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Lou Bianchi’s Case against Those Who Persecuted Him – Part 3

July 28, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Conspiracy, Demetri Tsilimigras, Gordon Graham, Henry Tonigan, Jeremy Reid, Joseph McGraw, Kellerer & Buckley, Leone Flosi, Lou Bianchi, McHenry County State's Attorney, Michael McCleary, Michael Morzos, Phil Weyna, Philip Hiscock, Pro-Life Victory PAC, Quest Consultants International, Robert Scigalski, Ron Salgado, Special Prosecutor, Sue Sedar, Terry Ekl, Thomas McQueen, Tom Salvi, Uncategorized

Here is the third installment of the posting of attorney Terry Ekl’s First Amended Complaint against Special Prosecutors Henry Tonigan, his assistant Thomas McQueen, Quest Consultants International, et al.  Here are Part 1 and Part 2.

Tonigan settled with Bianchi, et al, for $157,500.

Today we start with paragraph 83.

Thomas McQueen. Photo credit: First Electric Newspaper.

The Conspiracy to Force Bianchi From Office Continues

83. Shortly after obtaining the first indictment against Bianchi and Synek, Defendants Tonigan, McQueen, and Scigalski began a second illegal and unauthorized investigation of Bianchi, and two of his employees, Plaintiffs Ronald J. Salgado and Michael J. McCleary.

This investigation included interviewing witnesses about Bianchi’s handling of criminal cases, which clearly exceeded their authority under the orders signed by Judge Graham appointing Defendants Tonigan and McQueen on September 18, 2009 and January 7, 2010.

84. On October 1, 2010, long after Defendants Tonigan, McQueen, and Scigalski had already begun their second unauthorized investigation, Defendant McQueen filed a verified petition to expand their investigation which contained knowingly false statements regarding Bianchi’s allegedly improper intervention in three criminal cases, to wit:

  1. that Bianchi directed an ASA to reduce a plea offer to Ronald Salgado’s nephew (Jeremy Reid) from five to four years;
  2. that Bianchi asked an ASA to secure a recognizance bond for one of his relatives (Michael Morzos), a felony defendant, and instructed the ASA to delay the case so his relative could benefit from a diversion program which was not yet operational; and
  3. that Bianchi interceded in the case of a defendant (Tom Salvi), who was related to a financial supporter of Bianchi.

85. Defendant McQueen’s misrepresentations in the petition were intended to convince Judge Graham to expand Defendants Tonigan and McQueen’s authority to investigate and prosecute Bianchi and Salgado for crimes they did not commit and further the goal of the conspiracy to tarnish the reputation of Bianchi and drive him from office.

86. Based on Defendant McQueen’s perjured petition, on October 1, 2010, Judge Gordon Graham signed an order appointing Defendants McQueen and Tonigan as special state’s attorneys to investigate and prosecute individuals for using their official position in the SAO to give benefits in criminal prosecutions to friends, relatives, and supporters.

87. In regards to the second investigation, Defendants McQueen and/or Tongian, along with Defendant Quest investigators, and other as yet unnamed co-conspirators agreed, through explicit and/or implicit means, to fabricate evidence for the purpose of charging and prosecuting Bianchi and Salgado with criminal offenses, despite the lack of probable cause or competent
evidence to support such charges.

88. Prior to and after October 1, 2010, Defendants McQueen, Scigalski and Hanretty, interviewed several witnesses.

89. Prior to all witness interviews, Defendants Scigalski and Hanretty identified themselves as McHenry County Special Investigators who had been engaged by Special State’s Attorney Henry Tonigan to conduct an investigation into official misconduct in the SAO.

90. The interviews conducted by Defendants Scigalskiand Hanretty occurred at the direction of Defendants Tonigan and/or McQueen. After they were completed, the Defendant Quest Investigators informed Defendants Tonigan and/or McQueen of the substance of several interviews.

91. Several witnesses interviewed by Defendants McQueen, Scigalski, and Hanretty provided information that negated the credibility of any accusations against Bianchi and Salgado.  Defendants McQueen and the Quest investigators deliberately ignored and failed to document that exculpatory information.

