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Judge strikes reference to ex-Illinois speaker Madigan's personal fortune from sentencing record

Madeline Buckley, Jason Meisner, Chicago Tribune on

Published in News & Features

CHICAGO — A federal judge on Tuesday struck from the court record a reference to former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan’s personal net worth of more than $40 million, agreeing with the Democrat's defense team that it should have been kept private, even as the attorneys acknowledged the move was “hollow” given that it was already widely publicized.

U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey said he didn’t find any “bad faith” on the part of the federal prosecutors who included the figure in a filing last week ahead of Madigan’s highly anticipated sentencing on Friday, but found that common practice would be to file such personal information under seal.

Blakey’s ruling came before the attorneys delivered arguments over sentencing guidelines at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse, technically kicking off the sentencing process. Blakey took the matter under advisement until Friday’s hearing.

Federal prosecutors made Madigan’s net worth public for the first time in a response to a sentencing memorandum filed by his attorneys, arguing that the defendant’s “greed is even more appalling given his law firm’s success.”

Daniel Collins, an attorney for Madigan, called the inclusion of the former speaker’s personal fortune improper and a “gratuitous effort” to publicly identify his net worth.

“It is not necessary to include the number in order for the government to make an argument about greed,” Collins said.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Streicker countered to the judge that the defense left the door open by arguing in filings that Madigan was solely motivated by a desire to help people. She also said the figure is relevant as the government seeks a fine in the case.

 

“It’s fair for the government to rebut that narrative and show the defendant was motivated by greed not need,” Streicker said. “This is a defendant that enjoyed every advantage and significant financial wealth and still turned to bribery and fraud.”

In February, Madigan was convicted of 10 of 23 counts, including marquee allegations that he agreed to squeeze lucrative, do-nothing contracts from ComEd for pals such as former Ald. Frank Olivo and Ald. Michael Zalewski and precinct captains Ray Nice and Edward Moody, all while the utility won a series of major legislation victories.

Madigan was also convicted on six of seven counts — including wire fraud and Travel Act violations — regarding a plan to get former Ald. Daniel Solis, a key FBI mole who testified at length in the trial, appointed to a state board.

Jurors deadlocked on all six counts related to Madigan’s co-defendant former ComEd lobbyist Michael McClain.

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