July 19, 2005 FBI
Affidavit against
Sorich , against
Slattery
Other
Stories and articles
BY
STEVE WARMBIR,
TIM NOVAK,
FRAN SPIELMAN
AND ABDON PALLASCH
Staff Reporters
Daley administration loyalists are providing federal investigators ammunition in the most significant prosecution yet in the Hired Truck investigation -- one that aims to show that the mayor's people lied, forged, then covered up to defy a court order banning politics from most city hiring.
Criminal charges filed Monday described a city hiring system that's rigged in many instances from the get-go in at least five major city departments. It's one in which the application and interview process is often irrelevant because, officials allege, the mayor's administration decides what political workers will fill the most basic jobs, such as city truck drivers.
Roughly 37,000 jobs are supposed to
be filled on merit
under a 1972 court
decree. Yet,
hundreds of those
city jobs are filled
each year based
mainly on a nod from
an alderman, a
recommendation from
a Daley political
coordinator or a
request from one of
the city's powerful
unions, the feds
charge.
| IN A WORD . . .
A few excerpts from the federal government's criminal complaint against Mayor Daley's patronage director, Robert Sorich.
"You just have to . . . tell the truth because I'm sure they know anyways.''
-- Mayor Daley's patronage director Robert Sorich told a former Streets and Sanitation worker who was wearing a hidden recording device to discuss city hiring practices.
"We shouldn't be meeting in City Hall to discuss stuff like this, if anything we should meet outside.''
-- Tim McCarthy, another mayoral patronage director, told a Streets and Sanitation official seeking jobs for political workers. They met by the elevators, just outside the mayor's patronage office.
The guy's "a drunk.''
-- Former deputy water commissioner Donald Tomczak said, balking at a job candidate Sorich sent to him. Sorich refused to budge and the guy was hired.
"Goofballs'' wound up getting many jobs in the city's Water Department, an unidentified supervisor told federal agents, describing the city's hiring process as a "joke'' and "rigged.''
"The blessed list.''
-- How a former Sewer Department supervisor referred to a roster of people the department was ordered to hire by the mayor's patronage office.
|
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Awarding those jobs and promotions
was the grease that
kept Daley's
political machine
running, they say,
electing the mayor
and his political
allies, from the
City Council to
Congress. Providing
details are more
than 30 witnesses,
including five
former city
commissioners and
six current or
former personnel
directors.
Mayor: 'clearly very
serious' case
The mayor's patronage system was run
by Robert Sorich, a
longtime Daley
loyalist who was
charged Monday with
mail fraud. Sorich
ran the mayor's
Office of
Intergovernmental
Affairs and was
arrested about 6
a.m. Monday at his
Bridgeport home.
Also arrested were two men suspected
of carrying out
Sorich's bidding:
his longtime friend,
Streets and
Sanitation official
Patrick Slattery,
and Sorich's
right-hand man, Tim
McCarthy, both of
Bridgeport. In
addition, Slattery
was charged with
mail fraud. No
charges were
announced against
McCarthy.
The mayor's office fired all three
men Monday. Slattery
just married one of
the mayor's personal
secretaries two
weeks ago.
The discovery of an allegedly rigged
hiring system is an
outgrowth of the
Hired Truck
investigation. So
far, 30 people have
been charged, 19
have pleaded guilty.
The investigation
started after the
Sun-Times uncovered
corruption and fraud
in the program last
year.
On Monday, Daley said little about
the most serious
allegations against
his administration
to date.
"I haven't yet had the opportunity to
fully review the
complaints issued by
the U.S. attorney,"
Daley said in a
statement. "However,
these are clearly
very serious
accusations. As I
have always said, if
there are
individuals who have
violated the law,
they should be
prosecuted and held
accountable for
their actions."
The feds say the rigged hiring system
infected at least
five city agencies
-- Transportation,
Aviation, Streets
and Sanitation,
Water and Sewer,
which has now merged
with the Water
Department.
Prosecutors described a few basic
steps the mayor's
staff are accused of
taking to ensure
their candidates got
city jobs.