Demetri Tsilimigas

92. After conducting witness interviews, Defendants Hanretty and Scigalski, in agreement with Defendants McQueen and/or Tongian, manufactured and fabricated false inculpatory evidence against Bianchi and Salgado in their reports while failing to properly document exculpatory evidence, to wit:

  1. Defendant Scigalski falsely reported that ASA Demetri Tsilimigras stated that he was directed by Bianchi to present the victim in the Thomas Salvi case with various alternatives to prosecution, one of which was for the victim to accept an apology and an agreement that Thomas Salvi would undergo counseling;
  2. Defendant Scigalski deliberately failed to record ASA Tsilimigras’ actual statement that he was the one who advised Bianchi of the options that could be given to the victim and Bianchi told him that if the victim wanted to proceed to trial, that was to be the end of the discussion;
  3. Defendant Scigalski falsely reported that former ASA Kirk Chrzanowski told him that Bianchi told him that the sentence for Jeremy Reid was to be four years, rather than five years, and that following Reid’s sentencing, the Reid family was greeted at the rear of the courtroom with Bianchi celebrating the sentence;
  4. Defendant Scigalski deliberately failed to report Chrzanowski’s actual statement that Bianchi did not direct him to reduce Jeremy Reid’s sentence to four years and that Bianchi did not have any face to face contact with Reid’s family;
  5. Sue Serdar

    With the knowledge of Defendants McQueen and Scigalski, Defendant Hanretty intentionally failed to report the statement of Sue Ann Serdar, the president of the Pro-Life Victory PAC, that contributions to Bianchi’s campaign were not in exchange for, or in anyway related to, Bianchi dismissing any charges against Thomas Salvi;

  6. With the knowledge of Defendant McQueen, Defendant Scigalski deliberately failed to prepare an investigative report to document the statement of Philip Weyna, the chairman of the Pro-Life Victory PAC, denying that any contribution was given to Bianchi in exchange for dismissing a case; and
  7. After Defendants McQueen and Scigalski interviewed Philip Hiscock, the former Chief of the SAO’s Criminal Division and ASA Kirk Chrzanowksi’s supervisor during the pendency of the Jeremy Reid case, the Defendants deliberately failed to prepare an investigative report to document Hiscock’s statement that it was he (Hiscock) and not Bianchi who made the decision to offer Jeremy Reid a four year sentence on a plea negotiation.

Henry Tonigan

93. Defendant Tonigan either participated in the agreement to manufacture and fabricate the false inculpatory evidence and conceal exculpatory evidence identified in paragraph 92, or that Defendant Tonigan was unaware that the evidence had been manufactured and fabricated and he unknowingly relied upon the false inculpatory evidence created by Defendant Quest Investigators and/or Defendant McQueen in ultimately deciding to charge Bianchi and Salgado.

94. Based on the fabricated inculpatory evidence and exculpatory evidence described in
paragraph 92(a-g) above, there was no probable cause or competent evidence supported any
accusation against Bianchi and Salgado alleging interference with any criminal cases.

December 2010 -February 2011: Defendants Again Engage in Gross Misconduct in Connection With the Special Grand Jury.

95. In relation to the second investigation of Bianchi, the Quest Investigators served subpoenas and subpoenas duces tecum at the direction of Defendants Tonigan and McQueen. These special grand jury subpoenas, which were issued by Defendant Tonigan and Defendant McQueen, were not in fact authorized or issued by the special grand jury, in violation of Illinois law.

96. As a result of the illegal subpoenas that were issued by Defendants Tonigan and McQueen and served by the Quest investigators, between December 3, 2010 and February 24, 2011, witnesses appeared and testified before the special grand jury.

Ron Salgado

97. When appearing before the special grand jury, Defendants deliberately engaged in misconduct for the purpose of improperly influencing the special grand jury to indict Bianchi and Salgado for crimes that were not supported by probable cause or competent evidence, to wit:

  1. Defendant McQueen falsely testified as a witness that Bianchi offered benefits to a few defendants that were not offered to everyone, in contravention of the way the system was supposed to work;
  2. Defendant McQueen knowingly presented the deliberately misleading testimony of Defendant Scigalski to the special grand jury concerning the baseless allegation that Bianchi dismissed the Salvi case in return for a campaign contribution from the Pro-Life Victory PAC, which Defendants McQueen and Scigalski knew to be false;
  3. Defendant Scigalski testified falsely before the special grand jury that he had been told by Defendant McQueen that Gwen Salvi, Thomas Salvi’s wife, testified that she had contact with Bianchi through the Pro-Life Victory PAC;
  4. Defendants McQueen and Scigalski knowingly presented false testimony to the special grand jury that Bianchi directed an ASA to reduce the sentence of Salgado’s “nephew,” Jeremy Reid, from five years to four years;
  5. Defendants failed to advise the special grand jury that Jeremy Reid was not Ronald Salgado’s nephew or otherwise related to Salgado;
  6. Defendants failed to advise the special grand jury that Michael Morzos was not related to Bianchi; and
  7. Defendants failed to advise the special grand jury that Bianchi was not involved in any decisions related to the disposition of Morzos’ case.

 February 2011: Bianchi and Salgado are Indicted and Arrested Without Probable Cause

98. After a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery, there likely will be evidentiary support that Defendant Tonigan was responsible for determining what charges to bring against Bianchi and Salgado.

Defendant Tonigan either

  • deliberately ignored the fact that the charges were not supported by probable cause or,
  • Defendant Tongian, in making his charging decisions, unknowingly relied upon the false and manufactured evidence and witness statements created by Defendant Quest Investigators and/or Defendant McQueen during the investigation.

Supporters of Lou Bianchi like Mary Alger wore buttons like this in the courtroom.

99. On February 24, 2011, based upon the Defendants’ misconduct described above, the special grand jury returned an indictment against Bianchi for three counts of official misconduct (11 CF 169) based on Bianchi’s alleged intervention in the three criminal cases described above.

100. On February 24, 2011, the special grand jury also returned an inictment against Salgado for official misconduct based on the false accusation that Salgado told an ASA that his nephew, Jeremy Reid, should be given a four, instead of five, year sentence.

101. None of the charges were supported by probable cause or any competent evidence and in fact were directly contrary to the information known to Defendants McQueen. Scigalski and Hanretty.

102. As a result of the indictments, a warrant was issued for the arrest of both Bianchi and Salgado. On or about February 28, 2011, Bianchi and Salgado were both placed under arrest by the McHenry County Sheriff and held in custody at the McHenry County Jail.

103. Salgado’s bond was set at $50,000, requiring Salgado to post $5000 prior to being released from the McHenry County Jail.

February 2011: The Indictment and Arrest of McCleary Without Probable Cause.

Michael McCleary

104. As an investigator for the SAO, McCleary was required to be on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and his duties included locating and serving witnesses with subpoenas. As such, McCleary was assigned a McHenry County vehicle.

105. Defendants Tonigan, McQueen and the Quest Investigators began an investigation into McCleary’s personal use of the County vehicle.

106. In relation to their investigation of McCleary, Defendants McQueen deliberately
presented misleading evidence to the special grand jurors to create the false impression that McCleary was not authorized to use a County vehicle for personal use when McQueen knew that based on his position and duties, McCleary was in fact authorized to use his County vehicle for personal use.

107. On February 24, 2011, Defendant McQueen improperly testified as a witness to the special grand jury by falsely stating that McCleary had asserted his Fifth Amendment rights and refused to answer whether he reimbursed the County for gas mileage or expenses. At the time, Defendant McQueen was fully aware that McCleary was never asked a single question relating to reimbursement to the County for gas mileage or expenses.

108. Defendant McQueen further falsely told the special grand jurors that he had issued a subpoena for any documents which would show that McCleary did reimburse the County for gas mileage or expenses and that no such documents were produced.

In fact, no subpoena was issued which called for any such documents.

109. After a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery, there likely will be evidentiary support that Defendant Tonigan was responsible for determining what charges to bring against McCleary.

Defendant Tonigan either

  • deliberately ignored the fact that the charges were not supported by probable cause or,
  • Defendant Tongian, in making his charging decisions, unknowingly relied upon the false and manufactured evidence and witness statements created by Defendant Quest Investigators and/or Defendant McQueen during the investigation.

McHenry County Jail

110. On February 24, 2011, based upon the misconduct described above, the special grand jury returned an indictment against McCleary for official misconduct. The indictment falsely alleged that McCleary committed a theft of the County vehicle assigned to him.

111. As a result of the indictment, a warrant was issued for the arrest of McCleary. On or about February 28, 2011, McCleary was placed under arrest by the McHenry County Sheriff and held in custody at the McHenry County Jail.

