Longtime Ald. Edward Burke, one of Chicago’s most powerful figures and a vestige of the city’s old Democratic machine, has been charged with attempted extortion for allegedly using his position as alderman to corruptly solicit business for his private law firm.
Editor’s note: An earlier version of this story indicated Burke had already turned himself in. He is expected to do so Thursday afternoon.
The criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court comes five weeks after the FBI carried out a stunning raid on Burke’s City Hall office, working for hours behind windows covered with brown butcher paper before leaving down a back staircase with computers and files.
According to the one count, Burke in 2017 tried to extort a company that owns fast-food restaurants in the Chicago area and needed help with permits for a remodeling job.
The 37-page complaint revealed that authorities won a judge’s approval to wiretap Burke’s cellphone to record numerous calls. The evidence also includes emails and other documents, according to the complaint, which was filed Wednesday and unsealed Thursday.
The complaint also alleged Burke illegally solicited a campaign donation from an executive with the restaurant company for another politician, who is not named in the charges.
Burke is expected to turn himself in Thursday for an initial appearance at 3 p.m. at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse before a magistrate judge.
The criminal charge was jaw-dropping even for a city with a long history of public corruption. While dozens of his City Council colleagues have been convicted and sent to prison over the decades, Burke was largely seen as too clever or sophisticated to be caught. He had faced federal scrutiny several times before but always escaped charges.
As a consummate insider with his hands on many of the city’s levers of power, Burke is arguably one of the biggest fish ever reeled in by the U.S. attorney’s office, which has famously indicted a succession of Illinois governors, aldermen and other politicians in a seemingly never-ending parade of graft.
For decades, the Southwest Side alderman has used his iron grip on the City Council’s Finance Committee and key role in slating Cook County judges to build a massive amount of political capital.
Burke, who turned 75 last week, often decides whether Chicago’s most important legislation will move forward. He controls millions of dollars in campaign funds. He is the sole steward of the city’s $100 million workers’ compensation program. And he plays a crucial role in redrawing the city’s ward maps — a key in maintaining political power amid shifting demographics.
He’s also married to Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke, who was quietly sworn in to a second 10-year term on Nov. 29, the same day her husband’s City Hall and 14th Ward offices were raided. The FBI carried out a second search of Burke’s City Hall office on Dec.13.
Known for his bold pinstripe suits, throwback style and a love of Chicago lore, Burke was first elected as the ward’s Democratic committeeman in July 1968 after his father, Ald. Joseph P. Burke, died of lung cancer while in office. The following year, the onetime Chicago police officer won election as alderman. He has held the post ever since, rising from a young ward heeler to one of the most influential council members the city has seen over the last half century.
In his rise to political power, Burke also built a lucrative business as one of the city’s most prominent property tax appeals attorneys, routinely saving some of Chicago’s largest business interests millions of dollars on their tax bills.
He was known in the 1980s as a key player in the racially heated Council Wars when a bloc of white aldermen led by him and Ald. Ed Vrdolyak feuded with Harold Washington, often blocking the initiatives of Chicago’s first black mayor.
Now more than a quarter century later, Burke and Vrdolyak have been reunited in a strange sense: Both face pending criminal charges at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse. Vrdolyak, who was convicted of real estate fraud years after he left the City Council and served a year in prison, is scheduled to go on trial in April on tax-related charges stemming from the massive tobacco company settlement in the 1990s.
In his 50 years in politics, Burke has been under federal scrutiny several times before but never charged.
In 2012, city Inspector General Joseph Ferguson sought access to records from the workers’ compensation program to review it for waste and inefficiency. Burke denied Ferguson access to those records, contending they fell outside the watchdog’s jurisdiction. That same year, a federal grand jury issued subpoenas for the program’s database, injury records, medical assessments and claim investigation records dating to January 2006.
Federal authorities also had subpoenaed similar records, but nothing appeared to have come of those requests.
Federal authorities also sought records from Burke’s Finance Committee in 1995 as part of Operation Haunted Hall — a probe centered on ghost payrolling that led to the convictions of about three dozen elected officials, their political cronies and relatives.
Marie D’Amico, daughter of then-39th Ward Ald. Anthony Laurino, held ghost-payrolling jobs with the Finance Committee from 1991 to 1993, purportedly overseeing workers’ compensation claims, federal authorities said at the time. Back then, Burke blamed a dead man — Horace Lindsay, D’Amico’s supervisor at the Finance Committee — for forging time sheets to cover her behavior.
“I don’t supervise the personnel,” Burke said then. “Do you expect I should know where everybody is, all 75 or 80 people or whoever’s there?”
At the time, officials had been looking closely at Burke since former short-time Ald. Joseph A. Martinez, who was a lawyer in Burke’s private law office and onetime Finance Committee employee, pleaded guilty to charges that he held ghost jobs with three City Council committees while working full time for Burke’s law firm.
In late 1997, Burke was under investigation again, this time by a federal grand jury. At the time, Burke and 11th Ward Ald. Patrick Huels, the former floor leader for then-Mayor Richard M. Daley, drew the federal heat. The grand jury subpoenaed the two aldermen’s campaign finance records, records of their personal campaign committees and financial payments awarded by the Finance Committee and the Transportation Committee, chaired by Huels at the time. Huels recently had resigned after admitting he borrowed $1.25 million from a Daley friend who also was a city contractor.
Source Article from https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-met-alderman-ed-burke-charges-20190103-story.html
Comments