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A deeper dive into the Madigan court filings

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* Jon Seidel

Former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan asked a federal judge Tuesday to toss secret recordings made by investigators and dismiss part of the bombshell racketeering indictment the feds spent years building against him. […]

They also offer new context to a secretly recorded August 2014 meeting between Madigan, then-Ald. Danny Solis, a hotel developer and a secret government informant. The Chicago Sun-Times exposed details of that recorded meeting in January 2019 in a report that first revealed the feds’ interest in the powerful Southwest Side Democrat.

Though Madigan did not appear to cross any legal lines in that meeting, Madigan’s attorneys painted it Tuesday as the starting point of the feds’ lengthy pursuit of Madigan — and wrongly so, they say.

They said the feds submitted an application the next month to the city’s chief federal judge. It allegedly theorized that Madigan and Solis had conspired to withhold Solis’ approval of a zoning change unless the developer hired Madigan’s law firm.

Madigan’s firm was not hired by the developer.

There’s lots more, so go read the rest.

* From the motion to suppress

The government theorized that Madigan conspired with [Ald. Danny Solis] to threaten to withhold [Ald. Solis]’s approval of a zoning request unless the developer hired Madigan’s law firm. A full and fair review of the audio and video recording of the meeting, as well as analysis of the surrounding circumstances, demonstrates that the government’s inferences were not objectively reasonable. In fact, they were purposefully false.

The falsity of the government’s inferences and ultimate conclusion cannot be in dispute. The government confronted [Ald. Solis] almost two years later, on June 1, 2016. He decided to cooperate with the government, and on June 3, 2016, the government debriefed him about the August 18, 2014 meeting. [Ald. Solis] explained that the government’s theories were erroneous. [Ald. Solis] told the government that he asked the developer and CS to meet with Madigan and did so because he felt bad about an unrelated situation and “wanted [CS] to be successful in the attempt to get the hotel built,” knowing that the developer had been unsuccessful on two prior occasions. [Ald. Solis] informed agents that a “side meeting” with Madigan that day (which was not captured by the CS’s recording device) did not include any discussion about a zoning change or frankly anything that would support the government’s extortion theory. Further, [Ald. Solis] made clear that Madigan had never offered Alderman A anything for introducing him to developers. In short, various inferences advanced in the September 26, 2014 affidavit were flat wrong.

The falsity of the government’s inferences and ultimate conclusion cannot be in dispute. The government confronted [Ald. Solis] almost two years later, on June 1, 2016. He decided to cooperate with the government, and on June 3, 2016, the government debriefed him about the August 18, 2014 meeting. [Ald. Solis] explained that the government’s theories were erroneous. [Ald. Solis] told the government that he asked the developer and CS to meet with Madigan and did so because he felt bad about an unrelated situation and “wanted [CS] to be successful in the attempt to get the hotel built,” knowing that the develope r had been unsuccessful on two prior occasions. [Ald. Solis] informed agents that a “side meeting” with Madigan that day (which was not captured by the CS’s recording device) did not include any discussion about a zoning change or frankly anything that would support the government’s extortion theory. Further, [Ald. Solis] made clear that Madigan had never offered [Ald. Solis] anything for introducing him to developers. In short, various inferences advanced in the September 26, 2014 affidavit were flat wrong.

Four days later, on June 7, 2016, the government nonetheless submitted a Title III application directed at Madigan, mentioning nothing about the critical, exculpatory information that [Ald. Solis] provided on June 3, 2016. The government’s own cooperator ([Ald. Solis]) essentially explained that their theory about what happened in August 2014 was factually wrong, and the government failed to disclose that to the Chief Judge. The information from [Ald. Solis] did not just undercut any conspiracy to commit extortion theory against Madigan but demonstrated that the inferences presented in the original Title III application were objectively unreasonable.

