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Congressman Randy Hultgren’s Weekend

October 11, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Plainfield, Randy Hultgren, St. Charles

Congressman Hultgren returned from Washington on Friday evening just in time to host a pizza party at the McHenry County GOP Headquarters in Crystal Lake.

My goal is to report to you, with the help of campaign staff, what Congressmen Randy Hultgren and Joe Walsh do each weekend and at other times on the trail to the March primary election.

Here’s is text by his staff:

Randy Hultgren meets with prospective constituents at a pizza party in Crystal Lake.

Congressman Hultgren returned from Washington on Friday evening just in time to host a pizza party at the McHenry County GOP Headquarters in Crystal Lake.

I'm presuming this is from the Plainfield Homecoming Parade.

On Saturday morning he kicked off the day at the Plainfield Homecoming Parade and spent the rest of the day in Will County.

Randy Hultgren greets a man at what I believe is the Plainfield Homecoming Parade.

On Sunday, he attended church with his wife and kids and then rode on a motorcycle in the DuKane ABATE Annual Toy and Food Run parade in Batavia.

Then, they headed over to the St. Charles Scarecrow Festival to meet constituents and enjoy the beautiful fall day.

= = = = =

Being in Kane County Sunday explains why Hultgren was not at the Marengo Settles Days Parade.

This past weekend, it appears never the twain did meet, each side picking different sides of the 14th Congressional District to mine for votes.

39% of Illinois Teachers Pay Nothing for Pensions

May 16, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Alton, Argo, Arlington Heights, Aurora, Ball Chatham, Belleville, Belvidere School District, Berwyn, Bremen Township, Cahokia, Canton, Cary Elementary School District 26, Cary Grade School District, Champaign, Chicago Public Schools, Chicago Schools, Cicero, Collinsville, Crete-Monee, Crystal Lake Grade School District 47, Crystal Lake High School District 155, Danville, Decatur, DeKalb, District 155, District 165, District 2, District 200, District 26, District 3, District 300, District 47, Dixon, Dolton, Downers Grove, East Maine, Edwardsville, Effingham, Elgin School District, Elmhurst, Evanston, Freeport, Geneva, Genoa, Grayslake Unit School District 46, Harvard School District 50, Harvey, Highland Park, Homewood, Illinois Education Association, Illinois State Board of Education, Johnsburg School District, Joliet, Kaneland School District 302, Kankakee, Kevin McCarthy, Larry Snow, LaSalle, Lemont, Leyden Township, Lockport Township, Lombard, Lyons Township, Manteno, Marion, Massac, Mattoon, McHenry Grade School District 15, McHenry High School District 156, Moline, Naperville Unit District 203, New Lenox, Niles, Nippersink Elementary School District 2, North Boone, O'Fallon, Oak Lawn, Palatine, Park Ridge, Pension, Peoria, Peru, Plainfield, Proviso Township, Quincy, Reed Custer, Rochester, Rockford School District, Round Lake School District 116, Schaumburg, Schiller Park, School, Springfield, St. Charles School District, Summit Hill, Sycamore School District 427, Taylorville, Teacher Negotiations, Teacher Pay, Teacher Pension, Teacher Salaries, Teachers Retirement System, Teachers Union, Thornton Township, Tolono, Union, Urbana, Valley View, Warren Township High School District, Wauconda, Waukegan, West Chicago, Wheeling, Wilmington, Woodstock School District 200, Yorkville, Zion

Larry Snow

While Democrats say Teachers ‘Have Kept Their Part of the Deal?’

is the title of an April 5, 2011, article by former Huntley School District 158 Board member Larry Snow.  (The quote was in the Chicago Tribune Marcy 31, 2011.  It is from Executive Director Dick Ingram of Teachers’ Retirement System.)

The article was published in “The Champion” with this teaser:

“82,981 of 132,502 Illinois Teachers Pay Nothing or Little into Their Pensions

That’s 63% of all teachers in Illinois.

The State Journal-Register is reporting that State Rep. Kevin McCarthy (D-Orland Park) is promoting a bill where state and local governments would all pay six percent of payroll toward employee pensions.

