More on the Moore Mailing

One can also compare not only the address side, but also the back side of the John Rossi for re-election post card with the back of the folded piece from Linda Moore.

Both pieces arrived at some homes Thursday in support of their respective candidacies for Grafton Township Supervisor.

I have done an extensive analysis of the Rossi’s card stock, black and white piece below. You can find the article here.

By looking at the two, you can see Rossi has a photo, while Moore doesn’t.

Rossi uses bigger type to urge people to vote. The left hand side is more eye-catching, I think. (You can click to enlarge both pieces.) The small type on both candidate’s pieces is large enough to read easily, but Rossi’s has less white space and white space makes whatever advertising you see easier to read.

Moore’s is on glossy paper and has splashes of red ink in headlines.

Moore continues her attack on Rossi’s having borrowed $3.5 million to build a new township hall on Haligus Road in Lake in the Hills.

What if someone put a second mortgage on
your home…without asking your permission?

the slanted red headline reads.

This is a reprise of an earlier pale yellow post card.

But the question gets more emphasis with its larger headlines.

Under the question is the following:

Your Grafton Township Supervisor and his township board have done something very close to that.

They have borrowed—in your name—$3.5 million to build a new township hall..in the middle of a recession…while spending $17,000 last year helping people in need with General Assistance.

You will have to pay back that $3.5 million—PLUS interest—with your property taxes.

If you want an elected official who will ask you opinion before you are put in debt…

Then in bigger print is the vote for Linda Moore pitch.

Something about the inside of the four-page 8½ by 11 piece later.

Main Piece for Linda Moore Arrives

What must be the main piece for Grafton Township Supervisor aspirant Linda Moore started arriving in mailboxes yesterday.

That was the same day that Supervisor John Rossi’s post card was delivered.

Let’s first compare the address sides of each piece.

Here’s Rossi’s:
Here’s Moore’s’
Both have a corner card that is campaign related, but it is pretty obvious that whoever designed Rossi’s campaign material wasted a chance to put a message on the
side most people will look at first.

Click to enlarge.

More later.

Reflections on the Kim Skaja King Maker Article

From the reaction of Huntley School Board member’s friends to my article about Kim Skaja’s being the king maker who induced Rob LaPorta (Grafton Township trustee candidate for re-election and candidate for the District 158 board) to step aside, I conclude I may have been wrong.

When viewing political tea leaves from afar, what looks logical–more often than not–is logical.

When I learned that Skaja had announced LaPorta’s decision to withdraw, I thought that meant she was putting things together for the board majority coalition.

Skaja is a direct beneficiary of his withdrawal because she is now guaranteed another four years on the school board. She is the senior board member.

Today, the Northwest Herald reported that LaPorta sent a letter to all school board candidates but Larry Snow telling them that he is withdrawing because he has a new job and the school board would take too much time.

It is common knowledge that the five candidates who were running for the four-year seats are allies with Mike Skala, who is facing off against Larry Snow.

LaPorta’s letter makes that pretty clear. He is a strong supporter of Mike Skala’s beating Snow for the two-year term.

You see, the board majority is not satisfied with a consistent 5-2 vote. The coalition supporting it wants total control.

Electing all four of the four-year seats will give the board majority continued solid control of the Huntley School District.

But, they think that pesky Larry Snow must go.

Snow, after all, is the one who pointed out that the 55-cent tax rate hike was not needed.

The victors in that tax hike referendum want him out of the picture.

And Snow keeps asking questions that the board majority doesn’t want to confront in public.

As evidence of the board majority coalition’s plan, I present the fact that two candidates—Mike Skala and Paul Troy–filed against Larry Snow for the two-year term. Snow and the other two filed for four-year terms, too.

Troy withdrew and is guaranteed a four-year seat.

Maybe no one in that faction is “pulling the strings.” Maybe there is a colloquial decision-making process.

Maybe it’s all coincidence.

If Skaja’s friends say it is not her coordinating the campaign, so be it.

But if no one deserves any credit for the strategy, then this little corner of Illinois politics is very, very different from every other one I have observed and/or participated in.

