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Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Sanalitro: ‘A culture of self-dealing was allowed to thrive in the environment of secrecy created by former leadership’

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Rep. Jennifer Sanalitro | Courtesy photo

Rep. Jennifer Sanalitro | Courtesy photo

State Rep. Jennifer Sanalitro (R-Bloomingdale) is applauding the conviction of the ComEd Four who await sentencing for their part in a multi-million dollar bribery scheme. 

Prosecutors called the four "grandmasters of corruption.”

“A culture of self-dealing was allowed to thrive in the environment of secrecy created by former leadership,” Sanalitro said in a press release. “I look to spend my time as a state representative contributing to a new era where service to the public is more common than service to oneself.”

Former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore and former ComEd lobbyist John Hooker along with Madigan’s right-hand man Michael McClain and lobbyist Jay Doherty, who previously ran the City Club of Chicago, were convicted of scheming to pay $1.3 million to Madigan-connected people and companies. As part of the scheme ComEd provided jobs – some of which were no-show – and contracts to those with connections to Madigan who at the time controlled the Democratic Party and had wielded power as the state’s most powerful politician as the longest-serving state House Speaker in the nation. ComEd, the state’s largest utility, engaged in the scheme to influence Madigan in order to get preferential treatment in the state House. ComEd paid a $200 million fine in July 2020 and admitted to the scheme.

Sentencing has not been decided yet for the four defendants. However, each faces fines as high as $5 million and a maximum of 20 years in jail.

The 81-year-old Madigan was in power as House Speaker from 1983 to 1995 and then from 1997 to 2021. He was an Illinois House member from 1971 to 2021 before stepping down amid scandal. He is charged in a separate filing of 23 counts of public corruption related to the ComEd scandal and is facing a single count of public corruption from a similar scheme with AT&T. Madigan will go on trial in April 2024. Despite being under investigation, Madigan reportedly took part in the 2022 election campaign. Additionally, he transferred the last $10 million from his campaign budget to his defense fund.

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