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Archive for the ‘Jeanne Hurley Simon’

Illinois Eavesdropping Law Passed by Shiela Simon’s Mother Found Unconstitutional

May 08, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Currency Exchange, Jack Mabley, Jeanne Hurley Simon, Paul Simon, Reformer, Roland Libonati, Sheila Simon

The 1957 eavesdropping bill that Sheila Simon’s mother, State Rep. Jeanne Hurley, sponsored has been declared unconstitutional by the U.S. Federal Appeals Court in Chicago.

The story of how Jeanne Hurley was tricked by legislators who wanted to prevent reporters from getting another tape recording such as was given Chicago reporter Jack Mabley about the Currency Exchange bribes to legislators.

Ever heard of Roland Libonati?

He was a state senator while Jeanne Hurley, later Mrs. Paul Simon, was state representative from Evanston.  Libonati later became a member of Congress representing the West Side of Chicago.

I met him in the Springfield train station after session adjourned for the week one day in the 1970′s. He had been visiting old friends, sitting next to Larry DiPrima in the back row where the”Royal Order of the Mushrooms” sat.

At the train station, DiPrima introduced me to Libonati.

After a while he warmed up to me, concluding that this Republican wasn’t a threat and started tell old war stories.

He told of how some non-reformers convinced Jeanne Hurley  to introduce legislation to limit secret tape recording. Here are the two I suppose he was referring to two 1957 bills, House Bills 1210 and 1211 (click to enlarge the Digest listings and look at the list of reformers sponsoring the bill):


The idea came up after Chicago American reporter Jack Mabley had written a series of stories on corruption. Someone taped  legislators talking in their hotel rooms.

“The tapes had been stashed in lockers at the Greyhound bus station. Mabley got the keys anonymously,”

Statehouse reporter Ray Long wrote for the April, 1996, Illinois Issues when he was working for the Associated Press.

Hotel rooms had transoms at that time and the legislature’s verbal history has it that those willing to be bribed left their transoms open so lobbyists could toss money into the room.

Needless to say, Libonati, reportedly a member of the West Side Blocbeholding to the Crime Syndicate did not convey that tale.

But he did say that his friends had snookered the woman who married Paul Simon into sponsoring legislation that he and his allies wanted passed.

He laughed as he explained that she thought it was a “good government” bill.

And, perhaps you will laugh at what Long printed about what former Governor and now sometimes lobbyist Jim Thompson told him:

“There’s no question that back decades ago Illinois, like many states, was kind of a wild and woolly place. My guess is today it’s probably about as clean as you can get.”

That was before the George Ryan, Tony Rezko and Rod Blagojevich trials, of course.

And, while we’re talking about eavesdropping, let’s not forget the legislators who voted against loosening the law this year:

Besides House Republican Leader Tom Cross, State Reps. representing parts of McHenry County who voted against the reform bill include Kent Gaffney and Tim Schmidt. Democrat Jack Franks was missing from the House floor today. State Rep. Mike Tryon voted in favor of the measure.

Here’s how the synopsis describes the bill:

“Provides that a person who is not a law enforcement officer nor acting at the direction of a law enforcement officer may record the conversation of a law enforcement officer who is performing a public duty in a public place and any other person who is having a conversation with that law enforcement officer if the conversation is at a volume audible to the unassisted ear of the person who is making the recording.”

Cross, Gaffney, Schmitz Vote Against Easing Recording Prohibition

March 21, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Eavesdropping, Jack Franks, Jeanne Hurley Simon, Mike Tryon, Paul Simon, Police, Recording, Roland Libonati, Sheila Simon, Tape Recording, Taping, Tim Schmitz, Tom Cross, Video, Video Recording, Videographer

I have written how reformer State Rep. Jeanne Hurley got snookered into sponsoring a bill in 1957 to prohibit reporters like Jack Mabley from using tape recordings of legislative corruption.

Hurley married Paul Simon and is Lt. Gov. Sheila Simon’s mother.

The retired State Representative who told me the story was Roland Libonatii.  After taking a busman’s holiday to the Illinois House Chambers, we were in the Amtrak Station waiting for the train back to Chicago.

Marvelous story of how those close to the Currency Exchange scandal took steps to try to prevent others from getting similar evidence of corruption.

So, now people have cell phones and record everything imaginable, even police making arrests.

