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Raoul responds to Tillman’s appeal of bond case

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* Yvette Shields at the Bond Buyer

An Illinois judge acted properly when he dismissed a taxpayer complaint that challenged repayment of $14.3 billion of state general obligation bonds after concluding the case lacked legal merit, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office argues in an appellate filing.

“The circuit court’s judgment denying petitioner leave to proceed on his complaint should be affirmed because he failed to establish a reasonable ground to pursue his claim to enjoin further payments on the 2003 and 2017 bonds based on his theory that the laws authorizing them violated the State Debt Clause,” reads the brief filed Feb. 14 by Raoul’s office.

“That claim lacked merit for several reasons. And the circuit court was not required, as petitioner contends, to let his case go forward even if doing so was ultimately futile as a matter of law,” the brief continued.

The filing marked the latest salvo in the case watched closely by market participants that dates back to last summer when Illinois Policy Institute head John Tillman sought to file a lawsuit blocking repayment of the state’s $10 billion 2003 GO pension obligation issue and $6 billion 2017 GO bill backlog borrowing. About $14.3 billion remains outstanding.

Tillman, who as head of the conservative IPI is a frequent critic of state fiscal policies, argues the bonds violated the state constitution and therefore should be voided. A hedge fund that originally was named as a potential plaintiff is no longer named in any filings.

The attorney general’s brief is here.

posted by Rich Miller
Wednesday, Feb 19, 20 @ 9:39 am

Comments

  1. Tillman should be run out of court (again) and then made to pay all attorney’s fees for this ridiculous lawsuit.

    Comment by Demoralized Wednesday, Feb 19, 20 @ 9:44 am

  2. ===let his case go forward even if doing so was ultimately futile as a matter of law===

    So in their own brief they are admitting there isn’t a legal basis for their claims?

    How is this not grounds for sanctioning the attorneys involved, if they knowingly did this?

    Comment by TheInvisibleMan Wednesday, Feb 19, 20 @ 9:58 am

  3. Actually what is ridiculous is that Illinois has a constitutionally mandated balanced budget that had been ignored for decades.

    Comment by Lucky Pierre Wednesday, Feb 19, 20 @ 10:04 am

  4. Jack Davis is a solid judge. He made the correct ruling. He will be affirmed because he should be. This is a waste of time and resources.

    Comment by Eire17 Wednesday, Feb 19, 20 @ 10:32 am

  5. ===let his case go forward even if doing so was ultimately futile as a matter of law===

    So his new legal argument is “because I want to”?

    Sheesh.

    Comment by JS Mill Wednesday, Feb 19, 20 @ 11:55 am

  6. Bloodymindedness.

    Comment by Da Big Bad Wolf Wednesday, Feb 19, 20 @ 12:11 pm

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