Last year, a soldier fighting in Iraq
wanted a Streets and
Sanitation truck
driving job, but the
city ceased taking
applications two
months earlier. The
soldier, who had
worked on political
campaigns, ended up
with the job anyway,
after making an
appeal to Sorich and
McCarthy, according
to charges.
Slattery is accused of signing a form
giving the soldier a
perfect score on his
interview, even
though the man was
never spoken with,
since he was serving
abroad.
'A whole new area of
law'?
Interviews for city jobs were often
meaningless, the
feds contend.
Sorich also allegedly issued orders
where the city
employees would go
in political
campaigns.
Donald Tomczak, a former top Water
Department official
charged in the case
and now cooperating,
told prosecutors he
routinely gave
Sorich a list of
city workers in
Tomczak's
organization and how
well they did on
political campaigns.
Sorich would often
call Tomczak to tell
him his political
army did a good job.
Tomczak's people, in
turn, got raises,
overtime and
promotions.
''The hiring system was rigged,''
U.S. Attorney
Patrick Fitzgerald
said Monday.
"Every resident of Chicago has the
right to compete
fairly for a job if
he or she is
qualified, without
regard to political
affiliation of
whether they do
campaign work,'' he
said. ''Qualified
persons sat for
interviews for jobs
that had already
been doled out as a
reward for political
work."
Daley's longtime political consultant
David Axelrod raised
questions about the
federal
investigation's
focus on the 1972
court order that
banned political
hiring, called the
Shakman Decree.
"The mayor's been very clear that any
violation of law
should be dealt with
as such, including
shredding or
test-rigging. On the
other hand, the U.S.
attorney implied . .
. that he is now the
overseer of the
Shakman Decree,
which is a civil
matter and any time
someone in public
office recommends
someone for a job,
and they get hired,
that that's somehow
a criminal offense,"
Axelrod said.
"If that's his theory, he's creating
a whole new area of
law. Every single
mayor -- from Byrne
to Washington,
Sawyer and Daley --
has been sued under
the Shakman Decree.
They've had court
actions brought
against their
administrations. But
they were civil
actions. The Shakman
Decree is not a
criminal law. It's
for the courts and
lawyers to figure
out [whether
Fitzgerald's theory
will hold up], but
it sounds a little
dubious."
2 men have Daley
family ties
Prosecutors, though, don't seem to be
criminalizing
political hiring
itself. They are
going after the
nuts-and-bolts fraud
allegedly used to
carry it out: sham
interviews,
falsified paperwork
and a subsequent
coverup.
The two men charged Monday have
family ties to
Daley's 11th Ward
political
organization, headed
by his brother, Cook
County Commissioner
John Daley. Sorich,
42, has driven John
Daley around and
worked in his ward
office. Sorich's
father was a
photographer for the
late Mayor Richard
J. Daley.
Slattery, also 42, lives just down
the block from John
Daley. Slattery's
sister, Maura
Slattery Boyle, was
elected a Cook
County judge with
John Daley's help.
The Slatterys "were great friends of
our family, very,
very close," John
Daley said Monday.
Contributing: Natasha
Korecki
Criminal charges 'revolutionary'
BY
FRAN SPIELMAN
City Hall Reporter
In the Richard J. Daley years, Tom
Donovan held forth
in a sixth-floor
office suite that
rivaled the mayor's.
Donovan made no
bones about it. He
was Daley's
patronage chief.
Under Richard M. Daley, the name was
changed to the
Mayor's Office of
Intergovernmental
Affairs, with the
purported purpose of
promoting the
mayor's legislative
agenda in the City
Council, Springfield
and Washington.
Patronage had officially been driven
underground, but it
was not dead and
buried as some had
hoped.
| Shakman fights to keep decree intact
BY ABDON M. PALLASCH Legal Affairs Reporter
"It is hereby declared that the conditioning, basing or affecting of the hiring of governmental employees upon or because of any political reason . . . is prohibited," U.S. District Judge Nicholas Bua wrote in 1983.
That was the second part of the "Shakman Decree" that started in 1972 with a ban on political firings in Chicago. Attorney Michael Shakman, fresh out of law school, had sued local governments over political hiring and firing in 1969.
