A.D. Quig

Bio

Covering the boss city of the universe @CrainsChicago. Alum: @thedailylinechi, @rivetradio, @kenrudinjunkie, @totn, @WIUX. Hoosier.
JAN 22, 2019
A day after Ald. David Moore (17) blocked former 17th Ward Ald. Latasha Thomas’ appointment to the Community Development Commission over questions about campaign cash, Thomas amended her campaign finance reports. Meanwhile, aldermen will consider a scaled-back proposal from City Clerk Anna Valencia to waive the fee for a city sticker to all veterans who are honorably or generally discharged from the armed services.

Morning briefing — Thomas amends filing after Moore blocks appointment; Aldermen to weigh pilot program to offer veterans free city stickers

A day after Ald. David Moore (17) blocked former 17th Ward Ald. Latasha Thomas’ appointment to th...
JAN 18, 2019
Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson (11) promised to add an important bit of information to some of his window signs after a complaint was filed by his opponent with state officials. Former Cook County Clerk David Orr backed a slate of "independent" candidates and mayoral candidate Bill Daley saw a familiar face around the office Thursday.

  • Sign complaint — David Mihalyfy, who is running against Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson in the 11th Ward, filed a complaint with the Illinois State Board of Elections, alleging that Daley Thompson’s campaign signs do not include a required notation that indicates what entity paid for them. “Everyone’s saying we can do better in the ward,” Mihalyfy said. “That’s about big picture stuff like youth and helping people with cost-of-living, but we also deserve an alderman who pays attention to everyday details, not to mention basic legal boundaries.” Daley Thompson said an error by the printer left off the notice on his campaigns’ English-language signs, and would be corrected immediately.


  • Orr endorses slate of aldermanic challengers – Former Cook County clerk and 49th Ward alderman David Orr endorsed a group of aldermanic challengers at a City Hall press conference Thursday. Orr backed Rafael Yañez (15), Mike Rodriguez (22), Jessica Washington Gutierrez (30), Tara Stamps (37), Robert Murphy (39), Dianne Daleiden (40), Erika Wozniak Francis (46), Matt Martin (47), and Maria Hadden (49). Orr said he was encouraged by the group’s commitment to “efficient” government and said he expected them to pursue a long list of reforms – from TIF reform to police abuse, zoning scandals to school closures. “These candidates are independent, they’re proactive, and will demand change, accessibility, transparency and to make council a real legislative body,” Orr said.


  • Daley joins Daley — Thursday was John R. Daley’s first day as the political director for Bill Daley’s campaign. Bill Daley, the brother of John R. Daley’s father, Cook County Comm. John P. Daley (D-11), the uncle of Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson (11), the brother of former mayor Richard M. Daley and the son of former mayor Richard J. Daley, denied the existence of a family business in his interview with the Tribune’s editorial board. “Yes, my brother, my father were career politicians,” he said. “Yes I was a political advisor and ran Rich’s campaigns, but I never had any business at City Hall.” Bill Daley pledged in October that if elected, he would bar family members from benefiting from his position — including bidding, lobbying, or managing public pension funds at the city or its sister agencies. John R. Daley said his role will be in a “small advisory capacity” and “as was stated in the ethics roll out, I will not lobby a Daley administration.” John R. Daley is on leave from his lobbying role at Reyes Kurson, where he abstained from lobbying the county.


  • Vallas focuses on pensions — Mayoral candidate Paul Vallas held a jam packed press conference Thursday to offer a blueprint to end the city’s pension woes. Vallas said he could find the roughly $300 million that the city will owe in 2020 by cutting the, including a 5 percent reduction in base expenditures. Vallas also pledged to cap property tax increases, “depoliticize” pension fund investment decisions and pursue a state legislative agenda that reverses the hundreds of millions of dollars he says the city is being “short-changed.” Vallas’ statements Thursday echo many he made in a speech about his financial plan in at the City Club in October.

  • Preckwinkle and Mendoza applaud Pritzker —  Mayoral candidates Toni Preckwinkle and Susana Mendoza praised Gov. JB Pritzker for signing SB 337, which requires gun dealers to be licensed by the state. Former Gov. Bruce Rauner vetoed the bill, which had been championed by Mayor Rahm Emanuel. “This bill will have a tremendous impact in the city of Chicago, as strengthening gun dealer licensing requirements will reduce the number of guns that come into the wrong hands,” Preckwinkle said in a statement. Both Mendoza and Preckwinkle said they looked forward to working with Pritzker on future gun control bills. “It is so incredible to finally have a governor who recognizes the effects of gun violence on our communities and has the courage to sign the Gun Dealer Licensing bill,” Mendoza said.