In a revealing sentence in reporter Chris Wetterich’s article, he writes,

What’s unclear is how much more employees themselves would have to pay.

Because no one has done the research except, I believe, the Illinois Education Association and Snow, how much extra teachers would have to pay if their so-called contribution rate was raised from 9.4% to 13.77% is a really good question.

While not covering every school district in Illinois, Snow did research the teachers’ contracts for all of the large school districts (by law all are supposed to be on the internet) in order to find out how much teachers pay in order to get a “full 75 percent pension after working only 27 years.” He points out, “Most adults work for 27 years before they turn age 50.”

As way of background, Snow notes that teachers are not in the Social Security System and, therefore, are not forced to pay Social Security taxes.

“Ordinary workers get hit with a 6.2 percent deduction for Social Security,” Snow writes. “It’s a deduction they have to pay federal and state income taxes on.

“Democrats gave teachers a huge loophole of not paying income taxes on any of their pension deductions” he continues. “This enormous no-tax handout to teachers amounts to billions of dollars each year.”

Snow’s research leads him to this conclusion:

Over 51,000 of the total 132,502 teachers in Illinois contribute nothing from their K-12 paychecks into their pensions. Illinois law says it is to be 9.4 percent.

“About an additional 32,000 teachers pay little into their pensions. It is 1.81 percent to be precise for these 31,956 teachers.

How many teachers pay not a dime toward their retirement?

51,025 teachers in 186 school districts pay nothing for retirement benefits.

They “don’t pay a penny into the 9.4 percent called out by Illinois law.

“There are a total of 868 districts in Illinois.

“The pay-zero teachers listed are 39 percent of all teachers in Illinois,” Snow reveals.

No agency in state government seems to keep track of this information.

Not the Downstate Teachers Retirement Fund, which boldly and incorrectly claims,

“Active TRS members are required to contribute 9.4 percent of their creditable earnings each year…”

The State Board of Education doesn’t keep track either.

My guess is that only the Illinois Education Association has a matrix showing what school districts have given what benefits in contract negotiations.

Snow discovered this about Lockport:

“…on page 14 of the Lockport Township HS 205 teachers contract it reads:

  1. The Board will pay the current level of retirement contribution to the Teachers Retirement System of Illinois.”
  2. It is expressly understood that figures appearing on this salary schedule include a sum equal to the current level of TRS contribution of the base salary of each Teacher which is, in fact, payable to the Teachers’ Retirement System on the Teacher’s behalf.”

“The ISBE report shows this board paying nothing. A Democrat bureaucracy doesn’t check the teachers contracts to see if what is reported, matches what’s in writing.”

And, if legislation is passed requiring 4.37 percentage points more, how long do you think it will take Lockport taxpayers to pick up the difference?

Given that local teachers’ unions pretty much control school boards wherever they are elected (read everywhere but Chicago), my guess is will be on the top of the collective bargaining list.

Do you wonder if Rep. McCarthy knows that?

Is his proposal just a setting up local taxpayers for an even bigger fall?

Five years from now will 39% of teachers still be paying nothing for their pensions?

Even better for teachers is that this pension payment ups their pension payments.

Take a look at the chart below.  Chances are your school district is on it.

Chart of Pension Contributions by 82,981 District Teachers of 132,502 Total Illinois K-12 Teachers

Name of District

 

