But McClain’s attorney, Patrick Cotter, told Shah he would soon be filing a motion to stay proceeding­s in that matter until the high court rules on the Indiana case.

The Madigan case is assigned to U.S. District Judge John Blakey.

Lawyers also sought to put a pause on the case for longtime Madigan chief of staff Tim Mapes with a motion Monday that revolved around the Supreme Court review.

Mapes is set to be sentenced Jan. 31 by U.S. District Judge John Kness for perjury

and attempted obstructio­n of justice.

Defense attorneys in the ComEd case had sought last week to stay “all proceeding­s” after learning that the Supreme Court would review the corruption conviction of James Snyder, a former mayor of Portage, Indiana.

The ComEd defense attorneys insisted in a six-page filing that “the Supreme Court’s decision in Snyder is certain to impact [the ComEd] case, and it has a substantia­l chance of requiring dismissal of the charges, acquittal or, at a minimum, a new trial.”

At issue is a bribery statute dealing with programs receiving federal funds. Lawyers in the ComEd case have sparred over whether that law criminaliz­es only bribery as opposed to so-called gratuities or rewards.

Another point of contention is whether a bribery conviction under the statute requires proof of a “quid pro quo.”

Federal prosecutor­s in Chicago insist that it does not.

The ComEd defense attorneys wrote that the Snyder case “squarely and precisely” addresses the first question and could affect the second.

“In approximat­ely six months, the Supreme Court will rule definitive­ly on the question of whether the government or the defendants were correct from the start of this case about what conduct is criminal, and thus whether their conviction­s are valid,” the defense attorneys wrote.

Federal prosecutor­s in Chicago wound up handling the Snyder case because of conflicts involving his former attorney, Thomas Kirsch, who went on to become the top federal prosecutor in Indiana and, later, a judge.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan is set to face trial in April.
AP FILE Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan is set to face trial in April.

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