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From the IPSN
Archives, Summer 1994. A look back at Operation Greylord and
Operation Gambat, the far-reaching 1980s judicial corruption
scandals in the Cook County Circuit Court system. Can it happen
again? Retired Circuit Court Judge
James M. Bailey talked to Rich Lindberg about the likelihood of a
re-occurrence in
the following article.
No More Greylords?
by Richard Lindberg
Most people will agree that
the broken wheels of justice - as they spin in the Cook County
Circuit Court system after the massive Greylord investigation and
trials - require fixing. There now exists a nighttime Narcotics
Court that was intended to be a temporary stop-gap measure when it
became operational in 1989, but has since evolved into a justice
mill" where over-burdened judges - hemmed in by regressive Class X
and Super Class X sentencing guidelines - attempt to tackle a case
load that is onerous and chaotic. Meanwhile, a number of suburban
courtrooms hearing criminal cases frequently close early - some of
them well before mid-day.
Numerous and unexplained
continuances delay the disposition of-cases and clog the courts for
months and years. Substandard courtroom facilities at the historic
26th and California facilities and at Chicago's Traffic Court on
LaSalle Street receive scant attention from the Cook County Board in
their zeal to appropriate vast sums of money to construct new
Correctional Divisions in order to provide additional jail space for
the ever increasing and overcrowded inmate population. And despite
halfhearted acknowledgments that some form of Merit Selection of
judges would be advisable. a consensus cannot be achieved on how
this is to be done. In such a volatile, contagious atmosphere,
corruption and inefficiency within the Judicial system lurk below
the surface and will continue to be the unfortunate by-product of
the failure to strike at the root of a serious and corrosive
problem. In other words, as much as things change, they still remain
the same in the Cook County Circuit Courts.
In the wake of the 1980s
federally initiated Operation Greylord Scandal that rocked the
community and exposed a judicial system rife with corruption.
incompetence, intrigue, and influence peddling. a blue-ribbon panel
was assembled to examine the ills of the Cook County courts and
issue recommen-dations that would contribute toward noteworthy, long
overdue reform. The Special Commission on the Administration of
Justice in Cook County (better known as the Solovy Commission), was
established in August 1984 by the Chief Judge of the Circuit Court
of Cook County, Harry G. Comerford. The Commission received its name
from its chairman. Attorney Jerold S. Solovy from the high profile
law firm of Jenner & Block. Mr. Solovy also chairs the Illinois
Supreme Court Commission, established on January 6, 1992 to perform
essentially the same tasks as the first Solovy Commission. with
respect to the Supreme Court.
Solovy and his colleagues
took a comprehensive approach in evaluating court administration.
Judicial ethics, and the day to day mechanisms of Traffic Court, the
Law Division, Adult Probation, and Felony Courts. The task force
published fifteen separate reports containing 165 recommendations
spanning a four-year period. No more Greylords and much-needed
change is the hoped for intention.
The conclusions drawn,
however noble and well meaning seemed to have fallen well short of
the mark, in the learned opinion of some legal scholars,
specifically James M. Bailey, a retired but well-respected veteran
who served as a Circuit Court judge within the Criminal Division.
Judge Bailey commented
somewhat critically on the Commission s findings by stating: "They
had some good people on the Commission but like anything else,
whoever headed the Commission headed in the direction they wanted.
They came up with some good suggestions for change, but the big
thing is you can't have change unless you have change at the top."
The kind of change that Mr.
Bailey alludes to is the periodic rotation of judges beginning at
the top where Harry G. Comerford has continuously served as Chief
Judge since November 1978. [Editor's Note: Harry Comerford has
retired since this article first published.] "In all the years I was
on the bench, I had only two Chief Judges. John S. Boyle who took
over in 1964. and Harry Comerford," Bailey said. "The Circuit Court
of Cook County is four times larger now than it was under Boyle's
leadership. Whoever is Chief Judge makes all the assignments. He
calls the shots and he Is the one who moves them around." Comerford
presently supervises 383 judges - 211 elected Circuit Judges. and
172 appointed Associate judges.