Not until 674 days later, on April 6, 2018, after submitting numerous other Title III applications did the government finally tell the Acting Chief Judge about at least some of the exculpatory information offered by [Ald. Solis]. In doing so, the government buried its admission in the middle of a footnote and offered its spin that even though the government’s interpretation of what happened in August 2014 was factually wrong, it was still somehow permissible for the government to rely upon the August 2014 incident because the now-cooperating [Ald. Solis] “acknowledged” how “an independent observer” could have misinterpreted the events.

The inclusion of the footnote and the so-called acknowledgment by [Ald. Solis] followed a remarkable two days of pressing [Ald. Solis] about the August 2014 meeting. More specifically, on April 3, 2018, the government met with [Ald. Solis], who, according to the report, told the government at the start of the interview:

[…] In short, after two days of being pressed and despite desperately seeking cooperation credit, [Ald. Solis] told the government that its view of what took place in that August 18, 2014 meeting was factually wrong.

Needless to say, the August 2014 event involving CS was not charged in the original or superseding indictment in this case for one simple reason – Madigan had committed no crime. The government’s theory that Madigan conspired to commit extortion, put forth in the September 26, 2014 Affidavit as well as numerous other subsequent affidavits to support its Title III surveillance, was purposefully false.

The Court should suppress the contents of the communications intercepted as a result of the September 26, 2014 Title III application, and any evidence derived therefrom

* Jason Meisner and Ray Long

In their motion to suppress, Madigan’s attorneys, Sheldon Zenner, Daniel Collins and Gil Soffer, have asked U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey for an evidentiary hearing to determine whether investigators made any misrepresentations in its wiretap applications.

Though rarely granted, the so-called “Franks hearing” could provide a fascinating glimpse into how the government built its investigation, first by gathering evidence on Solis’ own misdeeds, then pressuring him into cooperating against two of the state’s most powerful and longstanding politicians, Madigan and Chicago Ald. Edward Burke.

The agents who handled Solis’ stunning turn as an FBI mole could be required to testify should the judge order the hearing. Blakey has set a telephone status hearing for March 10 to discuss the schedule going forward.

* From the motion to dismiss

After years of investigation, thousands of hours of wiretaps and consensual recordings, wide-ranging searches of homes and offices, and countless witness interviews, the government’s case against Michael J. Madigan comes down principally to this: He recommended people for jobs with ComEd and AT&T while legislation of interest to those utilities was pending before the Illinois House of Representatives. Roughly half of the sprawling Superseding Indictment charges Madigan with criminal conduct on that basis. It alleges that he had the capacity to and did promote or defeat legislation consistent with the interests of ComEd and AT&T; and that— after more than a decade of investigation, during which time Madigan made countless job recommendations for innumerable candidates to ComEd, AT&T, and elsewhere—four of those candidates (which do not reflect all, most, or even many of Madigan’s recommendations) did “little or no” work once hired.

What the Superseding Indictment does not allege, however, is a connection between the job hires or any other benefits that Madigan purportedly received and any legislative decision that Madigan made. In 117 pages, the Superseding Indictment does not allege a single word spoken to or by Madigan linking these simple job recommendations to any legislative act by him. Nor does it more generally allege that Madigan took or refrained from taking (or agreed to take, or refrain from taking) legislative action because of, in exchange for, or resulting from any hiring decisions made by ComEd and AT&T. The government carefully avoids any such factual allegation. Instead it asserts, in the most conclusory terms, that Madigan “accepted” job hires “intending to be influenced” in connection with legislation affecting the utilities, on which he voted “in furtherance” and to “effect [the] objects and purposes” of a conspiracy to influence him.

These allegations do not state a federal crime. Instead, what they describe is a commonplace practice in which public officials and party leaders make job recommendations for constituents and associates to employers within their jurisdictions. Those employers may (and often do) accept such recommendations, and they may well do so in an effort to curry favor with the officials in question. But currying favor with government officials—even those with the capacity to influence legislation of interest to the employers—is legal. “Accepting” job hires made by employers, even if they were made with the desire to curry favor, is legal. In contrast, corruptly soliciting something of value in return for official action is not. The Superseding Indictment blurs that distinction entirely, rendering its cornerstone allegations involving ComEd and AT&T deficient under the corruption statutes and constitutionally untenable.