Trail reports — Challenger files complaint against Daley Thompson; Orr backs slate of ‘independent’ candidates; Daley joins Daley

Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson (11) promised to add an important bit of information to some of his w...
JAN 17, 2019
With petition challenges finally drawing to a close, early voting will start 11 days late, officials said. Meanwhile, a dozen challengers won the backing of a national progressive organization, and the ad wars in the mayoral campaign continued full speed ahead.

Trail reports — Early voting set to start Jan. 28; Run for Something taps 12 City Council challengers; Sposato backs Mendoza — and Burke

With petition challenges finally drawing to a close, early voting will start 11 days late, offici...
JAN 17, 2019
Chicago and Cook County’s watchdogs released their regular reports this week, with one finding an abuse of the city’s family and medical leave policy, and the other tallying up the cost to taxpayers for a Recorder of Deeds staff team building retreat in Wisconsin.  

JAN 16, 2019
More than seven years after all 50 aldermen went along with Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s proposal to close six of the city’s 12 mental health clinics, triggering vehement protests and national attention, aldermen will call for a new task force to consider reopening some of the clinics.

Demand for city-funded mental health clinics to take center stage at City Hall, again

More than seven years after all 50 aldermen went along with Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s proposal to clos...
JAN 10, 2019
Nearly a dozen aldermanic candidates rallied at City Hall Wednesday in an effort to breathe new life into a measure that would put the Chicago Police Department under the control of an elected board of civilians, while former U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez backed Ald. Ameya Pawar (47) in the race for treasurer and Toni Preckwinkle released her first ad buy focused on what her campaign said in a statement was her “pivotal role in the Laquan McDonald investigation.”

Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, who is running for re-election as 35th Ward alderman, rallied in support of civilian police oversight. [Heather Cherone/The Daily Line]
JAN 08, 2019
A group hoping to derail a fast-moving effort to approve a new tax-increment financing district that would fuel the massive Lincoln Yards development announced its petition drive had reached a milestone, while Sen. Tammy Duckworth met with Aviation Commissioner Jamie Rhee.

Morning Briefing — Anti-Lincoln Yards TIF petition has 2,000 signatures: group; Duckworth meets with Rhee at O’Hare

A group hoping to derail a fast-moving effort to approve a new tax-increment financing district t...
JAN 03, 2019
Ald. Ed Burke (14) in September 2018. [A.D. Quig/The Daily Line]
Ald. Edward Burke (14) — the longest serving alderman in the history of the Chicago City Council and the chairman of the powerful Finance Committee — has been charged with one count of attempted extortion, according to a criminal complaint filed Wednesday and unsealed Thursday.

Burke, 75, has served on the City Council for 50 years and is running for another term.

The complaint comes five weeks after FBI agents raided Burke’s City Hall, 14th Ward offices and campaign offices, papering over the windows while they searched for hours before hauling away boxes and computers.

“The transaction described in the complaint does not make out an extortion or an attempt to extort,” Burke’s attorney Charles Sklarsky told reporters. He is also represented by Anton Valukas. “We look forward to a prompt day in court to prove the innocence of Alderman Burke.”

According to a source in Mayor Rahm Emanuel's office, Emanuel believes it is "unacceptable" for Burke to continue as Finance Committee chairman.

Under the City Council's rules, is Burke if removed or resigns as chairman, he would be replaced by Finance Committee Vice Chairman Ald. Pat O'Connor (40), who also chairs the Committee on Workforce Development and Audit, until a permanent leader is selected.

"Members, chairmen and vice-chairmen of committees may be removed only by resolution of the Council adopted by an affirmative vote of a majority of all the Aldermen entitled by law to be elected," according to the City Council's rules.

Burke's departure could threaten Emanuel's plans for the end of his term — Ald. John Arena (45) said Thursday night he would push for City Council's caucuses to select their own choice for Finance Committee chairman, and that Emanuel should halt the push for new major tax increment financing districts and a potential pension obligation bond ordinance until a trustworthy chair can be installed. Arena's choice is Ald. Scott Waguespack (32).

"The decision on who chairs the committees is made by the aldermen. It should be made by the aldermen, it shouldn’t be at the advice and consent of the mayor," Arena said. "We are our own legislative body and we control our own destiny and we should represent ourselves in this."

Brown paper covers the windows at 14th Ward Ald. Ed Burke's City Hall office on Nov. 29. [A.D. Quig/The Daily Line]
Related: FBI agents raid Ald. Ed Burke’s ward, City Hall offices, setting off shockwaves

Burke did not enter a plea during a court appearance Thursday afternoon. Wearing his trademark pinstripe suit with a red and white pocket square, Burke was released after posting an $10,000 unsecured bond. Among the requirements of his release is that he must dispose of the 23 firearms kept in his offices.