Main Piece for Linda Moore Arrives

What must be the main piece for Grafton Township Supervisor aspirant Linda Moore started arriving in mailboxes yesterday.

That was the same day that Supervisor John Rossi’s post card was delivered.

Let’s first compare the address sides of each piece.

Here’s Rossi’s:
Here’s Moore’s’
Both have a corner card that is campaign related, but it is pretty obvious that whoever designed Rossi’s campaign material wasted a chance to put a message on the
side most people will look at first.

Click to enlarge.

More later.

Reflections on the Kim Skaja King Maker Article

From the reaction of Huntley School Board member’s friends to my article about Kim Skaja’s being the king maker who induced Rob LaPorta (Grafton Township trustee candidate for re-election and candidate for the District 158 board) to step aside, I conclude I may have been wrong.

When viewing political tea leaves from afar, what looks logical–more often than not–is logical.

When I learned that Skaja had announced LaPorta’s decision to withdraw, I thought that meant she was putting things together for the board majority coalition.

Skaja is a direct beneficiary of his withdrawal because she is now guaranteed another four years on the school board. She is the senior board member.

Today, the Northwest Herald reported that LaPorta sent a letter to all school board candidates but Larry Snow telling them that he is withdrawing because he has a new job and the school board would take too much time.

It is common knowledge that the five candidates who were running for the four-year seats are allies with Mike Skala, who is facing off against Larry Snow.

LaPorta’s letter makes that pretty clear. He is a strong supporter of Mike Skala’s beating Snow for the two-year term.

You see, the board majority is not satisfied with a consistent 5-2 vote. The coalition supporting it wants total control.

Electing all four of the four-year seats will give the board majority continued solid control of the Huntley School District.

But, they think that pesky Larry Snow must go.

Snow, after all, is the one who pointed out that the 55-cent tax rate hike was not needed.

The victors in that tax hike referendum want him out of the picture.

And Snow keeps asking questions that the board majority doesn’t want to confront in public.

As evidence of the board majority coalition’s plan, I present the fact that two candidates—Mike Skala and Paul Troy–filed against Larry Snow for the two-year term. Snow and the other two filed for four-year terms, too.

Troy withdrew and is guaranteed a four-year seat.

Maybe no one in that faction is “pulling the strings.” Maybe there is a colloquial decision-making process.

Maybe it’s all coincidence.

If Skaja’s friends say it is not her coordinating the campaign, so be it.

But if no one deserves any credit for the strategy, then this little corner of Illinois politics is very, very different from every other one I have observed and/or participated in.

Northwest Herald’s Little Sister Paper in Kane County Goes to Five Days a Week

Shaw Newspapers’ Kane County Chronicle is downsizing.

It’s going from seven to five days.

And, it will become a tabloid.

Blame decreased advertising.

No more Sunday papers for the 12,000 circulation paper.

No more Monday.

Fear not, however.

Breaking news will be covered on its web site.

Both the Chronicle and the Northwest Herald are owned by the Dixon-based chain. The Northwest Herald claims about 40,000 circulation.

The drawback of resources follows the cutting back by Elgin’s Courier-News, one of its competitors, from seven-day a week coverage to six. The Courier-News is no longer published on Saturday. It is owned by the Chicago Sun-Times and shares advertising sections.

The Elgin paper recently converted to tabloid size, the first one of which you can see below.

It used to look like this:

McHenry County Submits Stimulus Package Possibilities

There is no official way to submit proposals for the new stimulus package, so an association of the largest counties in Illinois took it upon themselves to develop their own list.

County Administrator Peter Austin emailed me,

“We submitted it as a part of the Metro Counties organization to CMAP (a combination of the old NIPC and CATS) and the IL Senatorial Task Force called for by Senator (John) Cullerton and Chaired by Senator (Michael) Bond.”

