Showing posts with label Jim Thompson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jim Thompson. Show all posts

Monday, December 22, 2008

Fitzgerald Plays Peoria

by Cal Skinner

Here's what might be an interesting development.

U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald spoke at the mid-year graduation ceremony at Peoria's Bradly University this weekend.

That's what this Chicago Tribune media story reports.

Peoria is not in the court district in which Fitzgerald serves.

If one were thinking about running for statewide public office, someone like Fitzgerald would be trying to make himself known through Illinois.

Could this be an leading indicator that Patrick Fitzgerald might be willing to run for office?

If he wanted to take that leap, following in the footsteps of Jim Thompson, who seemed to lust for the office of governor long before he left the U.S. Attorney's Office, this might be Fitzgerald's first step.

Would he run as a Republican or a Democrat?

Or, as independent?

No one I know has a clue where he stands on any issue but public corruption.

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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Illinois corruption update: Ex-Gov. Ryan runs out of appeals, ex-Gov. Thompson to ask for sentence to be commuted

En route to Mississippi I drove through Vienna (pronounced VYE-uh-nuh), Illinois, where I came across the Paul Powell Museum. A longtime Illinois Democratic politician, he was Illinois' Secretary of State when he died in 1970. Twenty years later, Republican George Ryan would be elected to the post.

Powell was possible the most dishonest Illinois politician ever, which is saying a lot. In many states, the Secretary of State's office is known as the department of motor vehicles. While Powell was Secretary of State, checks for driver's licences were made out to "Paul Powell," not "Illinois Secretary of State," or even "Paul Powell, Secretary of State."

After he died, over $800,000 in cash, much of it in a shoebox, was found in Powell's Springfield hotel suite. Powell never earned a salary of more than $30,000 a year. I wonder where that cash came from?

I was on tight schedule--I didn't want to be on the road while I took part in a teleconference--so I was unable to visit the museum, which is in downtown Vienna.

One day there may be a George Ryan museum in his hometown of Kankakee. Why I am I talking about the disgraced former secretary of state, who later became governor?

Because earlier today, the U.S. Supreme Court, without comment, refused to hear Ryan's appeal of his 2006 racketeering and fraud conviction.

Ryan chose not to run for re-election in 2002, his successor, Democrat Rod Blagojevich, who lied to 12 million Illinoisans when he proclaimed "I will govern as a reformer," nervously awaits the jurors' verdict in the corruption trial of his friend and political confidante Antoin "Tony" Rezko. Another friend of the governor, Christopher Kelly, faces was indicted on tax charges last year. In the last two years, Blagojevich's campaign fund has piled up over $2 million in legal bills.

The Democrats control the each of the state's constitutional offices, and it hold a majority of both houses of the General Assembly. So it's up to the opposition, the Republican Party to fix things, right?

I still think so, but the Illinois GOP has to work on its image. Ryan's attorney is former Illinois Governor James R. Thompson, a Republican. And now that Ryan's appeals are exhausted, Thompson plan to ask President Bush to commute Ryan's prison sentence.

Yeah, he is Ryan's lawyer, but doesn't Thompson care about the state? Or the party? Folks watching the television news tonight, or reading tomorrow morning's papers, will have this image to digest. A former Republican governor asking the president to commute the prison sentence of another former Republican governor.

Thompson undoubtedly knows other lawyers. Why can't he ask one of them to represent Ryan. It's not about money, since I believe Thompson, whose image was tarnished while serving on the board of Hollinger, is representing Ryan pro bono.

If the Illinois Republican Party is going to, as I've phrased it in the past, "take back the state," we have to completely wash our hands of the mess of the George Ryan legacy. Thompson is not helping things.

Perhaps there is a museum board seat in Thompson's future.

To comment on this post, please visit Marathon Pundit.

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Sunday, February 03, 2008

McCain's Illinois Rally

Yesterday McHenry County Blog published the first half of an article on U.S. Senator John McCain's rally at the Odeum in DuPage County. Today's installment resumes where it ended.

The most interesting introduction was of former Governor Jim Thompson.

He was beaming when State Rep. Jim Durkin mentioned his name.

But no one could see him because he was standing at the bottom of the stairs to the stage.

So, later McCain brought him on stage.

Take a look at the smile on his face as he was being introduced the first time, even though virtually no one could see him.

This is the first I have heard of him since the extensive television coverage when he drove with his former Lieutenant Governor George Ryan to prison near the Wisconsin Dells.

