Politics & Government

New Study Examines Political Corruption in Chicago Suburbs

A UIC study says corruption is not just a Chicago problem, and calls for the policing of suburban politics.

 

Suburbanites used to throw stones at Chicago for its political corruption. But suburbanites live in glass houses, according to a new University of Illinois (UIC) study.

The University of Illinois-Chicago Political Science Department's sixth Anti-Corruption Report released Monday says that political misbehavior in the suburban ring around Chicago is equally prevalent, but faces far less scrutiny.

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Which is why, according to the Huffington Post, the head of the department and co-author of the study, former Chicago alderman Dick Simpson, called for the creation of an independent Suburban Inspector General to police suburban politics at a press conference Monday.

At that conference, Simpson released the study's findings, which included detailed outlines of corruption incidents involving more than 130 individuals across 60 suburbs since the 1970s.

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The report maps arrests stemming from corruption charges including instances of nepotism, police officers aiding or extorting criminals, kickbacks and bribes to administrators and public officials with ties to organized crime; a total of 6 categories of impropriety that are well-represented in many of the examined suburbs.

The six categories of corruption-related convictions in suburban Chicago, according to the report, are:

  • Public officials with ties to organized crime,
  • Nepotism,
  • Police officers aiding or extorting criminals,
  • Kickbacks and bribes to officials and administrators,
  • Large development projects, and
  • Stealing of funds by leaders of school districts and special purpose districts.

The report includes theft charges against a former Lisle Park District director in 2000. Kim Paetschow was ordered to perform community service after using the services of a Park District employee without the board's consent, according to a Chicago Tribune report.

To read the entire UIC report, click here.

 

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