Below is what McHenry County government submitted:

McHenry County “READY TO GO” Project Survey


Transportation Projects

Reconstruction

1. Chapel/Lincoln Intersection reconstruction – $1.8 million

2. Fleming Road Reconstruction with porous pavement – $3.5 million

Resurfacing

3. Critical Priority County Resurfacing (approx 42 lane miles) – $8 million – Includes the following roads which are rated at a 4.0 or worse on the MCDOT Pavement Condition Rating Survey:

a. Pyott Road
b. Chapel Hill Road
c. Franklinville Road
d. Hobe Road
e. Maple Street
f. Ramer Road
g. Deep Cut/Nelson Road
h. Hampshire Road
i. Burlington Road

2. High Priority County Resurfacing (approx 97 lane miles) – $18 million – Includes the following roads which are rated between a 4.0 and 5.25 on the MCDOT Pavement Condition Rating Survey:

a. Roberts Road
b. Lawrence Road
c. Cary Road
d. Lake-Cook Road
e. Flat Iron Road
f. Marengo Road (in Huntley)
g. Miller Road
h. Harmony Road
i. River Road
j. Hartland Road

3. Randall Road resurfacing – $4 million – Randall is rated at a 5.25 on the MCDOT Pavement Condition Rating Survey

Bridge Projects

4. McHenry County has 12 bridges planned for replacement over the next 5 years. All are Federally eligible and the County is anticipating replacement costs at about $1 million per bridge for a total of $12 million. The bridges are:

a. Kishwaukee Valley Road,
b. Graf Road (1 county and 1 township)
c. Dunham Road (1 county and 1 township)
d. Lawrence Road (1 county and 1 township)
e. Union Road
f. Hill Road
g. Noe Road
h. County Line Road
i. Blivin Road

Construction Projects

1. Former Woodstock Cardunal Bank Renovation – to become new County Treasurer’s Office

Size of project: 5700 square feet
Renovation costs: $416,603
Contingency 10%: $ 41,603
Arch/Professional Fees $ 56,078
FFE $ 80,000
Miscellaneous $ 42,500
$636,784

2. Sheriff’s Evidence Facility Expansion/County Archive Facility Addition – Demolition of Annex V

Size of project: 63,038 of building demolition at Annex V
25,000 square foot addition to Evidence Facility
Demolition costs: $ 346,200
Expansion costs: $3,750,500
$4,096,700
Contingency $ 187,525
Arch/Professional Fees $ 300,040
FFE $ 562,575
Miscellaneous $ 122,901
$5,269,741

3. Site Improvements to County Government Campus – including expanded roads, sewer and water

Construction costs: $13,489,500
Contingency: $ 674,475
Arch/Professional Fees: $ 1,079,160
Miscellaneous $ 404,685
$15,647,820

Park Board Makes No Decision on Community Center Location

The Crystal Lake Park Board met behind closed doors Thursday night.

Before adjourning, the board made no decision regarding a location for the long talked about community center.

Through Freedom of Information requests, however, McHenry County Blog has learned that two of the properties being considered.

One, previously revealed, is Viking Dodge on Route 176 on the northern edge of town.

The other is the old Oak Manufacturing building at East Crystal Lake Avenue and South Main Street.

Out of contention is the old Cub Food store, which backs up to Vulcan Lakes.

Attending the meeting until nearly the end was Crystal Lake City Engineer Victor Ramirez and traffic engineer Gary Overbay. (Overbay is on the left; Ramirez on the right.)

One could imagine Overbay and Ramirez trying to figure out a way to get traffic into and out of the Viking Dodge property.

Perhaps Ramirez’ knowledge about water mains was also tapped, considering a pool is contemplated.

Present for the entire meeting was real estate broker Mike Deacon.

As you can see, board members continued their discussion after the meeting adjourned at about 10:10 PM. Here you see Richard Sexton, on the left, talking to Mike Walkup, while Angel Collins converses with Candy Reedy (back to camera).

Northwest Herald’s Little Sister Paper in Kane County Goes to Five Days a Week

Shaw Newspapers’ Kane County Chronicle is downsizing.

It’s going from seven to five days.

And, it will become a tabloid.

Blame decreased advertising.

No more Sunday papers for the 12,000 circulation paper.

No more Monday.

Fear not, however.

Breaking news will be covered on its web site.

Both the Chronicle and the Northwest Herald are owned by the Dixon-based chain. The Northwest Herald claims about 40,000 circulation.