Tonigan and McQueen’s Defamatory Statements Further Tarnish the Reputation of Bianchi, Salgado, and McCleary

112. On February 28, 2011, the Defendant law firm of Kelleher & Buckley, acting through its agent Defendant Tonigan, and Defendant McQueen, issued a press release to the media.

In the press release, Defendants repeated the inflammatory allegations contained in the indictments against Bianchi, Salgado, and McCleary, which, as described above, they knew to be false and not supported by probable cause or any competent evidence.

113. On February 28, 2011, Defendants Tonigan, McQueen, and Scigalski also held a press conference.

Press conference conducted by Henry Tonigan (center), Thomas McQueen (left) and Robert Scigalski (right) to which McHenry County Blog was not invited. Photo credit: First Electric Newspaper.

At that time, McQueen, under the supervision and/or direction of Tonigan, again repeated the inflammatory allegations contained in the indictments against Bianchi, Salgado, and McCleary, which, as described above, he knew to be false and not supported by probable cause or any competent evidence.

During the press conference, Defendant McQueen also made additional false and inflammatory statements regarding Bianchi, Salgado, and McCleary, to wit:

  1. Defendant McQueen falsely stated that after the return of the first indictment Scigalski received calls from a number of lawyers regarding cases handled by Bianchi and that those cases suggested that the equal protection rights of all defendants were not being upheld because of favoritism;
  2. Defendant McQueen falsely stated that in a case where the defendant was Salgado’s nephew, Salgado called the ASA handling the case and told the ASA that the negotiated plea of five years would be reduced to four years;
  3. Defendant McQueen falsely stated that after being called into Bianchi’s office, the ASA was told that the sentence for Salgado’s nephew would not be a five year period of incarceration but rather it would be four years; andDefendant McQueen falsely stated that Bianchi instructed an ASA to give his nephew a recognizance bond on a criminal matter.

114. Defendant McQueen and Tongian’s statements in the press release and press conference were defamatory, violated the Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct, and were made in furtherance of the conspiracy to convict Bianchi, Salgado and McCleary, force Bianchi to resign from office, and tarnish the public’s opinion of Bianchi.

June-August 2011:Salgado and McCleary’s Cases Are Dismissed by the Court and Bianchi is Acquitted After a Motion for Directed Finding

115. In furtherance of the conspiracy to prosecute and convict Bianchi, Salgado, and McCleary for crimes they did not commit, Defendants Scigalski and Hanretty deliberately and without lawful justification withheld exculpatory evidence, including notes of critical witness interviews and witness statements, during the prosecutions of Bianchi, Salgado, and McCleary.

116. Only after Bianchi filed a Motion to Compel and then a Motion for Sanctions against Defendants Tonigan and McQueen, did the special prosecutors produce the notes prepared by Defendant Hanretty of the interview he conducted of Sue Ann Serdar.

However, Defendant Hanretty intentionally excluded from his notes Sue Ann Serdar’s exculpatory statement, in response to a direct question, that Pro-Life Victory did not contribute to Bianchi in exchange for Bianchi dismissing the case against Thomas Salvi.

117. On June 24, 2011, Defendant Scigalski deliberately gave perjured testimony at an evidentiary hearing on a Motion for Sanctions regarding who he spoke to during the investigation and what those individuals told him.

This was done in an effort to conceal the identify of the other participants in the conspiracy to charge and prosecute Bianchi, Salgado, and McCleary for crimes they did not commit.

118. By fabricating evidence during the investigation through manufactured interview reports and perjured grand jury testimony and then concealing their wrongdoing after indictment, Defendants Tonigan and/or McQueen, along with the Quest Investigators, forced Bianchi to remain under indictment for more than five months.

119. The withheld information revealed gross investigative and prosecutorial misconduct, and perjured testimony before the special grand jury, which if timely disclosed, would have led to the dismissal of Bianchi’s indictment well in advance of trial.

Joseph McGraw

120. On June 3, 2011, Judge McGraw dismissed the charge of official misconduct against Ronald Salgado based on the failure of the charge to state an offense against Salgado.

121. On June 29, 2011, Judge McGraw dismissed the charge of official misconduct against
Michael McCleary based on the failure of the charge to state an offense against McCleary.

122. Bianchi’s second bench trial began on August 1, 2011.

At trial, Defendant McQueen was assisted by Leone Flosi, an employee of Quest.