The remaining counts of the Superseding Indictment target conduct unrelated to ComEd and AT&T, alleging behavior involving real estate projects and Madigan’s private law firm. Some of those counts fall short because of defects in the statutes the government invokes and the thinness of the allegations.

One overarching failure stands out, however: the government’s effort to allege a single, all-encompassing RICO charge in Count One. That count purports to graft together, into a RICO conspiracy, one half of the Superseding Indictment (alleging misconduct involving ComEd and AT&T) with the other half (alleging misconduct involving Madigan’s law firm). But the alleged facts, purposes, and major players at issue in the two halves of the Superseding Indictment are wholly distinct. A RICO enterprise requires a common purpose. On the face of the Superseding Indictment, no such common purpose is alleged. Whatever may have been the government’s reason for cobbling disparate claims together—whether to bolster its cornerstone ComEd/AT&T allegations, or otherwise—it has failed to allege a proper RICO conspiracy claim.

In short, this far-flung Superseding Indictment impermissibly treats lawful ingratiation as illegal bribery, and stitches together unrelated allegations of purported misconduct into a single scheme. The mismatch between the conduct alleged and the statutes invoked is a fatal defect that precludes this prosecution. For these reasons and others described below, Counts One through Seven, Eleven through Fourteen, and Twenty-One through Twenty-Three are fatally infirm, constitutionally and otherwise. Madigan respectfully requests their dismissal either in full or in part.

* More

“[A] good will gift to an official to foster a favorable business climate, given simply with the ‘generalized hope or expectation of ultimate benefit on the part of the donor,’ does not constitute a bribe.” United States v. Jennings, 160 F.3d 1006, 1013 (4th Cir. 1998) (quoting United States v. Johnson, 621 F.2d 1073, 1076 (10th Cir. 1980)); cf. Sun–Diamond, 526 U.S. at 405–06 (18 U.S.C. § 201(c) does not criminalize acts taken “to build a reservoir of goodwill that might ultimately affect one or more of a multitude of unspecified acts, now and in the future”). Simply put, “ingratiation and access . . . are not corruption.” Citizens United v. Fed. Election Comm’n, 558 U.S. 310, 360 (2010). To avoid sweeping this innocent conduct into the ambit of federal anti-bribery statutes, the Supreme Court has required the government to identify a quid pro quo—that is, “a specific intent to give or receive something of value in exchange for an official act.”

* State constitutional angle

The Illinois bribery statute sweeps much more broadly than the Constitution permits because of its wide and undifferentiated coverage of “any act related to the employment or function of any public officer.” 720 ILCS § 5/33-1(d)–(e). This statutory text covers conduct that lies within the protection of the First Amendment. That such all-encompassing coverage chills protected activity is shown most clearly by the comparison of Illinois law to the federal statute, 18 U.S.C. § 201(a)(3), at issue in McDonnell v. United States, 579 U.S. 550 (2016). […]

The Court in McDonnell narrowed the federal statute substantially, in large measure to avoid constitutional concerns that would arise from an expansive and unbounded interpretation of “official act” encompassing virtually any act an official might perform. Because the statutory narrowing approach in McDonnell is not available here for Illinois laws, those same constitutional concerns require a holding that the Illinois bribery statute is unconstitutionally overbroad. […]

The Illinois official misconduct statute similarly lacks the safeguards to avoid sweeping more broadly than the Constitution permits. […]

The Illinois bribery statute is impermissibly vague as applied because it did not provide Madigan with fair notice that his conduct was (even arguably) criminal, nor did it protect him from arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement. […]

Similarly, even if § 5/33-3(a)(4) of the Illinois official misconduct statute is not facially void for vagueness, it is unduly vague as applied. […]

The government cannot save the ComEd-related counts brought under § 666 by jettisoning its bribery theory in favor of an intent-to-reward (or gratuity) theory. As an initial matter, this Court should follow the thoughtful analyses of the First and Fifth Circuits and hold that § 666 only criminalizes bribes, not gratuities.

