Thursday, January 12, 2023

A sad day for Chicago

Chicago U.S. Attorney John Lausch to leave office by early March
Lausch has been Chicago’s U.S. Attorney since late 2017 and has overseen major public corruption investigations. They culminated with the indictment of former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan — and ultimately re-shaped Chicago politics.
By Jon Seidel




U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois John Lausch Jr. speaks during a news conference in the courtyard of the Dirksen Federal Building in the Loop on Friday afternoon, July 17, 2020.

Chicago U.S. Attorney John Lausch plans to leave the Justice Department “in early 2023” for the private sector, Attorney General Merrick Garland told reporters Thursday.



Lausch has overseen major public corruption investigations in his five years in office. They culminated with criminal charges against former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan — and ultimately re-shaped Chicago politics.

“We’ll provide an update in the coming days,” Joseph Fitzpatrick, Lausch’s spokesman, told the Chicago Sun-Times. “We expect John will be moving on by the end of February or early March.”

Garland revealed Lausch’s plans while making comments about the appointment of a special counsel to look into potentially classified documents found at the Penn Biden Center, where President Joe Biden kept an office after he left the vice presidency.

Lausch had been asked by Garland to review the documents, and Lausch recommended investigation by a special counsel. But Garland said Lausch, who stood beside Garland during his comments Thursday, told him he “would be unable to accept any longer-term assignment because he would be leaving the Department [of Justice] in early 2023 for the private sector.”

Lausch will be leaving as some of the most significant public corruption cases he’s overseen head to trial. It appears he’ll leave office before the March 6 trial of four individuals accused of trying to bribe Madigan.

His tenure will mostly be remembered for the aggressive probes of Illinois politics that went public under his watch, which targeted old-school Chicago-style graft.

But Lausch also spent the bulk of his term navigating a perilous position as the Justice Department’s man in Chicago during the Republican Trump administration that enjoyed little popularity here — a tricky balancing act in an intensely partisan era.

Lausch’s success was likely due in part to his Joliet roots and the relationships he built in his past work as a federal prosecutor. Key among his former colleagues was Lori Lightfoot, who became mayor of Chicago while Lausch was in office but now faces a tough reelection fight.

Lausch has also enjoyed the support of U.S. Sens. Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth, both Democrats who, in a 2021 letter to newly inaugurated President Joe Biden, successfully called on him to keep Lausch in place.

They said there is precedent for a U.S. attorney to remain “to conclude sensitive investigations.” They did not get more specific. But the news of Lausch’s departure comes three months after the filing of a superseding indictment that expanded the Madigan case.

The Lausch era also leaves Ald. Edward M. Burke (14th) under indictment for racketeering, accused of using the City of Chicago as a criminal “enterprise” in a document that added phrases to the local lexicon like, “did we land … the tuna?” Former Ald. Danny Solis was also exposed as a federal cooperator who turned on Burke after being confronted with his own alleged corruption.

Madigan left office in 2021 amid the feds’ investigation, and Burke has chosen not to seek re-election while facing trial. They were two of Chicago’s most significant politicians, whose careers were seemingly ended by the work of Lausch’s office.

ComEd was charged with bribery, and four members of then-House Speaker Michael Madigan’s inner circle are under indictment for the same charge, accused of spending years trying to reward Madigan for official actions with jobs for associates and allies.

The Lausch era also led to criminal charges against several other public officials, including state Sens. Thomas Cullerton, Terry Link, Martin Sandoval and Emil Jones III, as well as state Reps. Luis Arroyo and Eddie Acevedo. Sandoval died in December 2020.

Chicago Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson went to trial last February, leading to his conviction for cheating on his taxes and lying to regulators, which cost him his seat on the City Council.

Ald. Carrie Austin (34th) is also under indictment and facing trial.

A bevy of politicians and politically connected individuals have also agreed in writing to “fully and truthfully cooperate in any matter” in which they are called upon by the feds in the future.

Records show the investigations that swirled around Burke, Madigan and ComEd predated Lausch, with some key evidence being gathered before he took office. For example, Solis began cooperating with the feds in 2016. Zachary Fardon, nominated by President Barack Obama, was Chicago’s U.S. Attorney at the time. Fardon was removed at the beginning of the Trump era.

Lausch’s background battling street violence pushed him to the top of the list when it came time to pick Fardon’s successor. Then a partner at Kirkland & Ellis, Lausch had previously worked in the U.S. Attorney’s office, serving as the violent crime coordinator and leading the Anti-Gang and Project Safe Neighborhoods programs. In his earliest comments to reporters, Lausch listed gun violence as a priority for his office, along with public corruption.

But during his more than five years as Chicago’s top federal prosecutor, Lausch mostly let the indictments do the talking. He rarely spoke in court. He made a rare personal plea to U.S. District Judge Harry Leinenweber, though, asking the judge to reject a request for a sentencing break from Gangster Disciples co-founder Larry Hoover. Lausch told the judge it would be a “miscarriage of justice to reduce [Hoover’s] sentence in any way, shape or form.”

The judge initially turned Hoover down, but Hoover has renewed his request.

Under Lausch, federal prosecutors in Chicago also indicted and secured a conviction against R&B singer R. Kelly, who faces sentencing next month before Leinenweber.

Fate also put Lausch in charge of the U.S. Attorney’s office during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, which led to an unprecedented shutdown of Chicago’s federal court. Shortly after it began, prosecutors acknowledged trouble convening grand juries. They ultimately churned out several charges against politically connected individuals in 2020, as well as against ComEd.

The day ComEd was charged, Lausch held a press conference outside the Dirksen Federal Courthouse with officials from the FBI and IRS.

Lausch acknowledged that day that, in his few public comments, he had previously characterized public corruption as a “very stubborn problem.”

“It continues to be a stubborn problem,” Lausch said that day. “But I feel very confident with the people that are working here… that we’re going to do whatever we can to try and whack away at that stubborn problem.”

He is a modern day Elliot Ness. I would say that he probably set in motion, more than a few investigations, which will result in indictments far into the future. Many of the political criminals have entered into agreements with the Feds that tolls the statute of limitations, in exchange for......

Lausch did a great job.


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