No. of Teachers Percent of Pension

Contributed by Teachers

Thornton Twp 205 428 Zero
Proviso 209 281 Zero
Waukegan 60 1,098 Zero
Morton 201 455 Zero
Kankakee 111 348 Zero
Joliet 204 340 Zero
Round Lake 116 387 Zero
Rockford 1,843 Zero
Decatur 61 454 Zero
Crete Monee 340 Zero
Danville 118 382 Zero
Valley View 365 1,068 Zero
Aurora West 129 706 Zero
East Peoria 309 69 Zero
Galesburg 281 Zero
Bremen 228 313 Zero
Freeport 317 Zero
Leyden 212 219 Zero
Elgin U-46 2,332 Zero
Rock Island 388 Zero
Mattoon 225 Zero
Collinsville 394 Zero
Massac 1 143 Zero
Sterling 219 Zero
Belvidere 531 Zero
Quincy 436 Zero
Dixon 179 Zero
West Chicago 248 Zero
Cook County 130 289 Zero
Cicero 99 738 Zero
Joliet 86 617 Zero
Harvey 152 163 Zero
Crystal Lake 155 412 Zero
Crystal Lake 47 564 Zero
Wheeling 21 489 Zero
Champaign 4 717 Zero
United CUSD 304 68 Zero
Riverdale 100 76 Zero
Reed Custer 255 114 Zero
Wilmington 209U 84 Zero
United Township 30 90 Zero
Summit Hill 161 213 Zero
Plainfield 1,695 Zero
Schiller Park 81 98 Zero
Dolton 149 176 Zero
Township 211 Palatine 799 Zero
Ball Chatham 5 248 Zero
Taylorville 3 152 Zero
Williamsville 15 81 Zero
Harrisburg 3 130 Zero
Belleville 201 281 Zero
Dupo 196 76 Zero
O’Fallon 203 145 Zero
O’Fallon 90 207 Zero
Rochester 3A 142 Zero
Pekin 108 248 Zero
Morton 709 175 Zero
New Lenox 122 287 Zero
Frankfort 157 158 Zero
Marion 2 219 Zero
Carterville 5 110 Zero
Kinnikinnick 131 122 Zero
Tolono 7 116 Zero
Mahomet-Seymour 3 161 Zero
Champaign 4 717 Zero
Urbana 346 Zero
Charleston 1 180 Zero
Park Ridge 64 319 Zero
Evanston 202 222 Zero
Maine HSD 207 508 Zero
Arlington Heights 214 753 Zero
Niles 219 350 Zero
Berkeley 87 165 Zero
Berwyn South 263 Zero
Lyons 204 239 Zero
Lemont 113 144 Zero
Palatine 15 713 Zero
Schaumburg 54 1,003 Zero
Oak Lawn 123 203 Zero
Oak Lawn 229 114 Zero
CHSD 230 Orland Park 519 Zero
Argo 217 111 Zero
Homewood 233 174 Zero
Genoa 424 137 Zero
Sycamore 427 231 Zero
Dekalb 428 362 Zero
Lombard 44 216 Zero
Downers Grove 58 277 Zero
Hinsdale 86 296 Zero
Elmhurst 205 538 Zero
Naperville 203 1,063 Zero
Effingham 40 176 Zero
Canton Union 66 175 Zero
Morris 54 61 Zero
Morris 101 50 Zero
Coal City 1 138 Zero
Jersey 100 164 Zero
Central CUSD 301 224 Zero
Kaneland 302 275 Zero
St. Charles 303 880 Zero
Cahokia 298 0.4
Chicago Public Schools 23,219 2
Peoria 150 988 0.4
Springfield 1,105 0.4
Moline 40 461 0.4
Harvard 149 0.87
Dolton 148 236 1.4
Belleville 118 228 0.4
Pekin 303 125 0.4
Hononegah 207 118 0.4
Arlington Heights 59 444 3
Leyden 212 219 0.4
Summit 104 103 0.4
Palos 118 130 0.4
CHSD 219 Orland Park 519 0.4
Bensenville 2 145 1.4
DuPage 88 266 0.4
CHSD 94 122 0.9
CUSD 300 1,189 4.4
Hawthorn 73 253 1.4
Lake Forest 115 132 0.4
Wauconda 118 273 0.4
Johnsburg 12 158 0.4
Cary 26 192 4.9
Woodstock 200 385 1.4
Keeneyville 20 107 0.4
Winnebago 323 117 0.4
LaSalle-Peru Twp. 120 88 0.7
Prairie-Hills 144 187 0.4
Geneva 304 367 Zero
Herscher 2 126 Zero
Manteno 5 160 Zero
Bourbonnais 53 160 Zero
Bradley 61 103 Zero
Bradley Bourbonnais 307 114 Zero
Momence 1 88 Zero
Yorkville 115 329 Zero
Plano 88 154 Zero
Oswego 308 827 Zero
Streator 44 132 Zero
Ottawa 141 140 Zero
Ottawa 140 102 Zero
Glenview 34 343 Zero
Zion 6 177 Zero
Grayslake 46 266 Zero
Elmwood Park 401 181 Zero
Libertyville 70 159 Zero
North Shore 112 374 Zero
HSD 113 Highland Park 249 Zero
Grant 124 91 Zero
Zion-Benton 126 156 Zero
Evanston 65 547 Zero
Grayslake 127 187 Zero
Meridian 15 64 Zero
Mt. Zion 3 133 Zero
Edwardsville 7 480 Zero
Alton 11 467 Zero
Macomb 185 130 Zero
McHenry 15 282 Zero
McHenry 156 158 Zero
Nippersink 2 92 Zero
Columbia 4 111 Zero
Waterloo 5 166 Zero
Hillsboro 3 114 Zero
Meridian 223 113 Zero
Illinois Valley Central 321 139 Zero
Carbondale 165 76 Zero
Carbondale 95 105 Zero
Riverton 14 85 Zero
Auburn 10 90 Zero
Pawnee 11 47 Zero
Panhandle 2 35 Zero
Sullivan 300 75 Zero
Centralia 135 93 Zero
Litchfield 12 83 Zero
Harlem 122 505 Zero
Granite City 9 617 Zero
Princeton 115 86 Zero
Princeton 500 43 Zero
Bond County 2 120 Zero
Duquoin CUSD 300 101 Zero
Rocton 140 102 Zero
Rochelle Twp. HSD 212 71 Zero
Rochelle CCSD 231 131 Zero
Byron 226 127 Zero
Oregon 220 104 Zero
Farmington Central 265 85 Zero
Porta 202 75 Zero
River Bend 2 71 Zero
Red Bud 132 73 Zero
Sparta 140 105 Zero
Southwestern 9 107 Zero
Staunton 6 87 Zero
Gillespie 7 81 Zero
Hamilton County 10 83 Zero
Midwest Central 191 85 Zero
Tuscola 301 86 Zero
West Carroll 314 99 Zero
Oakwood 76 64 Zero
Hoopeston 11 94 Zero
Westville 2 80 Zero
Beardstown 15 98 Zero
El Paso-Gridley 11 99 Zero
Murphysboro 186 137 Zero
Monticello 25 111 Zero
Paris-Union 95 74 Zero
Mt. Vernon Twp. 210 80 Zero
Mt. Vernon 80 109 Zero
Jasper County 1 101 Zero
Steger 194 128 Zero
Calumet City 155 77 Zero
North Boone 200 116 Zero
CCSD 93 Carol Stream 294 Zero
East Maine SD 63 254 Zero
Lockport Township HS 205 205 Zero
     