The drawback of resources follows the cutting back by Elgin’s Courier-News, one of its competitors, from seven-day a week coverage to six. The Courier-News is no longer published on Saturday. It is owned by the Chicago Sun-Times and shares advertising sections.

The Elgin paper recently converted to tabloid size, the first one of which you can see below.

It used to look like this:

McHenry County Submits Stimulus Package Possibilities

There is no official way to submit proposals for the new stimulus package, so an association of the largest counties in Illinois took it upon themselves to develop their own list.

County Administrator Peter Austin emailed me,

“We submitted it as a part of the Metro Counties organization to CMAP (a combination of the old NIPC and CATS) and the IL Senatorial Task Force called for by Senator (John) Cullerton and Chaired by Senator (Michael) Bond.”

Below is what McHenry County government submitted:

McHenry County “READY TO GO” Project Survey


Transportation Projects

Reconstruction

1. Chapel/Lincoln Intersection reconstruction – $1.8 million

2. Fleming Road Reconstruction with porous pavement – $3.5 million

Resurfacing

3. Critical Priority County Resurfacing (approx 42 lane miles) – $8 million – Includes the following roads which are rated at a 4.0 or worse on the MCDOT Pavement Condition Rating Survey:

a. Pyott Road
b. Chapel Hill Road
c. Franklinville Road
d. Hobe Road
e. Maple Street
f. Ramer Road
g. Deep Cut/Nelson Road
h. Hampshire Road
i. Burlington Road

2. High Priority County Resurfacing (approx 97 lane miles) – $18 million – Includes the following roads which are rated between a 4.0 and 5.25 on the MCDOT Pavement Condition Rating Survey:

a. Roberts Road
b. Lawrence Road
c. Cary Road
d. Lake-Cook Road
e. Flat Iron Road
f. Marengo Road (in Huntley)
g. Miller Road
h. Harmony Road
i. River Road
j. Hartland Road

3. Randall Road resurfacing – $4 million – Randall is rated at a 5.25 on the MCDOT Pavement Condition Rating Survey

Bridge Projects

4. McHenry County has 12 bridges planned for replacement over the next 5 years. All are Federally eligible and the County is anticipating replacement costs at about $1 million per bridge for a total of $12 million. The bridges are:

a. Kishwaukee Valley Road,
b. Graf Road (1 county and 1 township)
c. Dunham Road (1 county and 1 township)
d. Lawrence Road (1 county and 1 township)
e. Union Road
f. Hill Road
g. Noe Road
h. County Line Road
i. Blivin Road

Construction Projects

1. Former Woodstock Cardunal Bank Renovation – to become new County Treasurer’s Office

Size of project: 5700 square feet
Renovation costs: $416,603
Contingency 10%: $ 41,603
Arch/Professional Fees $ 56,078
FFE $ 80,000
Miscellaneous $ 42,500
$636,784

2. Sheriff’s Evidence Facility Expansion/County Archive Facility Addition – Demolition of Annex V

Size of project: 63,038 of building demolition at Annex V
25,000 square foot addition to Evidence Facility
Demolition costs: $ 346,200
Expansion costs: $3,750,500
$4,096,700
Contingency $ 187,525
Arch/Professional Fees $ 300,040
FFE $ 562,575
Miscellaneous $ 122,901
$5,269,741

3. Site Improvements to County Government Campus – including expanded roads, sewer and water

Construction costs: $13,489,500
Contingency: $ 674,475
Arch/Professional Fees: $ 1,079,160
Miscellaneous $ 404,685
$15,647,820

Park Board Makes No Decision on Community Center Location

The Crystal Lake Park Board met behind closed doors Thursday night.

Before adjourning, the board made no decision regarding a location for the long talked about community center.

Through Freedom of Information requests, however, McHenry County Blog has learned that two of the properties being considered.

One, previously revealed, is Viking Dodge on Route 176 on the northern edge of town.

The other is the old Oak Manufacturing building at East Crystal Lake Avenue and South Main Street.

Out of contention is the old Cub Food store, which backs up to Vulcan Lakes.

