Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Feds: FBI interviewe­d Madigan confidant in 2014, 2016

- By Ray Long and Jason Meisner

Less than two weeks before the federal ComEd Four bribery conspiracy trial, prosecutor­s revealed in a court filing that a confidant of former Speaker Michael Madigan was interviewe­d twice by federal authoritie­s before the probe became public about his use of code words to refer to the longtime House leader.

The first interview of Michael McClain, the speaker’s friend and ComEd lobbyist, came in August 2014, the same month that Madigan was secretly recorded by an FBI informant at his law firm discussing a desire to secure property tax business with a Chinatown developer, the filing shows.

The other interview, in April 2016, occurred shortly before federal authoritie­s secured the cooperatio­n of then-Ald. Daniel Solis, who later recorded numerous conversati­ons about a Chinatown land deal that was a centerpiec­e in the bombshell indictment separately filed against Madigan and McClain.

In both interviews, which were revealed for the first time in the filing late Tuesday, McClain was asked about his use of codes for Madigan such as “our friend,” “a friend” and “friend,” a nickname the Tribune first reported in 2019 that McClain used when sending secret fundraisin­g requests to close allies. In those emails, McClain also referred to Madigan as “Himself ” and the prospectiv­e donors as “most trusted of the trusted.”

In the 2014 interview, prosecutor­s wrote, McClain admitted he referred to Madigan as “our friend” because “people might be listening to or reading McClain’s conversati­ons,” prosecutor­s said. In the other interview nearly two years later, McClain admitted he referred to Madigan as “our friend” in conversati­ons and over email because he “never knows who’s listening,” the prosecutio­n filing stated.

The revelation that McClain was twice confronted by the FBI with questions involving Madigan comes less than two weeks before McClain is set to go on trial March 6 along with three others on bribery conspiracy charges related to ComEd’s alleged attempts to illegally influence the then-powerful House speaker.

Also charged are former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggior­e, longtime top ComEd lobbyist John Hooker and lobbyist Jay Doherty, who resigned as head of the City Club during the federal probe.

It’s not clear in the prosecutio­n filing what else, if anything, federal investigat­ors asked McClain in the newly disclosed interviews. But it’s the first indication that McClain — and likely Madigan — were on notice that the feds were looking

into them nearly five years before the investigat­ion went overt with a series of raids in May 2019, including on McClain’s home in downstate Quincy and at the City Club offices.

Prosecutor­s contend McClain’s admissions about the use of coded language “clearly show that McClain did not want any eavesdropp­ers to know the true subject of his communicat­ions and are therefore wholly consistent with the indictment and the government’s evidence at trial: ‘our Friends’ and ‘a friend of ours’ were terms designed to conceal Madigan’s identity.”

McClain’s attorneys have argued he couldn’t have been using the term to conceal anything because he’d already readily admitted to investigat­ors he was talking about Madigan. The issue also could be used by the defense to push the idea that they were confident they were staying within the boundaries of legal behavior.

McClain’s attorney could not be reached for comment.

The 65-page filing by prosecutor­s also revealed several other new details they want to present to the jury to show the depth of the friendship between Madigan and McClain.

Among them: how McClain allegedly orchestrat­ed a group of utility lobbyists to send payments to a longtime Madigan aide, Kevin Quinn, after the speaker ousted him in a 2018 sexual harassment scandal.

Quinn, the brother of Madigan’s hand-picked 13th Ward Ald. Marty Quinn, has not been charged in the case. But the Tribune reported that McClain rounded up several lobbyists to send more than $30,000 worth of contracts to Kevin Quinn after Madigan booted him from the speaker’s state and political operations.

The feds also want to show jurors that they intercepte­d a call in which Madigan

asked McClain to help secure a job for an unidentifi­ed state representa­tive’s wife. In the July 2, 2018, phone call, Madigan allegedly said the representa­tive “came to me and same story, he needs money, and he had the thought that maybe I could help his wife on something,” according to the filing.

Prosecutor­s also want to use a McClain call in which he described himself as “sort of Madigan’s agent” as he worked with a lawmaker to guide him through oversight of bills dealing with ComEd and gambling.

Madigan and McClain also face an overarchin­g case in which both ComEd and the Illinois affiliate of AT&T have reached deferred prosecutio­n agreements in which they have acknowledg­ed they sought to give favors to Madigan in hopes of his help on their legislativ­e agendas in Springfiel­d.

The agreements included having ComEd pay a $200

million fine and AT&T pay a $23 million fine. Prosecutor­s have agreed to drop bribery charges against the companies if they cooperate in the investigat­ion. Both Madigan and McClain have pleaded not guilty in the case, which is slated for trial in April 2024.

Further, the government in its filing disclosed it planned to show that Madigan arranged for two of his allies to get part-time state positions, including former Ald. Frank Olivo, who received a position with the Illinois Motor Vehicle Review Board and received about $20,000 a year for more than two decades.

It is the latest disclosure as prosecutor­s fight to allow for compensati­on of defendants to be included in the trial, including Pramaggior­e making as much as $2.8 million. The defense has maintained the various disclosure­s could be prejudicia­l and seek to keep them away from the jury.

 ?? E. JASON WAMBSGANS/TRIBUNE ?? Lobbyist Michael McClain appears outside then-House Speaker Michael Madigan’s office in Springfiel­d on May 25, 2012. McClain is set to go on trial March 6.
E. JASON WAMBSGANS/TRIBUNE Lobbyist Michael McClain appears outside then-House Speaker Michael Madigan’s office in Springfiel­d on May 25, 2012. McClain is set to go on trial March 6.

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