Above Teachers Total 82,981  

 

Prairie Grove Grade School Board Member Appointed Elgin’s Director of Financial Operations

November 05, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Dale Burnidge, Elgin, Elgin United School District, Plainfield, Prairie Grove, Prairie Grove District 46, Ron Brown, U-46

Dale Burnidge

Elgin Unit School District 46 is the second largest in Illinois. Only Chicago is larger.

Its relatively long term Chief Financial Officer John Prince went off to Plainfield and was replaced by McHenry County College’s finance guy Ron Ally.

He lasted a year until he went to back to the world of community colleges at Harper.

Now U46 has promoted Prairie Grove Grade School Board member Dale Burnidge as a partial replacement.

Not quite Chief Financial Officer, Director of Financial Operations, instead.

Burnidge will earn $105,250.

The district is facing a $40 million hole in spite of passing a massive Working Case Fund referendum a couple of years ago.

Gazebos Sounding Like 1930′s WPA Projects

September 12, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: Aurora, Batavia, Creston, DeKalb, Dixon, Frankfort, Fulton, Gazebo, Geneva, Malta, Mural, New Lenox, North Aurora, Oregon, Park Forest, Plainfield, Rochelle, Senic Byways, Sterling

Tuesday, I posted an article entitled,

Clue that State’s Financial Situation May Not Be as Bad as Some Would Lead You to Believe

While writing the article, which was based on a Chicago Sun-Times article about Geneva’s getting a gazebo and a mural to commemorate the first national cross-country road–the Lincoln Highway–I asked the Illinois Department of Transportation what the other 17 towns that would get similar amenities.