It has been an ongoing battle over the last 36 years, with courts sometimes backtracking on the rulings. About 900 positions in the city of Chicago are exempt from the decree. The city of Chicago wants the decree voided for at least 2,000 temporary workers it hires every year.
Shakman is fighting to keep those workers subject to anti-patronage rules he said keep local government from returning to the bad old days when political jobs "were used to generate an army of patronage workers and a vast treasury of money. The law has been clear for 20 years that you can't hire on the basis of politics and you can't fire on the basis of politics."
Referring to the federal complaints unsealed Monday, he said, "It's not a case of a few bad apples. It's widespread. The complaints show hiring forms have been been falsified. People were alleged to have been interviewed when they were out of the country."
|
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On Monday, federal prosecutors who
have spent months
bearing down on city
personnel practices
and the role of the
Daley-created
Hispanic Democratic
Organization struck
a crushing blow to
the new way of doing
business.
Two veteran city officials with
long-standing ties
to the 11th Ward
Regular Democratic
Organization run by
the mayor's brother
were accused of
engineering an
illegal scheme to
get around the
decades-old federal
decree that was
supposed to put an
end to political
hiring.
Federal complaint a
bombshell
"You're seeing the criminalization of
things that were
never criminal
before," said one
veteran political
observer, echoing
the refrain sounded
after former Gov.
George Ryan was
indicted in the
licenses-for-bribes
scandal.
"If you buy that premise, everybody
for a hundred years
has been involved in
a criminal
enterprise. If every
time a ward
committemen says,
'I'd like you to put
this guy on' and the
guy gets on and
that's a crime,
that's
revolutionary. I
don't know who would
want to be mayor
under those
circumstances," the
source said.
The federal charges hit close to home
for Mayor Daley.
Bridgeport native Patrick Slattery is
a newlywed whose
wife is the mayor's
personal secretary.
The mild-mannered
Robert Sorich, whose
father was Richard
J. Daley's
photographer, spent
years as John
Daley's personal
driver and as the
11th Ward secretary.
Sorich was the
mayor's unofficial
patronage chief, but
everybody believes
he was carrying out
somebody else's
orders.
The bombshell criminal complaint
drives a stake
through a Mayor's
Office of
Intergovernmental
Affairs that has
spawned some of the
mayor's most
powerful political
operatives: Tim
Degnan and his
successor Victor
Reyes; chief of
staff Sheila
O'Grady; Rosemarie
Andolino,
quarterback of the
O'Hare modernization
program; consultant
Michael Broderick,
and Maria Nino, who
has close ties to
ousted Streets and
Sanitation
Commissioner Al
Sanchez.
Park District Supt. Tim Mitchell is
another Victor Reyes
protege who worked
hand-in-glove with
intergovernmental
affairs during his
years at City Hall.
Aldermen pointing
fingers
For years, aldermen have griped that
their control over
hiring had been
supplanted by HDO
and other renegade
organizations formed
by Daley allies to
get around the ward
organizations that
comprise the
traditional
Democratic party
structure.
On Monday, aldermen were busy
pointing fingers --
and breathing a sigh
of relief that many
of their patronage
pleas had apparently
gone unanswered.
"It's a disgrace. All these years
we've been telling
people there was no
more political
hiring -- [that]
you've got to go to
the Personnel
Department and get
hired according to a
proscribed process.
Now, we find out
that has not been
the case and that
political hiring has
been an integral
part of the system,"
said Ald. Ed Smith
(28th).
Ald. Joe Moore (49th) said the
federal charges
"could very well
accomplish what the
Shakman decree was
unable to completely
accomplish: to end
political hiring,
firing and
promotions as we
know it. It's one
thing to run the
risk of incurring
civil fines as a
result of violating
a court decree. It's
quite another to run
the risk of going to
jail.
"Many of my colleagues have been
griping for years
that they're not
getting much out of
the Daley
administration. But
that doesn't mean
they didn't get
something. We'll
have to wait and
see," he added. "It
appears that federal
prosecutors are
operating under a
theory that
political hiring and
promotions violate
criminal law. If
that's true, maybe
they'll be relieved
they got nothing. It
might have been a
blessing in disguise
for the aldermen. Be
careful what you
wish for."