Operation Greylord (30 page)

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Authors: Terrence Hake

BOOK: Operation Greylord
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Epilogue

I ultimately testified at the trials of 23 Greylord defendants from 1984 through 1993. In 2008, I testified before an Illinois Supreme Court Commission when attorney Bruce Roth, who had received 10 years in prison, petitioned to reinstate his law license. The Illinois Supreme Court denied Roth's petition in 2009. In fact, not one Greylord defendant convicted of a bribery-related act has ever received his law license back.

My first job after leaving the FBI was as the Inspector General of the Regional Transportation Authority in Chicago. After five years, I decided to return to federal service and eventually became an agent with the U.S. Department of Justice Inspector General's Office, the next best thing to being an FBI agent. We conducted criminal and administrative investigations relating to various agencies of the Justice Department. I retired in 2008 and went to work for the Cook County Sheriff's Office, where I eventually headed the internal affairs department.

But I longed to work in the courts again. Would the Cook County State's Attorney's Office want to hire a 63-year-old assistant prosecutor? Was the job I left to go undercover still open? When First Assistant State's Attorney Dan Kirk and Chief Deputy Walt Hehner interviewed me in 2014, they praised what my role in Greylord did for the for the State's Attorney's Office and the criminal justice system in Cook County. After considering their recommendation, State's Attorney Anita Alvarez hired me.

So after over 32 years I am living the dream I had just out of law school. Currently, I am working in the Felony Review Unit, deciding whether to charge defendants with felonies or not.

Dan Reidy told me when I agreed to work undercover that I would never be able to practice law again in Cook County. He wasn't wrong, but conditions have changed considerably. Many judges now on the bench went to law school or entered practice during the Greylord trials. They and their fellow attorneys absorbed the ethical lessons the
Greylord team had fought so hard for. Bill Haddad, who served as an assistant prosecutor, a defense lawyer, and then a judge, told me that Greylord made an immediate difference in the courtrooms where Judges Murphy and Reynold used to sit. Many other criminal defense attorneys have thanked me and told me that the system has changed completely for the good. One lawyer recently told me that all criminal defense attorneys are now on a level playing field rather than competing against fixers, and judges are no longer extorting bribes. 

Cathy retired from the State's Attorney's Office in 2013, after serving for over 28 years. Her last jury trial was my daughter Christine's first. A mother and a daughter had never prosecuted a case together in Cook County, and they won a conviction in a felony theft case. Christine is still an assistant state's attorney. Perhaps someday we can be father and daughter prosecutors before a jury. My daughter Elizabeth in the catering business, and my son Thomas is a high school lacrosse coach.  

To this day, I speak to law enforcement personnel, law students, and attorneys about the ethical lessons learned from Greylord. During the past year I have appeared at law schools such as Harvard, Boston College, Loyola University in Chicago, the University of Chicago, the University of Arizona, the University of St. Thomas, and Northwestern. I've also given continuing legal education seminars to the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office and the Illinois Prosecutors Bar Association. I am an adjunct member of the faculty at the Inspector General Academy at the Federal law Enforcement Training Center in Glynco, Georgia, where I have taught programs about undercover work and public corruption.

This is the post-Greylord status of the major judges and lawyers who were investigated. (Source, in part,
Chicago Lawyer Magazine
.)

Name

Sentence

After Prison or Trial

Judge John Devine

15 years

Died in 1987 of cancer in prison in Springfield, MO

Judge John Laurie

Acquitted

Cook County Judge (Retired)

Judge Richard LeFevour

12 years

Insurance claims consultant, died in 1997

Judge Martin Hogan

10 years

Worked for the Safer Foundation, which places former prisoners in jobs

Judge P.J. McCormick

6 years

Dairy route salesman

Judge John Murphy

10 years

Retired

Judge Wayne Olson

12 years

Prison job: law librarian at the federal prison in Lexington, KY. Died in 1994 at age 63

Judge John Reynolds

12 years

Administrator at an orphanage

Judge Raymond Sodini

8 years

College criminal justice professor; died in 1993

Judge Thomas Maloney

16 years

The last Greylord defendant to be released from prison, at age 79

Judge Maurice Pompey

Not charged

Retired to Arizona

Mark Ciavelli

Immunity

Successful in real estate sales

Frank Cardoni

Probation

Moved out of Illinois

Harold Conn

6 years

Gofer for an attorney. Conn said that prison was no worse than being in the army

James Costello

6 years

Living in Colorado

James LeFevour

2 years

Living in Florida

Bruce Roth

10 years

Worked construction

Peter Kessler

Probation

Successful businessman

Cyrus Yonan

1 year

Moved to Florida

The Investigative and Prosecuting Attorneys

Michael Ficaro, Scott Lassar, Dan Reidy, Charles Sklarsky, Sheldon Zenner, Thomas Sullivan, Dan Webb, and Anton Valukas are all partners at major law firms. In fact, Sklarsky, Sullivan, and Valukas practice at the same firm. Candace Fabri is a Cook County judge. Morton Friedman retired as general counsel of a State of Illinois agency. Bob Cooley is living in secret in another state. Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas M. Durkin who, along with FBI Agent Steve Bowen, guided Gambat, the Cooley offshoot of Greylord, is now a federal judge in Chicago.