* The “lots of other people did it” defense

Arbitrary Enforcement. As applied here, the Illinois bribery statute also fails to protect against arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement. […]

The threat of arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement of the Illinois bribery statute is not merely hypothetical. Publicly available information shows that other Illinois politicians have recommended political allies and associates for private-sector jobs—at utility companies, no less—yet no one has suggested that their conduct violated the Illinois bribery statute. For example, Illinois House Minority Leader Jim Durkin recommended former Illinois State Representative Thomas Walsh for employment with ComEd in November 2015, as the FEJA negotiations were ongoing. McClain told ComEd, “I really believe it is a wise move to respond favorably to Leader Durkin’s request.” In January 2016, McClain emailed ComEd again, asking: “Did we hire Tom Walsh?” ComEd engaged Walsh as a subcontracting lobbyist in February 2016. In December 2016, Leader Durkin voted in favor of FEJA.

Madigan has been using that very same argument for more than two years, so far to no avail.

And it goes on.

posted by Rich Miller
Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 10:59 am

Comments

  1. McDonnell v. United States. By the time USC is done, official misconduct will no longer be a crime. This is a decades long trend, supported by all political views.

    Comment by Anyone Remember Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 11:13 am

  2. The “other people did it” argument is more persuasive in political circles than legal ones.

    Comment by Pundent Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 11:14 am

  3. To the post,

    I’ve been of this belief since the USA spoke on that hot day to the subject of MJM;

    The art of lobbying will be what the defense is gonna sell, and the gray of that art isn’t bribing or criminal… “do you hire folks who *can’t* get access?”… “do you not see the art in working within a system where who and what you know in people and process *is* the trade called lobbying?”.

    It would be utter malpractice, the hiring of someone off the street to move in the corridors, no experience, and “blindfolded”

    Part of the trade of lobbying is not only access but relationships, and sometimes “sitting on one’s hands” to help or hurt legislation in the process.

    It’ll be so fascinating how that’ll fly

    Then there’s the mere process of getting a bill introduced, passed, introduced in the *other* chamber, passed there too… and then signed. Any number of pitfalls, any number of other outcomes, so it’s about MJM?

    I’ll be fascinated, that is the only thing I know.

    Comment by Oswego Willy Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 11:20 am

  4. Would be fun to watch Solis and the agents testify at a Franks Hearing. What was the content of the side meeting that day? If it was, hey, by the way we could use your help with that IDOT parking lot issue, I think the feds will eek it out.

    Comment by Katten watchers Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 11:25 am

  5. I’m no lawyer, but it seems like the Madigan defense has a pretty good argument.

    I still haven’t seen how they prove a quid pro quo. It certainly doesn’t look great, but I’m having a hard time seeing a federal crime.

    Comment by So_Ill Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 11:25 am

  6. “Four days later, on June 7, 2016, the government nonetheless submitted a Title III application directed at Madigan, mentioning nothing about the critical, exculpatory information that [Ald. Solis] provided on June 3, 2016. ”

    Regardless, of the ultimate outcome, if there were in fact ” omissions ” , then the Credibility of those Agents (and likely others) has been destroyed. The issuing Judge won’t forget , nor will his seatmates. Credibility lost is gone forever

    Comment by Anonymous Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 11:32 am

  7. 11:32 was me , Sorry

    Comment by Red Ketcher Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 11:33 am

  8. Interesting read. Madigan’s donors are paying top dollar for legal representation sounds like he getting it.

    Comment by regular democrat Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 11:54 am

  9. The Feds lied to the court in order to get permission to intercept Madigan’s communications. This lie was repeated by the Feds from 2014 to approximately 2019.