McQueen falsely represented to Judge McGraw that Flosi was an attorney who was licensed to practice law in the State of Illinois.

123. On August 1 , 2011, immediately prior to the commencement of trial and without any
prior notification to Bianchi, Defendant McQueen dismissed the charge against Bianchi which related to the prosecution of Michael Morzos.

On August 2, 2011, after a bench trial, Judge McGraw granted Bianchi’s Motion for Directed Finding and acquitted Bianchi of the two remaining charges.

Judge McGraw ruled that Defendant McQueen presented no evidence to suggest that Bianchi improperly handled any criminal prosecution or that he committed an offense of official misconduct.

Tomorrow:  “The Conspiracy Between The Special Prosecutors, Quest Investigators, and Other Unnamed Individuals Was Driven By Political and Financial Motivations.”

Lou Bianchi’s Case against Those Who Persecuted Him – Part 2

July 27, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Conspiracy, Gordon Graham, Henry Tonigan, Joseph McGraw, Joyce Synek, Lou Bianchi, McHenry County State's Attorney, Peter Austin, Robert Scigalski, Ron Salgado, Terry Ekl, Thomas McQueen

Terry Ekl

Please refer to Part 1 for the introduction to this series of posts that contain attorney Terry Ekl’s First Amended Complaint of McHenry County State’s Attorney Lou Bianchi, et al, against Special Prosecutors Henry Tonigan, Thomas McQueen, Quest International Consultants, et al.

Each day there will be about ten pages of the complaint put up so people can reference it during what I believe could well end up being an explosive case exploring the underbelly of McHenry County Republican politics.

Part 2 focuses on approximately page 11-20 beginning with paragraph 45.

45. After consulting with Defendants Tonigan and/or McQueen, the Defendant Quest Investigators prepared reports regarding certain interviews. In furtherance of their conspiratorial agreement with Defendants Tonigan and/or McQueen and in an effort to manufacture and fabricate evidence against Bianchi and other SAO employees, the Defendant Quest Investigators knowingly included false and manufactured information in their reports of interviews, to wit:

a) Defendant Scigalski falsely reported that former ASA William Dennison stated that:

  1. Bianchi held campaign meetings during working hours that were attended by SAO employees;
  2. Bianchi had an assistant, Jamie Rein, walking around the office selling tickets to his fundraiser; and
  3. Bianchi allowed SAO employees to leave the office early the day of his fundraiser because he wanted attorneys to arrive early.

b) Defendant Scigalski and/or Defendant Reilly falsely reported that former ASA Nichole Owens stated that:

  1. Bianchi used SAO employees to attend lunch time “political campaign committee meetings”;
  2. Bianchi’s campaign committee members were responsible for political activities in the SAO; and
  3. Expos (community sponsored public information forums) were used to promote Bianchi and comp time (paid time off) should not have been given to ASAs for attendance.

c) Defendant Reilly falsely reported that former ASA Mary McClellan stated that:

  1. Former ASA Michelle Courier ran the Bianchi campaign out of her office.

d) Defendant Scigalski and/or Defendant Stilling falsely reported that ASA Jamie Rein
stated that:

  1. The entire SAO was asked to attend a Bianchi fundraiser;
  2. She was told her lack of attendance at a fundraiser might affect her career;
  3. Attendance at expos by ASAs was mandatory and the expos were held to provide a political advantage to Bianchi; and
  4. She received comp time for attending a Bianchi’s fundraiser.

46. All of the former and current ASAs described in paragraph 45 (a-d) have confirmed that they did not make any of the statements attributed to them in Defendants’ false reports.

May-August 2010: The Special Prosecutors Engage in Gross Misconduct in Connection With the Special Grand Jury.

A truck in the 2010 Marengo Settlers Days Parade touted the candidacies of both Associate Judge Gordon Graham and Sheriff Keith Nygren.

47. On April 9, 2010, Judge Graham convened a special grand jury and also appointed, at taxpayers expense, fifteen (15) Quest investigators as agents of the special grand jury, including Defendants Jerger, Scigalski, Reilly, Hanretty, and Stilling.

48. After the special grand jury was convened, Defendants Tonigan and/or McQueen
continued to lead the politically motivated investigation by interviewing witnesses personally and
directing the Quest investigators who to interview, what questions to ask, and what information to
document.