Burke's travel is also limited to the Northern District of Illinois, and to and from another residence in Powers Lake, Wisconsin.

A preliminary hearing is scheduled for 2 p.m. on Jan. 18. If Burke is indicted by a grand jury, that hearing will be canceled. Amarjeet Bhachu, who also worked on the case of Burke's convicted colleague former 10th Ward Ald. Ed Vrdolyak, is the lead prosecuting attorney for the federal government. He was joined in the filing by Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Streicker and FBI Special Agent Edward McNamara.

The charges revolve around an effort to remodel a fast-food restaurant in Burke's Southwest Side ward, according to the 37-page criminal complaint. The Burger King at 4060 S. Pulaski Road in Archer Heights was renovated during the period detailed by the criminal complaint, according to city records.

Laquan McDonald was fatally shot 16 times by Chicago Police Officer Jason Van Dyke in 2014 near that Burger King.

The restaurant was not identified in the complaint, which notes that the two owners of the eatery are considered by federal officials to have been victims in the incident, and are not targets of the investigation. The eatery is part of a chain with more than 100 locations in Illinois, according to the complaint.

Burke is accused of using his power as an alderman to block permits for the work until the owners hired his private law firm, Klafter & Burke, to represent them in tax matters.

Burke's cell phone was tapped during the course of the investigation and the alderman — who is married to Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke — was placed under surveillance, according to the complaint.

The complaint alleges that Burke was explicit, telling the owners during a phone conversation on June 27, 2017, "we're going to talk about the real estate tax representation and you were going to have somebody get in touch with me so we can expedite your permits."

The owners of the restaurant were well aware of Burke's immense power at City Hall.

“I know these guys are very powerful and they can make life very difficult for all of our Chicago stores,” one of the restaurant owners is quoted as saying in the complaint.

However, owners did not hire Klafter & Burke, prompting the alderman to tell a staffer in his office — identified as only Ward Employee 1 — to interfere with the renovation by playing "hard ball" with the restaurant owners.

That delay — which started in October 2017 and ended in January 2018 — had a "major effect on sales and cash flow" to the restaurant, the complaint said.

The complaint, filed in federal court with U.S. Magistrate Judge Sheila Finnegan, alleges that Burke and his office halted the renovation by claiming that the restaurant needed a driveway permit, although the renovations did not involve the eatery's driveway or drive-thru window and the proper permits had been issued in 2012.

The issue of the driveway permit was used as a "pretext" to hold up the renovation and force the restaurant's owners to hire Burke's law firm, according to the complaint.

One of the items seized during the raid on Burke's City Hall office was a hard copy of an email dated Nov. 28, 2017, between Ward Employee 1 and an employee of the Department of Buildings about the driveway permit — which Burke's office insisted they get, but was preventing from being issued, according to the complaint.

One of the restaurant owners said they believed Burke was doing something "very shady and inappropriate," according to the complaint.

The owners met with Burke in person in December 2017 to resolve the impasse, and agreed to hire Klafter & Burke. Soon after, the remodeling project was allowed to restart, according to the complaint.

Ultimately, the restaurant's owners "strung the process out over several months and did not end up giving Burke's law firm any tax business," according to the complaint.

In addition, one of the restaurant's owners told federal agents that he made a $10,000 contribution to another Chicago politician at Burke's request in order to ensure there were not additional problems with the alderman. That contribution was later reduced to $5,600 —the limit on contributions — but was never reported to the Illinois State Board of Elections, according to the complaint.

That contribution was made to Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle who was running for re-election at the time and is now a candidate for mayor of Chicago.

Preckwinkle said Ald. Burke and Judge Burke as well as mayoral candidate and former Burke aide Gery Chico volunteered to host a fundraiser for her Cook County board campaign.

"As event hosts, they were solely responsible for organizing and fundraising of this event," Preckwinkle said in a statement. "Today, it has come to my attention that at that time an individual attempted to contribute through my website. This contribution was not accepted. My campaign has never been contacted by the authorities, and I am confident that my staff followed proper protocol."

Scott Cisek, Preckwinkle's campaign manager, said on Twitter late Thursday that "the contribution in question exceeded the state limit for an individual and was never accepted by the campaign. It was promptly returned in full."

However, the restaurant owners told federal officials they made the contribution and provided correspondence that "reflects that the committee confirmed the contribution was made," according to the complaint.

Preckwinkle filed an amended report with the Illinois State Board of Elections late Thursday that reported a $10,000 donation from Shoukat Dhanani, who is identified in the criminal complaint as Individual A, on Jan. 12, 2018.

