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Madigan corruption trial's 4th week starting without Illinois Rep. Bob Rita's expected testimony

Jason Meisner, Megan Crepeau and Ray Long, Chicago Tribune on

Published in News & Features

CHICAGO — Illinois state Rep. Bob Rita is no longer expected to testify Monday morning in the corruption trial of ex-Speaker Michael Madigan.

Rita had taken the witness stand for a few minutes Thursday and was expected to continue Monday morning. Instead, proceedings began with lengthy sidebars and a recess. When jurors finally got back to the courtroom just before 10 a.m., U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey told them Rita’s testimony would be “taken out of order.”

Jurors then began to hear further wiretapped recordings between Madigan and his co-defendant, longtime ally Michael McClain.

After several recordings, former ComEd general counsel Tom O’Neill was called to the stand. O’Neill testified last year about being pressured by McClain to hire a law firm headed by clout-heavy Democratic political operative Victor Reyes. At the same time, the utility was trying to win Madigan’s support on key legislation in Springfield.

As testimony resumed without him, Rita was still standing with his attorney in the hallway near the courtroom.

Rita, a Blue Island Democrat, was making his third turn as a prosecution witness, having already testified in last year’s ComEd Four bribery trial as well as in the perjury trial of Madigan’s former chief of staff, Tim Mapes. He was expected to give jurors a first-hand account of Madigan’s far-reaching power in the General Assembly.

Rita, a 21-year veteran of the House whose district encompasses parts of Chicago’s South Side and south suburbs, is the first sitting elected official to take the witness stand in the trial, which began Oct. 8 at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse.

He has not been accused of wrongdoing, and told the jury before the trial recessed for the week on Thursday that he had been provided a “non-target letter” from the U.S. attorneys office that assures him he’s not currently being investigated.

Rita is important to the prosecution’s case because he was on Madigan’s House leadership team and a co-sponsor of ComEd’s massive 2016 legislation at the heart of the indictment. He is also expected to testify how he was made a sponsor of the state’s massive gambling overhaul in 2013 after a meeting in Madigan’s office.

 

Rita provided some early fireworks in the ComEd case when asked how Madigan typically exercised his power. He paused for a second before saying in his flat South Side accent, “Through fear and intimidation.”

Madigan, 82, of Chicago, who served for decades as speaker of the Illinois House and the head of the state Democratic Party, faces racketeering charges alleging he ran his state and political operations like a criminal enterprise, scheming with utility giants ComEd and AT&T to put his cronies on contracts requiring little or no work and using his public position to drum up business for his private law firm.

Both Madigan and McClain, 77, a former ComEd contract lobbyist from downstate Quincy, have pleaded not guilty and denied wrongdoing.

The trial, which began Oct. 8, started slowly but ramped up considerably Thursday with the playing of a series of wiretapped phone calls from McClain’s phone that painted Madigan as hands-on to the extreme, ingrained in the day-to-day political minutia and particularly concerned about the negative optics the actions of others potentially posed for him.

Through tapes, emails and letters, jurors on Thursday also got a clear window into the relationship between Madigan and McClain, who served together in the legislature in the 1970s and formed a friendship that put McClain in the extremely rare position of having the speaker’s ear.

Rita is the sixth witness called by the prosecution so far. The trial is expected to last until at least mid-December.

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©2024 Chicago Tribune. Visit at chicagotribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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