Attending the meeting until nearly the end was Crystal Lake City Engineer Victor Ramirez and traffic engineer Gary Overbay. (Overbay is on the left; Ramirez on the right.)

One could imagine Overbay and Ramirez trying to figure out a way to get traffic into and out of the Viking Dodge property.

Perhaps Ramirez’ knowledge about water mains was also tapped, considering a pool is contemplated.

Present for the entire meeting was real estate broker Mike Deacon.

As you can see, board members continued their discussion after the meeting adjourned at about 10:10 PM. Here you see Richard Sexton, on the left, talking to Mike Walkup, while Angel Collins converses with Candy Reedy (back to camera).

John Rossi Sends Out Post Card

The Grafton Township Supervisor race heated up today with the arrival of a post card from John Rossi and his slate of incumbent trustees.

Incumbent Rossi is running against challenger Linda Moore.

You can see the side with the text here (click to enlarge).

I’m pretty amazed that he emphasizes that no referendum was held. Of course, he doesn’t tell constituents that he and township trustees put them in debt for $3.5 million without allowing them to vote for or against the proposal at the polls.

And, Rossi doesn’t reveal that there would have been tax decreases had the extra $3.5 million (plus interest) tax burden not been foisted on homeowners and businesses.

Instead he brags in boldface type,

no tax referendums
or tax increases

Talk about putting lipstick on a pig.

So, instead of a tax decrease, property owners will have to pay off a new tax burden caused by borrowed $3.5 million to build a new township hall.

As to the “no tax referendums” claim, a Linda Moore mailing said,

Rossi also includes the picture of an unnamed couple who have apparently given a contribution to the Grafton Township Food Pantry, new space for which will be extracted from township taxpayers without their having given approval at the ballot box. Rossi is president of the private not-for-profit food pantry.

As this article points out, the Crystal Lake Food Pantry was bought and remodeled (with three years’ utility cost in the bank) for $500,000. The money came from voluntary contributions, not coerced tax payments mandated by a township board.

Rossi states he is willing to “listen to constituents.”

He just won’t let them vote in a referendum whether they should be put in debt.

At least he is paying for this campaign mailing out of campaign funds, instead of tax dollars, the use of which close to the election is banned for state legislative candidates, but not for township officials.

At the bottom of his campaign mailer is this:

“Founder of the Grafton Township Republican Central Committee”

Unsaid is that he supported a Democrat for county board last fall. She beat a Republican.

Two Round Lake Folks Join Mortgage Fraud Parade

U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald issued a press release today implicating two Round Lake Beach Residents. This continues the Chicago-area effort to attack the supply side of the mortgage fraud scandal. The details follow:

SIX AREA DEFENDANTS INDICTED IN ALLEGED
$10 MILLION MORTGAGE FRAUD SCHEME

CHICAGO – Six Chicago area defendants were indicted on federal charges for allegedly fraudulently obtaining more than $10 million in mortgage loan proceeds from various lenders by submitting false loan applications and supporting documents, federal law enforcement officials announced today.

The defendants, who include

  • loan officers, processors,
  • a contractor and
  • an unlicensed appraiser,

were each charged with one or more counts of mail, wire or bank fraud in an eight-count indictment that was returned by a federal grand jury yesterday.

As part of the alleged scheme, the indictment specifies eight residential properties – seven of them on the south side of Chicago – upon which mortgage loans were fraudulently obtained between 2002 and 2007.

Two of the defendants, Deangelo McMahan, 36, of Hazel Crest, and Fred Haywood, 37, of Chicago, both of whom were loan officers for various mortgage lenders, were initially indicted in December. Four new defendants are

  • Rita McKenzie, 39, of Round Lake Beach, a loan processor;
  • Steve Young, 51, of Flossmoor, a loan officer;
  • Carl McMahan, 42, of Round Lake Beach, Deangelo McMahan’s brother who operated a purported home re-construction business; and
  • Sumira Persaud, 32, of Blue Island, an unlicensed appraiser.

Arrest warrants have been issued for McKenzie and Carl McMahan, while the others will be ordered to appear for arraignment at a later date in U.S. District Court, including Deangelo McMahan and Haywood, who were previously released on bond.