The Solovy Commission urged
Comerford in the mildest of terms to consider: "...a regular system
of rotation of judges be implemented throughout the Law Division and
throughout the Circuit Court." So far such has not been adopted.
Presently, only the Divisions not on individual calendar rotate.
Judges are transferred only when a need arises.
"Personally Harry Comerford
is one of the nicest guys you can ever hope to meet," Bailey adds.
"But Harry's like everybody else. He's going to protect his back.
The only way you protect your back is to go ahead and make the
assignments on the basis of politics, or on the basis of who you
know." Judge Comerford is 73-years-old. He was elected to the
Municipal Court of Chicago in 1960 after 13 years in private
practice, and was a Presiding Judge in the County Division from
1967-1978, before being elected Chief Judge that same year, Judge
Comerford's political allegiance goes to House Speaker Michael
Madigan who appears to want to maintain the political status quo in
the Cook County courts. Over the years Speaker Madigan has
effectively spiked attempts on the part of various advocacy groups
like the Chicago Council of Lawyers to push for merit selection of
Judges in Illinois.
The office of Chief Judge
of the Circuit Court of Cook County is a patronage mill - no
different than the Cook County Board, the County Clerk's office. or
the ill-fated Sheriff's office under James O'Grady and his successor
Michael Sheahan. "This position probably has more power than the
Appellate Court," Bailey emphasizes. "It might even have more power
than the Supreme Court. Just look at the enormity of the budget and
see Just how many people the Circuit Court of Cook County hires.
There are so many jobs the Chief Judge is in control of -
secretaries, probation officers, public defenders - it's amazing.
You're talking about a lot of jobs."
The Solovy Commission (an
entity of the good Judge Comerford's own making), said nothing about
term limitations for the Chief Judge - an essential reform Bailey
believes must be adopted in order to achieve the objective of a
scandal-free judiciary. "If we had term limitations for the chief
Judge and the presiding judge there's going to be movement every
three or four years because the top guy is going," Bailey said. "But
if the top guy isn't leaving there is no rotation. Judges at the top
like their assignments and don't want to give them up. They give
them up only when they retire or get into trouble one or the other."
Presiding Judges like
Harold W. Sullivan in the 2nd Municipal District (Skokie), repose in
comfortable assignments for 30 or more years. In response to a
Solovy Commission recommendation calling for term limitations of
three to six years for presiding Judges, Judge Comerford decided
that it is "...much more important to give stability to [the]
management team,"
Very often the only way for
a judge to obtain a coveted assignment in another division is to
approach a political "fixer" - a "connection guy" from the First
Ward, like former Alderman Fred Roti and his "eminence griese"
henchman, the now deceased Pat Marcy who were in a position to
dispense "favors." Favors, that intrinsically and inevitably require
some expected form of payback down the road. In the case of Messrs.
Marcy and Roti, a secret F.B.I. recording captured one Circuit Court
judge soliciting their help in securing a transfer from his current
assignment. In return the Judge promised to help support Marcy's
slate of judicial candidates aspiring for Associate Judge positions.
Edward M. Genson, attorney for Fred Roti during the Operation Gambat
investigations commented as to the common, recurring practice:
"Every Judge wants to get an assignment to a different division,
every judge wants to try to get on a political committee, and every
Judge tries to help the people who sponsored him when they called
them for sponsorship of their judges."
Scandal is more likely to
occur as a result of a Judge remaining too long in one assignment -
Traffic Court for instance, where the now infamous "Hustlers Club"
of crooked lawyers solicited bribe money from their clients in order
to "take care" of a cooperative Judge - fosters an attitude of
complacency ...and corruption. "Before and after Greylord many of
the judges accused of bribe-taking got stuck in Traffic Court and we
all know what - happened to them,'' Bailey adds.