I have received the answer in an email from Marisa Kollias, which follows:

“The communities slated to receive an Interpretive Gazebo are:
  • Aurora
  • Batavia
  • Creston
  • DeKalb
  • Dixon
  • Frankfort
  • Fulton
  • Geneva
  • Malta
  • New Lenox
  • North Aurora
  • Oregon
  • Park Forest
  • Plainfield
  • Rochelle
  • Sterling

“The bulk of the funding is from the federal scenic byway program and the match is provided by the local community.”

More information came from IDOT Communications Manager Paris Ervin:

“The National Scenic Byway Program (NSBP) is a federal program that is administered by each state, along with their Division Federal Highway Administration office. For more information, check out the NSBP website at www.bywaysonline.org.

“In a nutshell, the local grass-roots organizations that apply for and successfully attain National Scenic Byway status are eligible to apply each year for federal funds from the National Scenic Byways Program.

“It is an 80/20 reimbursement program so the federal funding is awarded at 80% and the 20% is provided by local match. Grantees must spend the funds on the project and then apply for reimbursement once performance is proven.

“There are no state funds involved in these projects with the exception of possible Marketing Partnership or Tourism Attraction Development Program grant funds that are administered by the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, Bureau of Tourism.

“Depending on the type of project, a grantee could be eligible to apply for these funds to use as matching dollars for the federal funds.

“The 2009 Scenic Byway projects have not been announced. The FY 2008 National Scenic Byway Program funds awarded to Illinois totaled $1,280,528. The local match amount is $320,132 for a total project amount of $1,600,660.”

So, it appears that my pressumption that state money was being spent on gazebos may be incorrect. At least it seems that the money isn’t road money from IDOT.

It’s the Federal government that has money to spend.

Hey! You Think We’re Going to Reward a Whistle Blower?

August 13, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: Centegra, Edward Hospital, Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board, Mercy Health System, Pam Meyer Davis, Plainfield, Rod Blagojevich, Stuart Levine, Susana Lopatka, Whistleblower, Will County

Let’s assume everything is on the square at the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board.

OK. Forget about the fixing of the new hospital that Wisconsin’s Mercy Health Care System wanted to build in Crystal Lake to compete with local biggie Centegra Health Care System’s dominant hospitals in McHenry County.

Governor Rod Blagojevich appointed a new board, didn’t he?

Problem solved, right?

No reason to be suspicious when Naperville’s Edward Hospital gets turned down for the third time, right?

“Edward contends that the hospital is necessary because of the area’s rapid growth and because one-third of the patients at its crowded Naperville campus come from the Plainfield area,”

Chicago Tribune reporter James Kimberly reports.

Edward Hospital admitted projecting that Will County would grow.

Naughty. Naughty.

“…acting health facilities board Chairman Susana Lopatka said population projections are not certain to materialize and even if they did, there would be insufficient demand to support a new hospital by 2015.”

Naturally, nearby hospitals objected.

Just as they did in McHenry County.

Irrelevant, of course, is that Edward Hospital CEO Pam Meyer Davis blew the whistle on Stuart Levine’s little shakedown game.

Oh, yes.

“…the board and its staff became contentious at times.”

I’ll bet.

The only cure for this regulatory agency is abolition, something I tried, but failed to accomplish in 1993.

No chance of that now.

We are in the age of “government knows best” again.

Maybe we’ll end up with another warehouse full of basketballs that won’t get given to Chicago kids, just like I was told two days ago that we had in Chicago during Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society.

Hey! You Think We’re Going to Reward a Whistle Blower?

August 12, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: Centegra, Edward Hospital, Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board, Mercy Health System, Pam Meyer Davis, Plainfield, Rod Blagojevich, Stuart Levine, Susana Lopatka, Whistleblower, Will County

Let’s assume everything is on the square at the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board.

OK. Forget about the fixing of the new hospital that Wisconsin’s Mercy Health Care System wanted to build in Crystal Lake to compete with local biggie Centegra Health Care System’s dominant hospitals in McHenry County.

Governor Rod Blagojevich appointed a new board, didn’t he?