49. The Defendant Quest Investigators served search warrants, subpoenas, and subpoenas duces tecum at the direction of Defendants Tonigan and McQueen. In violation of Illinois law, the special grand jury did not issue or authorize the issuance of these subpoenas, but rather they were unilaterally issued by Defendants Tonigan and McQueen, without the special grand jury’s knowledge or consent.

50. Pursuant to these illegal subpoenas, from May 21, 2010 until October 22, 2010, numerous witnesses produced documents to Defendants Tonigan and McQueen and appeared before the special grand jury to testify.

51. Defendants McQueen engaged in gross misconduct for the purpose of improperly influencing the special grand jury to indict Bianchi and Synek for crimes that were not supported by probable cause, to wit:

a) Defendant McQueen improperly testified as a witness to the following unsworn and false statements of fact:

Tom Carroll

  1. that County employees were given “comp time” for attending parades and evening public events which were political in nature;
  2. that Thomas Carroll, a former ASA, was directly told that he was expected to participate in political activities when he was hired as chief of the civil division;
  3. that political pressure was brought to bear on SAO employees during Bianchi’s tenure;
  4. that all of the documents that McQueen presented to the special grand jury, which came from the hard drive of a computer used by Joyce Synek, were political in nature; and
  5. that Joan Hoffman, an administrative assistant in the SAO, provided McQueen political documents from her SAO computer.

Henry Tonigan. Photo credit: First Electric Newspaper.

52. Defendant Tonigan was present when Defendant McQueen made the unsworn and false statements of fact, identified in paragraph 51. Defendant Tonigan either knew that Defendant McQueen’s statements were false or Defendant Tonigan incorrectly believed that Defendant McQueen was relating truthful information that he learned during his investigation.

Robert Scigalski. Photo credit: First Electric Newspaper.

53. Defendant Scigalski falsely testified before the special grand jury that former ASA Nichole Owens told him that:

  1. Bianchi assumed and expected that ASAs would do political activities, including attending fundraisers, leaving work early to go to campaign meetings, and marching in parades, for which they received comp time;
  2. One of Ronald Salgado’s chief jobs, as the chief investigator for the SAO, was to bring people together for political reasons;
  3. Bianchi believed he could give comp time to employees for political work; and
  4. Political campaigning was undertaken at Bianchi’s direction by SAO employees.

54. Defendant Scigalski also falsely testified before the special grand jury that SAO employees were given paid time by the County of McHenry for performing political work.

55. Defendant Daniel Jerger deliberately gave misleading testimony and intentionally withheld exculpatory evidence from the special grand jury for the purpose of conveying the false impression that Plaintiff Synek obstructed justice by deliberately deleting documents on a computer after receiving a grand jury subpoena.

56. At the time of that false testimony, Defendant Jerger knew there was no evidence that any document had been deleted from the computer after the issuance of the subpoena. Defendant Jerger also learned that the documents were not recoverable due to a computer virus rather than any wrongdoing by Bianchi or Synek.

September 2010: Bianchi and Synek are Indicted and Arrested Without Probable Cause.

Lou Bianchi and Joyce Synek after the ordeal.

57. On or about September 10, 2010, based upon the Defendants’ misconduct as described above, the special grand jury returned an indictment against Bianchi, for Conspiracy to commit official misconduct and obstruction of justice, nineteen (19) counts of Official Misconduct, and Unlawful Communication with a Witness (10 CF 933). None of these 21 counts were supported by probable cause or any competent evidence.

58. On September 10, 2010, based upon the Defendants’ misconduct as described above, the special grand jury returned an indictment against Synek for Conspiracy to commit official misconduct and obstruction of justice, four (4) counts of perjury, and obstruction of justice (10 CF 934). None of these counts were supported by probable cause or any competent evidence.

59. The indictment alleged that Bianchi and Syneck conspired to commit official misconduct and obstruction of justice. There was no evidence presented to the special grand jury that there was any agreement, either explicit or implicit, between Bianchi and Synek to commit either official misconduct or obstruction of justice.

60. The obstruction of justice charge against Synek falsely alleged that Synek, in agreement with Bianchi, deleted certain files after receiving a grand jury subpoena to produce those documents. Defendants knew the charge was false at the time of the indictment.