Nowadays James Bailey
practices civil law, and is a partner in the law firm of Schippers,
Gilbert Bailey. From the perspective of 20-years front-line
experience as a Cook County Criminal Court judge, Bailey understands
the nuances of the system....and is eminently qualified to assess
its shortfalls and strengths. During his years on the bench he was
viewed as a bear for efficiency who demanded no less from the
lawyers who argued their cases before him in Room 504 of the old
Criminal Courts Building at 26th and Cal.
In any given year Bailey
routinely disposed of 1,000 felony cases: setting a standard of
performance few of his black-robed colleagues were able to emulate.
"Come on! Come on! Let's go!" he would admonish dawdling, foot
dragging attorneys maneuvering for their erstwhile clients. Bailey
presided over some of the most notorious criminal cases of note.
Henry Brisbon, the "1-57 killer" from the early 1970s, and Lester
Harrison, accused of murdering four women in Grant Park. were two of
the more brutally sensational cases he heard over on 26th Street.
Bailey was no bleeding heart - defense attorneys knew that he
mistrusted theories of rehabilitation for hard core felons and that
he would not hesitate to impose the death penalty when deemed
appropriate. In all, 16 defendants were sentenced to death during
Bailey's tenure.
By the same token, Bailey
scorns the Class X sentencing (legislatively imposed) guidelines for
petty drug offenders that have come down the road in the 1980s. It
is his opinion that these kind of laws clog the over-crowded prisons
of America In the name of political expediency. Unfortunately it has
produced dangerous repercussions. "All these mandatory sentences,
while not entrapment exactly, have the same effect as going out and
creating crime," he suggests. "What happens is that our police
departments are out looking for Class X drug peddlers and what they
bring in is a nickel and dime "Mickey the Mope" who has been charged
as a Class X offender. The prosecutor doesn't care but the police
department can say, 'hey, we busted a Class X guy.' There was just
no showing me that these numerous minor offenders could equate Into
big-time peddlers. So you end up loading the jalls with these kind
of individuals and I wonder if the end result is we end up creating
crime."
Judge Bailey was well into
his second decade on the bench when the whisperings of Greylord
erupted into a front-page mayor media scandal that compromised the
fragile integrity of ail of Cook County's judiciary. The renowned
federal investigation began when Terry Hake, a former Cook County
worked for Judge Bailey, approached the F.B.I. and agreed to wear a
hidden microphone and record the conversations detailing the ways
and means of payoffs between lawyers and judges. The rest is history
and a woeful, misbegotten history it was.
An amazing array of 92
individuals, including many well known defense attorneys, court
bailiffs, clerks, and 13 esteemed veterans of the bench were
indicted in Greylord, a scandal with far-reaching repercussions that
stemmed from an "old boy network;" the result of too much
familiarity among the courtroom crowd. "It started out by someone
doing a favor, and then some more favors," Bailey recalls. "When
does a favor become a bribe? Eventually the guy doing the favor says
I'm not doing this for the fun of it. I think I should be
compensated for it."
No-one understood how this
system functioned better than former Associate Judge Frank Salerno,
one of 19 Cook County judges convicted in the wake of the Greylord
and Operation Gambat investigations. He was both bribe giver and
bribe taker. As a young state's attorney in his formative years,
Salerno accepted $50 bribes from misdemeanor defendants who
"understood" that they would not be vigorously prosecuted by him in
court. As a defense attorney working Chicago's Traffic Court,
Salerno recruited bailiffs to serve as bagmen, and would pay court
clerks $2 for each case that was called promptly.
"The guys who got convicted in Greylord seemed to have one common
interest," Bailey recalls. "They all liked to drink. "If you're
going to a bar every night and some guys start buying you drinks and
they stuff money in your pockets, let's face it, after a while
you're going to be looking for it. It becomes a part of your life.
Most of them weren't taking big money but they were accepting
hundreds and sooner or later it begins to add up."
Traffic Court, and the
high-volume misdemeanor courtrooms attached to six Chicago Police
Department Area Headquarters spawned Greylord - they were seedbeds
of corruption for many years and the average street cop knew this to
be true. Suburban Cook County was fertile ground.