    Presenting false facts to a court is a felony. This is our justice system and why do we tolerate the Feds actions?

    Comment by MOON Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 11:58 am

  10. Pretty straightforward case of criminal behavior.
    ComEd has already plead and wiretaps were approved and done.
    The defendants called the tune and now it time to “Pay the Piper”.
    The fact that they refuse to admit their guilt only makes this whole mess more unsavory.

    Comment by Back to the Future Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 12:02 pm

  11. Wonder how much of the government’s case is based on the “fruit of the poisonous tree”.

    Comment by Hannibal Lecter Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 1:14 pm

  12. The chances of the FBI and the USDA in Chicago basing their case on the “fruit of the poisonous tree” are at a solid “0”.
    These folks have integrity, know the rules and follow the law.
    The other case that was coming up in a week is now postponed for a week, but these defendants will surely met Lady Justice and I suspect will come away from that encounter with a new respect for her.
    Sometimes the folks that think they are entitled and the “smartest guys and gals in room” are really just a bunch of arrogant, stupid criminals on the way to a jail cell.

    Comment by Back to the Future Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 2:02 pm

  13. ===These folks have integrity===

    I’d hold up and wait to see how the judge is going to rule on this motion.

    Not choosing sides, I’d merely wait to see on this issue.

    Comment by Oswego Willy Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 2:07 pm

  14. ===These folks have integrity===

    For the vast majority, I agree. But… https://www.reuters.com/article/us-justice-stevens/u-s-drops-corruption-case-against-ex-sen-stevens-idUSTRE5302O820090401

    Comment by Rich Miller Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 2:11 pm

  15. These people…prosecutors have ambition. Some let their ambition get in the way of sound judgement. “These folks” are human and often let ambition lead them astray. I questioned their integrity.

    Comment by MOON Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 2:20 pm

  16. Respect everyone’s opinion on these cases and readily agree that sometimes prosecutors waddle over a line or two. Frankly there is nothing better than a good cop or good prosecutor and nothing worse than a bad cop or bad prosecutor.
    Thinking those defendants in the Northern District of Illinois on these ComEd cases are going to trail regardless of these pre-trail motions and then are going to jail.
    I have every confidence in the world that the USDA/FBI folks have their ducks in order. Hard to believe anyone would think that these defendants aren’t criminals. Yes maybe it is just a 98% conviction rate historically, but thinking in this case it will be a 100% chance of a conviction.
    The only issue is whether or not they plead guilty and go for a shorter time in jail than the time they will surely get when they go through an expensive time consuming trail and Jury finds them guilty.
    Not saying all insiders are crooks, but these defendants gleefully crossed a line and will surely should and will pay a price. IMHO Defendants on tape, with complying partners in crime and the ComEd plea deal equals a guilty verdict and jail time.

    Comment by Back to the Future Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 2:49 pm

  17. =These folks have integrity, know the rules and follow the law.=

    Aaron Schock would like to have a word with you.

    Comment by Pundent Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 3:06 pm

  18. ===Hard to believe anyone would think that these defendants aren’t criminals.===

    The United States courts presume innocence until proven guilty.

    If your bias is that they are already criminals or guilty, it would make sense that you can’t see that maybe an error could occur.

    As stated above, Aaron Schock might disagree.

    Comment by Oswego Willy Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 3:43 pm

  19. === Hard to believe anyone would think that these defendants aren’t criminals. ===

    The more you write, the more it sounds like you have an axe to grind. Nothing about this case is traditional and nothing about this case is cut and dry. The courts will determine whether the law was followed by the FBI/prosecution. We are just observing from the gallery.

    Comment by Hannibal Lecter Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 4:46 pm

  20. No axe to grind and appreciate your opinion.
    These cases seem very clear cut to me, but time will tell as these cases go to trail.

    Comment by Back to the Future Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 5:04 pm

  21. ComEd plea deal was innocent not guilty

    Comment by Rabid Wednesday, Mar 1, 23 @ 10:11 pm

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