According to the indictment, the defendants schemed to arrange for buyers with good credit, but insufficient income, to purchase homes by promising them money for acting as nominees, knowing that in most cases the buyers did not intend to occupy the homes as their primary residences or fulfill any long term payment obligations.

The defendants and others caused false information to be included in mortgage loan applications regarding the applicant’s income, assets, employment, intention to occupy the home and the source of the down payment so the applicant would falsely appear to qualify for a loan.

They also allegedly schemed to create false appraisals that did not reflect the fair market value of the properties and were designed to create excess value.

In some instances the defendants funneled excess cash they generated from inflated appraisals on the properties to sham businesses they had created, while other times they flipped the properties from one sale to another to make a profit, the charges allege.

The indictment also seeks forfeiture of $2,383,020, which reflects the loss suffered by various mortgage companies that were victims of the alleged fraud scheme.

The charges were announced by Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois; Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; and Thomas P. Brady, Inspector-in-Charge of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service in Chicago.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason Yonan.

Each count of mail and wire fraud carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, while bank fraud carries a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison and a $1 million fine. 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 defendants are presumed innocent and is entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

John Rossi Sends Out Post Card

The Grafton Township Supervisor race heated up today with the arrival of a post card from John Rossi and his slate of incumbent trustees.

Incumbent Rossi is running against challenger Linda Moore.

You can see the side with the text here (click to enlarge).

I’m pretty amazed that he emphasizes that no referendum was held. Of course, he doesn’t tell constituents that he and township trustees put them in debt for $3.5 million without allowing them to vote for or against the proposal at the polls.

And, Rossi doesn’t reveal that there would have been tax decreases had the extra $3.5 million (plus interest) tax burden not been foisted on homeowners and businesses.

Instead he brags in boldface type,

no tax referendums
or tax increases

Talk about putting lipstick on a pig.

So, instead of a tax decrease, property owners will have to pay off a new tax burden caused by borrowed $3.5 million to build a new township hall.

As to the “no tax referendums” claim, a Linda Moore mailing said,

Rossi also includes the picture of an unnamed couple who have apparently given a contribution to the Grafton Township Food Pantry, new space for which will be extracted from township taxpayers without their having given approval at the ballot box. Rossi is president of the private not-for-profit food pantry.

As this article points out, the Crystal Lake Food Pantry was bought and remodeled (with three years’ utility cost in the bank) for $500,000. The money came from voluntary contributions, not coerced tax payments mandated by a township board.

Rossi states he is willing to “listen to constituents.”

He just won’t let them vote in a referendum whether they should be put in debt.

At least he is paying for this campaign mailing out of campaign funds, instead of tax dollars, the use of which close to the election is banned for state legislative candidates, but not for township officials.

At the bottom of his campaign mailer is this:

“Founder of the Grafton Township Republican Central Committee”

Unsaid is that he supported a Democrat for county board last fall. She beat a Republican.

Two Round Lake Folks Join Mortgage Fraud Parade

U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald issued a press release today implicating two Round Lake Beach Residents. This continues the Chicago-area effort to attack the supply side of the mortgage fraud scandal. The details follow:

SIX AREA DEFENDANTS INDICTED IN ALLEGED
$10 MILLION MORTGAGE FRAUD SCHEME

CHICAGO – Six Chicago area defendants were indicted on federal charges for allegedly fraudulently obtaining more than $10 million in mortgage loan proceeds from various lenders by submitting false loan applications and supporting documents, federal law enforcement officials announced today.

The defendants, who include

  • loan officers, processors,
  • a contractor and
  • an unlicensed appraiser,

were each charged with one or more counts of mail, wire or bank fraud in an eight-count indictment that was returned by a federal grand jury yesterday.

As part of the alleged scheme, the indictment specifies eight residential properties – seven of them on the south side of Chicago – upon which mortgage loans were fraudulently obtained between 2002 and 2007.