History tells us that Thompson likes to have a say in who is United State’s Attorney.

I wonder if he knows that McCain has said he will retain Patrick Fitzgerald, while Mitt Romney has indicated he will sack Fitzgerald.

Not just in response to my question eleven and a half months ago, but to the Chicago Tribune.

McCain seemed genuinely pleased to have Rockford’s General John Borling in attendance.

Borling is one of McCain’s 16th congressional district delegates.

McCain’s wife Cindy told of how she spent time at Mother Teresa’s orphanage in Bangladesh.

One little girl took a liking to her and the feelings were reciprocated.

As she was about to leave, Mother Teresa told her that she could make a difference in the little girl’s life, urging her to take her back to the United States.

She did.

As she was sitting on the airplane, she was wondering how she was going to tell her husband of her decision.

She got off an airplane with the girl in front of a crowd about the size of Friday night.

She said McCain asked her where she was going to live.

“I thought she could live with us,” she replied.

It so reminded me of the starfish story by Loren Eisley. Our First United Methodist Church of Crystal Lake's senior Pastor David Seyller used the story just last month.

You can't save all of the starfish on the beach, but you can save one at a time.

And he accepted her suggestion.

The girl is now a young lady of 16.

I’ve heard this story twice now.

Once from McCain’s lips while his wife stood at the side of the Union Club conference room 11½ months ago and Friday night from his wife.

It’s an effective, emotion-laden story.

From his expressions in the pictures, his wife's decision seems to still affect him deeply despite his having heard his wife tell the story numerous times.

McCain said something my wife has said repeatedly,

“Don’t you think we ought to give a little credit to the President for not having had another 9-11?”
He told of a New Hampshire mother's asking him if he would wear a bracelet with her son's name, as she asked him to make sure that he did not die in vain.

You can see it on his right wrist.

And what will McCain do if he is the Republican candidate?

“I’m going to beat them like a drum!”

After the speech, McCain came down off the stage and started shaking hands and signing yard signs, books, a photograph, whatever people could find upon which he could write.

The camera folks had a field day.

After taking some from the floor, I got the chance to get on the stage and shoot down. It was an interesting experience.

One man was waving a Naval Academy banner that said, “Brigade of Midshipmen.”

Although he was standing on a riser, I’m not sure McCain could see him in the rush of people trying to get his attention.

The only other time I have been in a similar situation with a presidential candidate was 1960. The Oberlin College Young Republicans participated in a very close to election torch light parade in Cleveland.

Vice President Richard Nixon’s convertible drove by us and I got to shake his hand. As I suggested, it was near the end of the campaign, maybe even the Saturday before.

What I remember is that Nixon’s hand was puffy.

But, back to 2008.

A woman in a red outfit, including a red hat, had made a pillow for McCain.

She profusely thanked him while standing on some seats. I doubt he heard her, but others in front of her did and cleared a path so she could give it to the Senator.

First, though, a female aide had her remove the stuffing.

The Senator got the pillow sans stuffing.

As I was walking out of the stadium, I heard a guy say, “So, people came out.”

“Yeah, it was actually really crowded,” his companion replied.

In the foyer, volunteers were handing out yard signs.

Literature was available on a table.

Before the rally when I saw it and expressed surprise, one of McCain’s staffers said, “Yeah. What a difference a week makes.”

Of course, having literature on the Friday night before a primary is not good timing if you want precinct committeemen to distribute it.

Oh, yes.

I parked next to a a couple whose car had a McCain bumper sticker and a North Carolina license plate.

I asked them if they were McCain groupies, wondering if they had driven from North Carolina for the rally.

Turns out they were Mormon and had driven all the way from East Moline. The wife told me that she didn't think Romney was representing Mormon principles properly.

All pictures can be enlarge by clicking on them. For more McHenry County Blog, click here.

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Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Times of London: Conrad Black could get just a five year sentence


Former newspaper baron Conrad Black, former CEO of the Hollinger Group which once published the London Telegraph, the Jerusalem Post, and Canada's National Post, could receive a surprisingly light prison term of five years when he is sentenced in Chicago next month, according to an exclusive report by the Times of London.

The rump of Hollinger is now called the Sun-Times Media Group, which publishes the Chicago Sun-Times, the Daily Southtown and a whole bunch of suburban newspapers, including the Morton Grove Champion.

