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| | |-+  Jury Finds Former Ill. Gov. Ryan Guilty
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Author Topic: Jury Finds Former Ill. Gov. Ryan Guilty  (Read 1016 times)
Soldier4Christ
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« on: April 17, 2006, 05:57:30 PM »

Former Gov. George Ryan, who drew international praise when he commuted the sentences of everyone on Illinois' death row, was convicted of racketeering and fraud Monday in a corruption scandal that ended his political career in 2003.

Ryan, 72, sat stone-faced as the verdict was read and afterward vowed to appeal.

"I believe this decision today is not in accordance with the kind of public service that I provided to the people of Illinois over 40 years, and needless to say I am disappointed in the outcome," the former governor said.

Ryan faces up to 20 years in prison for racketeering conspiracy charge alone, the most serious against him in the 22-count indictment. The jury found him guilty of all counts, including fraud, obstructing the Internal Revenue Service and lying to the FBI.

Co-defendant Larry Warner, a Chicago businessman and Ryan friend, was found guilty of racketeering conspiracy, mail fraud, attempted extortion, illegally structuring bank withdrawals and money laundering.

Neither man took the stand during their six-month trial.

Prosecutors accused Ryan of steering big-money state contracts and leases, including a $25 million IBM computer deal, to his friends and political insiders while he was secretary of state in the 1990s and then as governor starting in 1999.

In return for that help, Ryan was rewarded with annual winter vacations in Jamaica, stays in Cancun and Palm Springs and gifts ranging from a golf bag to $145,000 in loans to his brother's business, prosecutors said.

Warner, 67, raked in $3 million from Ryan-era deals, according to the office of U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald - who during the trial was also leading the federal investigation into the leak of CIA officer Valerie Plame's identity.

The case against Ryan and Warner was the state's biggest political corruption trial in decades, and it had it share of troubles.

In late March, months of testimony nearly went down the drain when the judge discovered two jurors had failed to mention past arrests on their court questionnaires. Rather than declare a mistrial, U.S. District Judge Rebecca R. Pallmeyer decided to replace the two jurors with alternates and, over the objection of Ryan's attorneys, ordered the jury to start deliberations over.

The new jury had deliberated for 10 days when it announced its verdict Monday.

Afterward, Ryan attorney Dan K. Webb, a former federal prosecutor, zeroed in on the judge's decision to replace the jurors.

"We're going to begin working immediately on post-trial motions to try to get this verdict overturned," Webb said.

During the trial, Webb had pounded on a theme that no one ever testified to seeing Ryan take a payoff. His powerful law firm, Winston & Strawn, represented Ryan for free - at an estimated cost of $10 million.

Ryan's sentencing was set for Aug. 4.

The corruption scandal that led to Ryan's downfall began over a decade ago with a much smaller focus: a federal investigation into a fiery van crash in Wisconsin that killed six children.

The deadly 1994 crash exposed a scheme inside the Illinois secretary of state's office in which unqualified truck drivers obtained licenses for bribes. Ryan was secretary of state at the time, and prosecutors would later argue that thousands of dollars in payoff money from the licenses went into a Ryan campaign fund.

The probe expanded over the next eight years into a wide-ranging corruption investigation that eventually reached Ryan in the governor's office.

Seventy-nine former state officials, lobbyists, truck drivers and others have been since charged. Before Ryan's trial, 74 had been convicted, including Ryan's longtime top aide, Scott Fawell.

Fawell was a star witness against Ryan and the author of a 1994 memo that prosecutor Patrick Collins called "the Magna Carta" of the racketeering scheme.

The memo urged Ryan, then-secretary of state, to replace inspector general Dean Bauer with someone who "won't ask about FR tickets" - political fundraising tickets. Bauer himself pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice and acknowledged the government could prove he had spent seven years covering up scandals to spare Ryan personal and political embarrassment.

Even as he faced federal charges back home, Ryan accepted speaking invitations across the country and was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for his criticism of the death penalty.

In 2000, the Republican governor declared a moratorium on executions in Illinois after 13 death row inmates were found to have been wrongly convicted. Then, days before he left office in 2003, he cleared death row, commuting the sentences of all 167 inmates to life in prison. He declared that the state's criminal justice system was "haunted by the demon of error."

The auto accident that set the case in motion killed six children of the Rev. Scott and Janet Willis. A trucking company official later said he believed the truck driver's license was one of several bought from a state official.

The Willises, who received a $100 million settlement, attended parts of Ryan's trial.
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Soldier4Christ
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« Reply #1 on: April 18, 2006, 11:46:25 AM »

Former Illinois Governor Faces Prison


CHICAGO -- When the bad news came, George Ryan handled it without tears or whining.

"Hang in there," the snowy-haired, 72-year-old former governor advised one well-wisher after gathering up his coat and that of wife Lura Lynn as if it had been just another day at court.

"Bye, ladies," he told four courtroom sketch artists who had drawn pictures of him from the beginning of his racketeering and fraud trial six months ago until Monday, when he was convicted of steering millions of dollars in state leases and contracts to political insiders, lying to federal agents and tax fraud.

Ryan had just heard a verdict all but sure to send him to prison for years. But he seemed intent on not giving his adversaries the satisfaction of seeing him turn weak at the end.

Once the state's most powerful Republican, Ryan remained dry-eyed as he vowed to fight on in a federal appeals court to salvage a reputation wrecked by the state's biggest corruption scandal in decades.

"I believe this decision today is not in accordance with the kind of public service that I provided to the people of Illinois over 40 years, and needless to say I am disappointed in the outcome," he said after becoming the state's third former governor convicted in three decades.

"But I feel confident in our appeal and there will be an appeal."

Ryan was convicted of all 18 counts against him _ racketeering conspiracy, mail fraud, cheating on his taxes and lying to federal agents. Longtime friend Larry Warner, 67, also was convicted.

The jury, which sat through five months of testimony and reached its decision on the 11th day of deliberations, became a story in itself in the last several weeks after news reports that two jurors had arrest records they had not disclosed to the court.

Judge Rebecca R. Pallmeyer replaced the two jurors with alternates and ordered the panel to start its work over again. Even before the dismissals, the jury had hinted at turmoil in notes to the judge, who had instructed them to treat each other "with dignity and respect."

Ryan was convicted of steering state contracts and leases to Warner and other insiders. In return, he accepted expense-paid vacations in Jamaica, California and Mexico as well as gifts ranging from $145,000 in loans for his brother's floundering business to a free golf bag.

He also was convicted of dipping into his campaign fund without paying taxes on the money.

Defense attorney Dan K. Webb argued in vain that circumstantial evidence such as the sizable wads of cash that state troopers testified Ryan carried around with him proved nothing.

"We will begin working immediately on post-trial motions to try to get this verdict overturned," Webb told reporters. Warner also plans an appeal.

"We don't take joy in this verdict _ to know that the highest office in the State of Illinois was corrupted," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Patrick M. Collins.

Ryan faces a maximum of 20 years in prison plus a $250,000 fine on the racketeering conspiracy count alone, although he most likely will get much less time. Prosecutors declined to say what sentence they will recommend.

None of the jurors said they were disillusioned with Illinois politics despite a far-reaching tapestry of corruption that emerged from the witness stand.

"I think he's just one bad egg in the whole basket," said James Cwick, 22, a loading dock supervisor. "There are many people who are doing a great job out there."

Robert Grant, special agent in charge of the FBI's Chicago office, told reporters he hoped "this case begins the end of political prostitution that seems to have been evident in the State of Illinois and begins a resurrection of honest government and services in this state that so many people have demanded."

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