Problem solved, right?

No reason to be suspicious when Naperville’s Edward Hospital gets turned down for the third time, right?

“Edward contends that the hospital is necessary because of the area’s rapid growth and because one-third of the patients at its crowded Naperville campus come from the Plainfield area,”

Chicago Tribune reporter James Kimberly reports.

Edward Hospital admitted projecting that Will County would grow.

Naughty. Naughty.

“…acting health facilities board Chairman Susana Lopatka said population projections are not certain to materialize and even if they did, there would be insufficient demand to support a new hospital by 2015.”

Naturally, nearby hospitals objected.

Just as they did in McHenry County.

Irrelevant, of course, is that Edward Hospital CEO Pam Meyer Davis blew the whistle on Stuart Levine’s little shakedown game.

Oh, yes.

“…the board and its staff became contentious at times.”

I’ll bet.

The only cure for this regulatory agency is abolition, something I tried, but failed to accomplish in 1993.

No chance of that now.

We are in the age of “government knows best” again.

Maybe we’ll end up with another warehouse full of basketballs that won’t get given to Chicago kids, just like I was told two days ago that we had in Chicago during Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society.

Nick Hurtgen Indicted in Operation Board Games

December 12, 2007 By: Cal Skinner Category: Chicago Medical School, Edward Hospital, Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board, Jacob Kiferbaum, Kaarina Salovaara, Nick Hurtgen, Plainfield, Stuart Levine, Teachers Retirement System

The press from the U.S. Attorney’s Office about the indictment of Nick Hurtgen follows:

HURTGEN RE-INDICTED FOR ALLEGED ROLE IN AIDING PAY-TO-PLAY FRAUD SCHEME INVOLVING WILL COUNT HOSPITAL PROJECT

CHICAGO – A former executive in the Chicago office of Bear Stearns & Co., an investment firm that arranges financing for public works projects in Illinois, was indicted today on federal charges for allegedly assisting a fraud scheme in which a former member of the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board and a construction firm owner engaged in insider-dealing, influence-peddling and extortion involving their private interests and public duties, federal officials announced today.

The defendant, P. Nicholas Hurtgen, a lawyer and investment banker, allegedly participated in a fraud scheme to help lawyer, businessman and previous co-defendant Stuart Levine, formerly an influential member of the state board that controls medical facility construction projects, obtain millions of dollars for Levine and certain of his associates, including another previous co-defendant, Jacob Kiferbaum, an architect and construction firm owner, who schemed with Levine to obtain multi-million dollar contracts and to distribute construction kickbacks, announced Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois.

The new indictment is part of Operation Board Games, an ongoing federal public corruption investigation of insider-dealing, influence-peddling and kickbacks involving private interests and public duties related to various state boards and non-profit organizations.

Hurtgen, 44, of Glencoe, faced similar charges in a May 2005 indictment that charged him together with Levine and Kiferbaum.

After Levine, 61, of Highland Park, and Kiferbaum, 55, also of Glencoe, pleaded guilty and entered into cooperation agreements with the government, the charges against Hurtgen, who had pleaded not guilty, were dismissed earlier this year in a pre-trial ruling by Senior U.S. District Judge John Grady. (A third previous co-defendant, John Glennon, 55, OF Lake Forest, recently pleaded guilty and is cooperating.)

Today’s seven-count superseding indictment returned by a federal grand jury reinstates the same charges – six counts of aiding and abetting mail and wire fraud and one count of extortion, while adding more details about Hurtgen’s alleged role in, as well as his knowledge of, the charged criminal activity. Hurtgen will be arraigned at a later date in U.S. District Court.

According to the indictment, Hurtgen was a senior managing director in the Chicago office of Bear Stearns, which had done and sought future business with Edward Hospital in Naperville, part of Edward Health Services Corp., including seeking to arrange the financing for its proposed expansion by building a $90 million hospital and adjacent $23 million medical office building in Plainfield. Multiple hospital operators were competing to obtain permission from the state Planning Board, on which Levine served, to build new medical facilities in the rapidly growing area.