And the policemen don’t like being held accountable.

You can see that from this recent YouTube taken by professionals across the street from a Chicago Hospital where a little girl had been taken after having been shot by a gang banger.  (Thanks to Illinois Review for pointing me to it.)


So, why is House Republican Leader Tom Cross leading the way to coverup wrongdoing?

You tell me. I didn’t hear the debate.

Here’s the 45-59-1 roll call vote on House Bill 1944:

Besides House Republican Leader Tom Cross, State Reps. representing parts of McHenry County who voted against the reform bill include Kent Gaffney and Tim Schmidt. Democrat Jack Franks was missing from the House floor today. State Rep. Mike Tryon voted in favor of the measure.

Here’s how the synopsis describes the bill:

“Provides that a person who is not a law enforcement officer nor acting at the direction of a law enforcement officer may record the conversation of a law enforcement officer who is performing a public duty in a public place and any other person who is having a conversation with that law enforcement officer if the conversation is at a volume audible to the unassisted ear of the person who is making the recording.”

Of Eavesdropping and Irony at the Paul Simon Institute

February 08, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Eavesdropping, Jeanne Hurley Simon, Paul Simon, Paul Simon Policy Institute, Paul Simon Public Policy Institute, Sheila Simon

Maybe I should just re-run this article entitled,

Manipulating a Reformer,”

about how Jeanne Hurley, future bride of Paul Simon and mother of Illinois Lieutenant Governor Sheila Simon, sponsored and co-sponsored House Bill 1210 in 1957 to tighten eavesdropping laws in Illinois.

My source was former State Rep. Roland Libonati. He, some of his Democratic Party pals like Mike Nardulli and I were in the Springfield train station waiting to take Amtrak to Chicago. It must have been hear the end of the session, because the weather was pleasant.

He was telling how those not appreciative of Jack Mabley’s stories about bribery by the currency exchange lobbyist that resulted from tape recordings made by a party unknown and given to the Chicago American reporter.

Visiting Professor William H. Freivogel of the Paul Simon Policy Institute writes of how Illinois’ eavesdropping laws are among the strictest in the country.

Apparently he does not know of the role that his institute’s namesake and his wife had in enacting our state’s eavesdropping laws.

Manipulating a Reformer

April 24, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: Chicago American, Eavesdropping, Jack Mabley, Jeanne Hurley Simon, Larry DiPrima, Paul Simon, Roland Libonati, Westside Bloc, Wire Tapping

Ever hear of Roland Libonati?

He was a state senator while Jeanne Hurley (then) Simon was state representative from Evanston. Libonati later became a member of Congress representing the west side of Chicago.

I met him in the Springfield train station after session adjourned for the week one day in the 1970′s. He had been visiting old friends, sitting next to Larry DiPrima in the back row where the Royal Order of the Mushrooms sat.

At the train station, DiPrima introduced me to Libonati.

After a while he warmed up to me, concluding that I wasn’t a threat and started tell old war stories.

He told of how some non-reformers convinced Jeanne Hurley Simon to introduce legislation to limit secret tape recording. Here are the two I suppose he was referring to two 1957 bills, House Bills 1210 and 1211 (click to enlarge the Digest listings):


The idea came up after Chicago American reporter Jack Mabley had gotten a series of stories on corruption. Someone taped (see p. 28) legislators talking in their hotel rooms.

“The tapes had been stashed in lockers at the Greyhound bus station. Mabley got the keys anonymously,”

Statehouse reporter Ray Long wrote for the April, 1996, Illinois Issues when he was working for the Associated Press.

Hotel rooms had transoms at that time and the legislature’s verbal history has it that those willing to be bribed left their transoms open so lobbyists could toss money into the room.

Needless to say, Libonati, reportedly a member of the West Side Bloc beholding to the Crime Syndicate, did not convey that tale.

But he did say that his friends had snookered the woman who married Paul Simon into sponsoring legislation that he and his allies wanted passed.

He laughed as he explained that she thought it was a “good government” bill.

And, perhaps you will laugh at what Long printed about what former Governor and now sometimes lobbyist Jim Thompson told him:

“There’s no question that back decades ago Illinois, like many states, was kind of a wild and woolly place. My guess is today it’s probably about as clean as you can get.”

That was before the George Ryan and Tony Rezko trials, of course.