The contribution was "rejected" 10 days later on Jan. 22, according to the filing. There is no evidence in Preckwinkle's amended filing that Dhanani's contribution was ever reduced to $5,600, as detailed in the criminal complaint.

The amended form was filed in the interest of "transparency," Preckwinkle's spokeswoman Monica Trevino said.

Preckwinkle called for Burke to resign as alderman and said as mayor she would strip Burke of the chairmanship of the Finance Committee and remove the worker's compensation program from his control if he is re-elected alderman in February.

Chico was not a host of the event, but attended the event and made a $750 contribution, his spokeswoman Kelley Quinn said.

"In typical fashion, Toni Preckwinkle is being dishonest about her role outlined in a criminal complaint and deflecting responsibility," Chico said in a statement. "Let me be clear, I have no knowledge whatsoever about the $5,600 contribution that she accepted and is referred to in the criminal complaint."

In a separate statement, Quinn said Chico was "extremely disappointed" in Burke, whom he has known for three decades. Burke endorsed Chico in the race to replace Mayor Rahm Emanuel.

"No one is above the law," Quinn said. "While we will closely watch the case as it plays out in the court system, Gery obviously will not accept support from Ed Burke in the upcoming mayoral race."

Chico said Burke should step down as Finance Committee chairman.

Ald. Ed Burke (14) departs the Dirksen federal courthouse Thursday. [A.D. Quig/The Daily Line]
Mayoral candidate Lori Lightfoot alsoblasted Preckwinkle's role in the scandal.

“At a minimum, in light of allegations in the federal criminal complaint, Toni Preckwinkle must explain what Ed Burke has received in exchange for contributions. Ed Burke does not make contributions out of the goodness of his heart," Lightfoot said. "Additionally, Toni Preckwinkle must disgorge all contributions made or raised by Ed Burke and make good on her promise to strip Ed Burke of his power to slate judges for the Cook County Democratic Party."

Trevino did not respond when asked whether Preckwinkle would move to strip Burke of his position as 14th Ward Democratic Committeeman or as chairman of the party's judicial slating committee.

The municipal election is 54 days away. Burke faces four challengers — Tanya Patiño, Irene Corral, Jose Torrez and Jaime Guzman.

Patiño called for Burke to resign and withdraw from the race in order to "do what's best for the residents of the 14th Ward."

Torrez also called for Burke to resign, saying, "We can no longer allow our neighborhoods and communities to be run and affected by corrupt machine politics."

In a federal courtroom on the 17th floor of the Dirksen Building, Burke only spoke three times, including to simply tell the judge he understood the charges against him. "Yes, your honor."

Burke did not speak after his court appearance on Thursday, but was defiant after the FBI raids in late November, promising to cooperate fully — but noting that he had been under FBI investigation before and never faced an indictment or charges.

“I am completely confident that at the end of the day nothing will be found amiss in this instance either,” Burke said on Nov. 29.

Mayoral candidates have since scrambled to distance themselves from Burke, who rejected calls for him to step down as chairman of the Finance Committee after the raids. The committee controls the city’s $100 million workers compensation fund.

In a Thursday release, mayoral candidate Bill Daley said, “From the start of this campaign I have said that the 14th Ward needs new leadership. Today’s charges just confirm it. We must all work together on obvious reforms to our local government.”

Comptroller Susana Mendoza and Preckwinkle returned contributions from Burke earlier this month.

After Burke appeared in court, Mendoza issued a statement calling on Burke to resign as Finance Committee chairman.

"Furthermore, the time has come for new leadership in the 14th Ward," said Mendoza, who was married at Burke's Gage Park home. "While due process should be afforded to everyone, should he choose to continue as alderman in light of this formal federal investigation, voters will have an opportunity to voice their concerns in February.”

Read the full complaint here.

Ald. Ed Burke charged with attempted extortion, feds say

Ald. Ed Burke (14) in September 2018. [A.D. Quig/The Daily Line]Ald. Edward Burke (14) — the lo...
DEC 21, 2018
Mayoral candidate Gery Chico called for Mayor Rahm Emanuel to end the Chicago Infrastructure trust, noting that it had completed just one project since 2012. Toni Preckwinkle drew fire from Lori Lightfoot over an email that invoked the plight of a woman sentenced to life after suffering from sex trafficking, and later apologized.

Trail notes — End Chicago Infrastructure Trust: Chico; Preckwinkle apologizes for fundraising email focused on sex-trafficking victim

Mayoral candidate Gery Chico called for Mayor Rahm Emanuel to end the Chicago Infrastructure trus...

Bio

Covering the boss city of the universe @CrainsChicago. Alum: @thedailylinechi, @rivetradio, @kenrudinjunkie, @totn, @WIUX. Hoosier.