The Quest web site touts the 27 years that President Robert Scigalski spent in the FBI. He has “a B.S. degree in Psychology from Loyola.

61. The indictment falsely alleged that Bianchi, in agreement with Synek, committed official misconduct by causing Synek to prepare and maintain certain documents on her County computer.

The charges were insufficient on their face, as they failed to allege that Bianchi violated any law.

Furthermore, no evidence was presented to the special grand jury that any of the documents that Synek allegedly prepared were actually typed by Synek, that they were typed on a County computer, or that they were typed during County work hours.

Likewise, there was no evidence that Bianchi directed Synek to prepare any of the documents on a County computer or during County work hours.

62. After a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery, there likely will be evidentiary support that Defendant Tonigan was responsible for determining what charges to bring against Bianchi and Synek.

Defendant Tonigan either

  • deliberately ignored the fact that the charges were not supported by probable cause or
  • Defendant Tonigan, in making his charging decisions,unknowingly relied upon false and manufactured evidence and witness statements created by Defendant Quest Investigators and/or Defendant McQueen during the investigation.

63. The indictments returned against Bianchi and Synek were not supported by probable cause. The indictments were obtained after Defendant Quest Investigators, in concert with Defendant McQueen and/or Tongian, and other as yet unnamed co-conspirators fabricated false evidence and witness statements during their sham investigation.

64. As a result of the indictments, a warrant was issued for the arrests of both Bianchi and Synek. On or about September 10, 2010, Bianchi and Synek were both placed under arrest by the McHenry County Sheriff and held in custody at the McHenry County Jail.

Fox News ran this mug shot of Lou Bianchi.

65. The indictments and arrests of Bianchi and Synek were widely covered by print, television, and electronic media throughout the Chicagoland area. Bianchi was widely described as the first State’s Attorney in the history of the State of Illinois to be indicted while in office. Based on the indictments and media coverage, Bianchi’s political enemies called on Bianchi to resign from office and questioned his ability to continue to serve as State’s Attorney while under indictment.

66. Despite the concerted efforts by the Defendants and other as yet unnamed coconspirators, Bianchi refused to resign and continued with his duties as State’s Attorney.

October 2010: Based on the First Indictment Failing to Even State an Actual Offense Against Bianchi, a Manufactured Witness Statement is Used to Obtain a Superceding Indictment

67. The first indictment failed to allege Bianchi committed an actual underlying crime, which is required to charge official misconduct. Therefore, Defendant Quest Investigators, in concert with Defendant McQueen and/or Defendant Tonigan, resumed their investigation for the purpose of fabricating evidence that Bianchi committed an underlying crime of “theft of labor, services, and use of property.”

Peter Austin

68. To accomplish that result, on October 21, 2010, Defendant Richard Stilling interviewed Peter Austin, the McHenry County Administrator. During that interview, Peter Austin informed Defendant Stilling that elected county officials, such as Bianchi, had discretion to authorize the use of county property for personal use. Peter Austin also referred Defendant Stilling to the County of McHenry Personnel Policy Manual which granted elected officials such authority. Peter Austin’s statement to Defendant Stilling negated any possibility that Bianchi or Synek committed the offenses of conspiracy or official misconduct.

69. After the interview with Peter Austin, Defendants Stilling and McQueen agreed to withhold the exculpatory evidence provided by Peter Austin and instead manufacture a false statement of Peter Austin for the purpose of creating the appearance that there was probable cause to charge Bianchi and Synek with conspiracy and official misconduct. Defendant Stilling did not prepare a report of the Peter Austin interview.

70. Defendants Stilling and McQueen fabricated a false statement that Peter Austin informed them that only the County Administrator could authorize the use of County property for non-county business and that Peter Austin had not given anyone in the SAO such permission.

71. After a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery, there likely will be evidentiary support that Defendant Tonigan relied upon what he was told regarding Peter Austin’s statement in making the decision to present a superceding indictment to the special grand jury, alleging that Bianchi and Synek engaged in official misconduct and conspiracy to commit official misconduct by committing the underlying offense of “theft of labor, services, or use of property.”

72. Tonigan was either told an accurate description of Peter Austin’s statement, in which case Defendant Tonigan participated in the agreement to fabricate the false statement and withhold exculpatory evidence, or Defendant Tonigan was told the fabricated version of Peter Austin’s statement and unknowingly relied upon manufactured evidence in deciding to charge Bianchi and Synek.