With Hurtgen’s knowledge and participation, Bear Stearns also did extensive business with the State of Illinois, including managing substantial funds belonging to the Teachers Retirement System, and participating in the refinancing of approximately $10 billion in State of Illinois bonds.

In part through Bear Stearns’ participation in these matters, Hurtgen was acquainted with Levine and high-ranking state officials. Bear Stearns compensated Hurtgen in part through payment of an annual bonus, whose size was influenced by the amount of business Hurtgen was responsible for generating in the year, the indictment states.

Between 2001 and June 2004, Levine and Kiferbaum engaged in a fraud scheme in which Levine misused his positions on the Planning Board and as a trustee of the former Chicago Medical School (now Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, referred to as “CMS”) to provide millions of dollars in financial benefits to Kiferbaum, primarily by using his positions to direct business to Kiferbaum’s company, Kiferbaum Construction Co., of Deerfield.

In return, by December 2003, Kiferbaum had already provided more than $1.6 million in concealed payments to Levine’s nominees in connection with two construction projects at CMS.

Kiferbaum also had agreed to pay Levine a substantial kickback in return for Levine’s role in securing a Certificate of Need from the Planning Board to construct a new hospital in Crystal Lake, Ill., which Kiferbaum had been hired to build, as well as to pay Levine or his nominees a substantial kickback from fees Kiferbaum would earn if his company was hired to build the Edward Hospital facilities in Plainfield.

Beginning in December 2003 and continuing through at least June 2004, Hurtgen allegedly aided and abetted the Levine-Kiferbaum scheme by agreeing to and assisting them in misusing Levine’s position with the Planning Board to obtain financial gain for himself, his employer Bear Stearns, and Kiferbaum Construction. The scheme allegedly deprived the Planning Board and the State of Illinois of Levine’s honest services.

Hurtgen allegedly assisted the scheme by promising representatives of Edward Hospital that the Planning Board would approve the Plainfield hospital and medical office building if Edward Hospital hired Kiferbaum Construction to build those facilities, and threatening those representatives that the Planning Board would deny Edward Hospital’s Certificate of Need applications if it did not hire Kiferbaum, even though Edward Hospital had already negotiated with Construction Company A to build them.

Levine’s and Hurtgen’s insistence on the use of Kiferbaum Construction, rather than Construction Company A, was unrelated to any objective criteria for Planning Board approval of the Certificates of Need for the Plainfield hospital and medical office building, the indictment alleges.

Knowing that Illinois law prohibited Levine from communicating directly with Edward Hospital officials regarding its applications before the Planning Board, and to reduce the risk that third parties would detect the unlawful pressure to force Edward Hospital to hire Kiferbaum Construction, Hurtgen allegedly agreed with Levine to communicate Levine’s threats and promises to Edward Hospital officials and to relay their responses to Levine.

To prove to Edward Hospital’s chief executive officer that Hurtgen was communicating genuine threats and promises on behalf of Levine, Hurtgen agreed to and did stage a sham encounter in which Hurtgen and Levine purported to “accidentally” meet the hospital’s chief executive and Kiferbaum at a restaurant, providing the hospital official with the opportunity to observe Hurtgen and Levine together, and Levine with the opportunity to praise Kiferbaum to the hospital executive.

The indictment alleges that Hurtgen sought to obtain financial gain for Bear Stearns and himself by assisting Levine in abusing his official position, believing from his communications with Levine that forcing Edward Hospital to hire Kiferbaum Construction would result in Planning Board approval for the Plainfield hospital and medical office building, whose construction Hurtgen expected Bear Stearns to finance.

Mr. Fitzgerald announced the charges with Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; Thomas P. Brady, Inspector-in-Charge of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service; James Vanderberg, Special Agent-in-Charge of the U.S. Department of Labor Office of Inspector General in Chicago; and Alvin Patton, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Division in Chicago.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kaarina Salovaara.
If convicted, each count of aiding and abetting mail fraud and wire fraud and extortion carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, or an alternative maximum fine of twice the gross profit to any defendant or twice the loss to any victim. The Court, however, would determine the appropriate sentence to be imposed under the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines.

The public is reminded that an indictment contains only charges and is not evidence of guilt. The defendant is presumed innocent and is entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.