The Investigators

Lamar Jordan

Retired from the FBI and living in Texas

Bob Farmer

Retired from the FBI and living in Washington State

Bill Megary

Retired as Special Agent in Charge of Newark and living in Virginia

David Grossman

Retired as Assistant Special Agent in Charge of Chicago and living in Chicago

David Victor Ries

Retired as Special Agent in Charge of Knoxville, TN and living in Virginia

Malcolm Bales

Left the FBI for the U.S. Attorney's Office in the Eastern District of Texas, where he is now the U.S. Attorney

David Benscoter

After leading the team of agents on the Judge Sodini indictment, which had 22 defendants, he left the FBI and retired as an IRS Criminal Agent in Spokane

Acknowledgments

I want to thank all of the Assistant State's Attorneys who cooperated in the corruption probe. Some of them bravely testified against Greylord judges when the legal community did not look favorably upon that. The ones whom I recall are Barry Gross, Thomas Burnham, Harry Wilson, Larry Finder, Kathleen Nathan, Jonathan Regunberg, Marilyn Koch, Randy Barnett, Joel from the shoplifting court and Bruce Paynter. Former FBI Supervisor Mike Dyer was very supportive of me during the trials and guided my career after I left the FBI. Former FBI Assistant Director William Beane was instrumental in me receiving the Lou Peters Award, the most distinguished award given by the Former FBI Agents Association, together with the FBI. I thank my former office partner, James Reichardt, who not only gave me an office while I was undercover, but has provided me with friendship and support over the years. Former Dean Nina Appel of Loyola Law School was the person who turned the tide in the legal community as far as the community's acceptance of Greylord. Nina understood the importance of the Greylord legal ethics issues for students and lawyers and I still speak to her classes. More recently, Professor Henry Shea of the University of St. Thomas and the University of Arizona Law Schools has recognized the significance of Greylord to legal ethics nationally. Hank has arranged for me speak at a number of law schools throughout the country. Terry Kinney and Steve Kessler of the U.S. Department of Justice recognized Greylord's international investigative and ethical importance and invited me to speak in Indonesia in 2014. I especially want to thank my attorney and agent Jay B. Ross for placing this book with Ankerwycke Publishing. Toby Roberts and Nancy Stuenkel of the Chicago Sun Times went out of their way in finding some of the photographs for this book. Finally, I am also grateful to the team at Ankerwycke, especially editors Jonathan Malysiak and Erin Nevius, who greatly improved the book.

The Cook County Courthouse at 2600 S. California.
Courtesy of Terrence Hake.

Terrence Hake, while testifying. ©
Chicago Sun-Times.

James Costello, hallway hustler and Hake's entry point into the Chicago courts' bribery and corruption. ©
Chicago Sun-Times.

Attorney Edward Genson (
right
) and Judge Wayne Olson (
left
), Narcotics Court Judge, who so widely accepted bribes that the FBI took the unprecedented step of bugging his chambers. ©
Chicago Sun-Times.

Harry Aleman (
left)
, the mafia hit man whose acquittal was so egregious the federal government began investigating the Chicago courts. Aleman was eventually convicted in an unheard-of retrial—the first trial was proven to be fixed and therefore Aleman was not in jeopardy. ©
Chicago Sun-Times
.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Scott Lassar.

Cousin to bagman James, Judge Richard LeFevour packed the courts under his supervision with corrupt judges so he could get a cut of their bribes. ©
Chicago Sun-Times
.

Chicago FBI Chief Ed Hegarty (
left
) swears in Terrence Hake (
right
) as an FBI agent in the warehouse where the Greylord team gathered. The swearing in was held quickly and casually in case Hake needed to reveal himself as an FBI agent while undercover, as judges and lawyers became more and more nervous about the rumored government mole.
Courtesy of Terrence Hake.

Bagman Harold Conn (
left
), deputy court clerk who passed bribes on to judges, sometimes publically. Conn's attorney Sheldon Sorosky is pictured on the right; Sorosky would go on to defend Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich in Blagojevich's 2010-2011 federal corruption trials. ©
Chicago Sun-Times
.

Judge John “Dollars” Devine, who openly used bribery to run Auto Theft Court. ©
Chicago Sun-Times
.

Judge Ray Sodini, famous for once having a policeman replace him on the bench while he was home with a hangover. ©
Chicago Sun-Times
.

Judge Thomas Maloney, the first American judge ever convicted of fixing murder cases. ©
Chicago Sun-Times
.

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