Lord Black was found guilty of fraud and corruption charges in a federal court earlier this year, the office of US Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald prosecuted the case. The prosecution is asking for a sentence of 24-30 years, a possible death sentence for a 63 year-old man.

The Hollinger case was a major story in Great Britain and Black's native Canada, but not so here. Authors Dominick Dunne and Mark Steyn were regulars in the visitors section of the courtroom during the trial.

Former Illinois Governor Jim Thompson is a former Hollinger board member.

To comment on this post, please visit Marathon Pundit.

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Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Greg Baise Called Me Last Night

The called ID said, “UNKNOWN CALLER,” but Greg told me his name and that he was President of the Illinois Manufacturers Association.

He wanted to talk to me about electric “rate relief for consumers who need it the most.”

Guess that’s not our household, but, hey, I was willing to listen.

Greg said that some legislators were calling for a rate freeze and that might result in a lawsuit with no one getting any rate relief and might even lead to electric companies’getting into financial trouble.

Oh, he was more elegant than that. I just couldn’t take notes fast enough.

In any event, he wanted me to tell my legislator that I wanted real rate relief and urged me to press 1 to do so (and 2, if I didn’t want to do so).

He wouldn’t answer my questions. I waited but there was not response.

So I hung up.

I’m trying to remember the first time I met Greg.

Was it at the Kane County Fair when Jim Thompson first saw my Thompson/Skinner buttons—the first Thompson buttons ever made, I think. Was he the guy walking Jim’s new dog?

Thompson looked askance at the button. I figured he thought I was trading on his name. Of course, I was running for my third term. I explained that he might be better known in the Chicago area, but I was better known in Boone County.

He certainly was the one in the governor’s office that summer day I held a press conference touting the Non-Game Wildlife Check-Off bill that I had passed during the session.

I had heard an Indian interviewed on WLS one Sunday afternoon. He was raising golden eagles using artificial insemination. I got in touch with him at his home in the Metro-East area and asked if he would be willing to hold a couple of press conferences with me.

I figured that his project would be one that might receive state funding from the money on the income tax check-off.

We drove from opposite sides of the state, meeting at the State Capitol on the second floor in northeast corner, where the bronze stature of an eagle then stood.

I pontificated about we in Illinois being able to have real eagles, at which point, his handler raised his arm and the female eagle spread her wings, or bronze eagles like the statutes behind us.

It was a slow day, so the eagle made the front page of the State Journal-Register in a separately posed picture on the front steps of the Capitol, but, after the press conference, one of the reporters, being in a playful mood, suggested showing the eagle to Governor Thompson, who was working in his office.

We walked into the office and asked the receptionist if the Governor would like to see the eagle.

Out came Greg to find out what was going on.

He delivered the message to Thompson.

Thompson’s Revenue Director Jim Zagel was adamantly opposed to the bill. I knew that.

So it was highly unlikely that the Governor would be willing to be part of a publicity stunt to bring pressure on him to sign the bill.

All of a sudden, I saw the Indian’s mother, who had accompanied him and the eagle, scurrying to the women’s room across the hall between the eagle statute and the Treasurer’s Office.

And, then, splat.

The eagle pooped on the floor.

The mother was there almost as the poop hit the floor trying to clean up the mess.

Boy, did she have a great sense of timing.

“The eagle sure knows who his friends are,” one irreverent reporter observed as Greg came out of the Governor’s office to tell us that the Governor did not want to see the eagle.

All of us were laughing uncontrollably by then, of course.

Afterwards a two-car convoy headed to Chicago for Tribune Plaza to hold another press conference.

The funniest thing about that one was a little black girl asking an older sister as the eagle tried to soar on the river wind current,

"Is that a turkey?"

Oh, as expected, Thompson vetoed my bill, but Virginia McDonald got him to sign it the next year.

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Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Thompson's pregnant pause

Sun Times today on KMPG's Marilyn Stitt's response to former Hollinger corporate counsel Mark Kipnis's lawyer about a $15 million paid Conrad Black and other executives,

Stitt said under cross-examination that KPMG brought up the $15 million in non-compete payments at a Feb. 25, 2002, Hollinger International audit committee meeting. She said she believed former Gov. James Thompson indicated that the committee he chaired had approved the payments.

Kipnis' lawyer, Michael Swartz, asked if Thompson told Stitt that he'd never heard of the payments.

"Gov. Thompson didn't say anything," Stitt testified. She said there was a "pregnant pause" before the committee moved on to other matters.

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