Two of the defendants, Deangelo McMahan, 36, of Hazel Crest, and Fred Haywood, 37, of Chicago, both of whom were loan officers for various mortgage lenders, were initially indicted in December. Four new defendants are

  • Rita McKenzie, 39, of Round Lake Beach, a loan processor;
  • Steve Young, 51, of Flossmoor, a loan officer;
  • Carl McMahan, 42, of Round Lake Beach, Deangelo McMahan’s brother who operated a purported home re-construction business; and
  • Sumira Persaud, 32, of Blue Island, an unlicensed appraiser.

Arrest warrants have been issued for McKenzie and Carl McMahan, while the others will be ordered to appear for arraignment at a later date in U.S. District Court, including Deangelo McMahan and Haywood, who were previously released on bond.

According to the indictment, the defendants schemed to arrange for buyers with good credit, but insufficient income, to purchase homes by promising them money for acting as nominees, knowing that in most cases the buyers did not intend to occupy the homes as their primary residences or fulfill any long term payment obligations.

The defendants and others caused false information to be included in mortgage loan applications regarding the applicant’s income, assets, employment, intention to occupy the home and the source of the down payment so the applicant would falsely appear to qualify for a loan.

They also allegedly schemed to create false appraisals that did not reflect the fair market value of the properties and were designed to create excess value.

In some instances the defendants funneled excess cash they generated from inflated appraisals on the properties to sham businesses they had created, while other times they flipped the properties from one sale to another to make a profit, the charges allege.

The indictment also seeks forfeiture of $2,383,020, which reflects the loss suffered by various mortgage companies that were victims of the alleged fraud scheme.

The charges were announced by Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois; Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; and Thomas P. Brady, Inspector-in-Charge of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service in Chicago.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason Yonan.

Each count of mail and wire fraud carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, while bank fraud carries a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison and a $1 million fine. 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 defendants are presumed innocent and is entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

Message of the Day – A Tee Shirt

This tee shirt’s message seems appropriate for all sorts of reasons this time of year.

DANGER
GAS EMISSIONS
STAND BACK 50 FT.

Of course, there are the Republican township primary elections.

Before any election there’s a danger of voters receiving gas, rather than information.

And, who knows, this might even be relevant to the McHenry County College Board meeting last night?

It was found at last May’s Old Capitol Art Fair in Springfield.

IDOT Stimulus Projects Ready to Go: Resurfacing Routes 14 and 176


2.35 miles of Route 14 resurfacing is the only stimulus project “shovel ready” in Don Manzullo’s 16th congressional district, his office reports.

That’s between Woodstock and Harvard.

The cost is $915,000 for this Illinois Department of Transportation project.

There’s another $1.6 million IDOT repaving project on Route 31 ready to go. It’s 3.89 miles on Route 176 from Route 31 to the Fox River. It goes right through Prairie Grove.

There’s also $2 million of pothole patching.

Not much, but IDOT has been shortchanging McHenry County for a long time.
= = = = =
Park Lane is marked on the Google map. Bunker Hill Road is in its upper left hand corner. The bottom map shows Route 176 from Route 31 to the Fox River.

Click to enlarge.

Mega-Tower Details Presented to Public for First Time

Here’s what it will look like.

The 1,500 foot tower that BMB Communications Management’s John Maguire, Jason and Ron Bradshaw want 3.6 acres of McHenry County College land to build upon.

BMB proposes to pay the college a definite $5 million and maybe as much as $6 million.

People from virtually every place in McHenry County into surrounding counties and Wisconsin will be able to see it.

The lights will radiate 30 miles at night, “if you’re looking for it,” as Maguire put it.

Maguire is a good salesman. He disarms potential opponents by agreeing that if he were in their place he would be concerned.

Think pilots.

Bob McCormick, a pilot and structural steel worker in college, pointed out the Eiffel Tower is two-thirds the size of the proposed tower.

“If the business plan fails, it’ll be pug ugly,” he said after pointing out that the World Trade Center had been “taken down by two airplanes.”

“It’ll be like the Motorola plant in Harvard, the empty stores in Crystal Lake.”

He revealed that most pilots fly 600 and 800 feet above the surface. Because of O’Hare, other traffic has to go at low levels to avoid commercial planes.