Thomas McQueen. Photo credit: First Electric Newspaper.

73. On October 22, 2010, Defendant McQueen knowingly presented the perjured testimony of Defendant Richard Stilling to the special grand jury. Defendant Stilling falsely testified that Peter Austin told him that only the County Administrator could authorize the use of County property for non-county business and that Peter Austin had not given anyone in the SAO such permission.

74. Furthermore, Defendants McQueen and Stilling falsely misrepresented to the special grand jury that the County of McHenry policy manual did not authorize Bianchi to give his SAO employees permission to use a County computer for non-work purposes. Defendant Stilling, as well as Defendant McQueen, knew the manual expressly gave Bianchi such authority. This perjured testimony was presented to the special grand jury for the purpose of securing a corrupt indictment charging that Bianchi committed the crime of theft of County property.

75. Other than the above described testimony of Defendants Stilling and McQueen, Defendants Tonigan and McQueen presented no other evidence or testimony to the special grand jury in support of the superceding indictment.

76. Based on the above described misconduct, the special grand jury returned a superceding indictment against Bianchi and Synek alleging that Bianchi committed the offenses of official misconduct by committing the underlying offense of “Theft of labor, services, and use of property” of McHenry County (720 ILCS 5/16-3). There was no probable cause or competent evidence to support the superceding indictment.

October 2010-March 2011: Defendants Withhold Critical Evidence and Plaintiffs Bianchi and Synek are Acquitted After a Motion for Directed Finding

Joseph McGraw

77. After all of the judges in McHenry County recused themselves from Bianchi and Synek’s criminal cases, the Illinois Supreme Court appointed Judge Joseph McGraw, a circuit court judge in the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit, to preside over the cases.

78. In furtherance of their conspiracy to prosecute and convict Bianchi and Synek for
crimes they did not commit, Defendants Quest investigators deliberately withheld exculpatory
evidence, including notes and witness statements, during the prosecutions of Bianchi and Synek.

79. Not until they were twice ordered by Judge McGraw to produce all handwritten notes
did Defendant Tonigan and Defendant McQueen finally tender Defendant Jerger’s handwritten notes containing critical witness statements from over ten separate interviews.

This untimely disclosure, five days before trial, was intended to prevent Bianchi and Synek from discovering there was no evidence that any document was erased from a computer after a subpoena for those documents was issued and that a computer virus explained why certain documents could not be recovered from the computer, rather than any deliberate act by Synek or Bianchi.

This evidence eviscerated the conspiracy and obstruction of justice charges against Bianchi and Synek.

80. By

  • fabricating evidence during the investigation through manufactured interview reports and perjured grand jury testimony, and
  • then concealing the exculpatory evidence which established the falsity of the charges after indictment,

Defendants Quest Investigators, McQueen, and/or Tonigan forced Bianchi and Synek to remain under indictment for more than six months.

81. The withheld information would have additionally revealed

  • gross investigative and prosecutorial misconduct and
  • perjured testimony before the grand jury,

thereby exposing due process violations which would have led to the dismissal of Bianchi and Synek’s indictments prior to trial.

82. On March 23, 2011, after a two day bench trial, Judge Joseph McGraw granted Bianchi and Synek’s Motion for a Directed Finding and acquitted them of all charges.

Judge McGraw found that the charges of conspiracy and official misconduct were all fatally defective as they failed to allege essential elements of the offenses and that Defendants McQueen and Tonigan failed to present any evidence to support any of the charges.

Tomorrow:  “The Conspiracy to Force Bianchi From Office Continues.”

Message of the Day – Political Fiction

June 29, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Conspiracy, Fiction, History, Illinois, Message of the Day, Political, Politics

The cartoon creators of Shoe don't think too much of the Sunday morning TV interview shows, it appears.

Have to admit that I like fiction with a political twist.

It’s interesting to see how realistic authors are.

Lots of conspiracies in such works, of course.

I remember in college having the Conspiratorial Theory of History denigrated.

Then I got involved in Illinois politics.

No doubt that conspiracies abound.

When I first glanced at this Sunday cartoon, I thought it was about reading political fiction in newspapers.

But, upon taking a closer look, it appears that Uncle Cosmo is reading the section about what’s on Sunday morning TV.