“The problem with the tower lighting, those lights appear in a field of lights, he explained later.”

Other extremely high towers are in the middle of nowhere where they are easy to see, he said.

“With the local airport, we’re not going to get that done. With the local pilots’ support, we won’t get that done,” Maguire replied

“I know that.

“You’re going to get a whole lot of bites at this apple.”

Maguire brought in two experts to answer the technical questions, radio engineer Alan Kirschner and Professional Engineer Ernest (Ernie) Jones.

Both seemed competent, having worked on some of the biggest tower projects in the country.

Kirschner displayed this slide, which seems a bit out of focus, but makes the point about the value of the MCC site.

FM stations or potential stations that now reach 200,000 or so listeners would be able to reach about 3 million people within the blue circled area.

And radio is all Maguire talked about tonight until after I told him that people without cable television were thinking they might get better over the air reception, if his tower were constructed.

Would television stations be able to send a signal from his tower?

“Not unless they (the TV stations) pay,” the entrepreneur told me.

But he said that having learned that Rockford’s and Chicago’s TV signals faded out in McHenry County, “I’ll go call those TV stations now that I know.”

And there will be “no limitation on the number of stations, except structural capacity,” which I think he said was 11.

I also asked Maguire if cell phone companies could locate their equipment on his tower.

The answer was “Yes,” which just might explain why T-Mobile dropped its request for a cellular tower in Crystal Lake’s Ken Bird Park.

Trustee Scott Summers asked if there were any other uses, suggesting Defense, Homeland Security and several others.

“Any use imaginable,” Maguire replied.

“Would it be possible for the college to share in those revenue streams?”

“No.”

Summers also said he felt “strongly about the money com(ing) to the college,” rather than the college’s foundation.

After I made the same point in the 3 minute public comment I was allowed after all the questions by board members (who have been talking about the matter since February 28th of last year), Board President George Lowe said,

“I think the board agrees.”

I also suggested that the board should not make a final decision the Thursday after next at its regular board meeting.

I feel strongly that a deal of this magnitude needs time to percolate among the citizenry.

Should the sixth million go by the wayside, if BMB doesn’t find a fifth broadcaster within five years, for instance?

Who knows how long this economic slump is going to continue.

Two citizens were forthright in their support. One was Jim Bishop, who handled legal work for the zoning for the other towers next to McHenry County College and engineer Loren Burkett.

The last question was probably the most incendiary.

The closest resident to the tower speaking, Jerry Welsh, said,

“This is going to be a beautiful terrorist target. How are you going to protect it?”

Macguire seems resigned to the possibility.

“If someone wants to (blow out one of the three support legs), there’s no way we can stop it.

“How can we protect anything?” he continued philosophically.

“We can put cameras on it, but we’ll just get to see him blowing it up.”

Earlier board member Donna Kurtz asked how close various infrastructure was.

The answers were:

  • 1,000 feet to the railroad tracks
  • 1,100 feet to the nearest MCC building
  • 700 feet to Route 14
  • 200 feet to the Com Ed high power lines

P.E. Jones stressed that the tower was being designed to prevent a catastrophic layout collapse, seen above.

Of the three candidates on the ballot for the April 7th MCC board election, only one attended the meeting. Mary Miller, a trustee up for re-election was one absent.

Only challenger John Darger was there.

He pointed out that local residents could have a win-win outcome or a lose-lose outcome. In the lose-lose scenario, the college would have sold off land that it needed and the FM radio stations would be blasting “slock across our landscape.”

“I’m not hostile to the idea,” he said, noting he was just trying to show both sides.

Darger had more than three minutes to contribute, but was cut off by Board President George Lowe, as he was saying that he would like to see the college have a radio station of its own.

Safety concerns were raised, most prominently by Board member Summers.

A former Armed Forces radioman Mike Toyler commented, “This amount of power is nothing. This will not impact life safety or (cause) biological concerns.”

= = = = =
The images are referenced in the text of the article except for the two schematic drawings of the tower. The one on the left shows how it will sway in the wind. The triangle is a view from either above or below. In any even the tower will have three legs.