In the palmy days of the
mid- 1970s when this mountain of corruption was tolerated and
ignored, and there was still a Women's Court located at 11th and
State, it was occasionally the practice for a judge to curry the
sexual favors of the pathetic junky prostitutes herded into the
"bullpen" following a long night's work on the streets. A veteran
police officer who asked not to be identified, recalls standing on
the ground floor waiting for an elevator to convey him to the upper
floors of Police Headquarters. When the doors slid open, a Women's
Court judge well known to the police officers and personnel assigned
to the Chicago Police Department First District, was leaning against
the back wall surrounded by giggling two- dollar hookers. One of
them was performing a trick of her trade (so-to-speak) upon on a
judge who was neither surprised nor embarrassed when the doors swung
open and he found himself standing before law enforcement personnel
Indelicto.
"In those days the judges,
the lawyers, and the people we arrested were all joined at the hip,"
the officer reminisced. "It was a brotherhood of corruption where
you take care of me, I'll take care of you." It was the system. It
was what you learned before you even knew it was wrong - from the
moment you came on the job. How does any young officer know such
practices are wrong when everyone else is doing the same thing and
you as a police officer, or employee of the courts are told it is
okay? It was a moral conundrum each person had to weigh in his own
mind once experience of the "system" was garnered.
Convicted Greylord Judge
Raymond Sodini presided over Gambling Court at 11th and State - a
carnival-like atmosphere where attorneys had to shout at the judge
and each other, in order to be heard over the din of a passing CTA
elevated train. Hot-dogs and sausages were grilled in the window
sills while Misdemeanor court was in session. In the outer corridors
court personnel bickered over the split of bribe money flowing into
Judge Sodini's court room. The scene was reminiscent of Ben Hecht's
lively tongue-and-cheek spoof of Chicago Jurisprudence in the bad
old days of the 1920s - The Front Page.
The campy exaggerations of
The Front Page were not so far off the mark when one considers the
weird environment of Chicago's confused and chaotic misdemeanor
courts.
The dangerous perception
that nobody gave a damn about the outcome of a misdemeanor bench
trial - certainly not the media who rarely covered such proceedings
because they considered these types of cases not "newsworthy"
-undoubtedly convinced Sodini and other judges they would never he
caught - and were invulnerable. And if not, what was there to lose?
With periodic cost of living adjustments, average Circuit Court
judge still makes less money than the attorneys in private practice
who appear before them every day. The branch courts become festering
holes of graft and corruption.
"The judges assigned to
these courtrooms felt isolated and out in limbo - problems of
burnout quickly set in," reports Barbara M. Schleck, former
Executive Director of Cook County Court Watchers, a civilian
watchdog group that monitors the local court system and publishes a
Judicial Ratings Summary. "They felt buried and often believed the
task of handling low status cases was unimportant in the larger
scheme of things. The members of the community of course, saw it in
an entirely different light."
The unchecked corruption
soon spread to the Municipal courtrooms - and out into the suburbs.
"The other sad thing about the whole affair," Bailey sighs, "is if a
Judge took $100 for a D.U.I. case let's say, he would hit the other
guy hard who should have received a break, so that the Judge's
record doesn't look like he's discharging everybody." It was a sad
commentary and a permanent black eye for justice.
Operation Greylord produced
evidence suggesting that high-profile murder cases could be fixed in
the Circuit Court of Cook County. Hard evidence to support such a
volatile allegation was finally drawn from Operation Gambat, a
federal investigation into court-related corruption that followed
several years later. Gambat begun in March 1986 when attorney Robert
J. Cooley, a streetwise and well-honed former Chicago Police
officer, criminal attorney, and a First Ward insider under Alderman
Fred Roti's thumb, told the F.B.I. that he had been paid to "fix"
murder and assault cases. The fast-talking Cooley also implicated
the prestigious Chancery Division in the crooked doings. Alderman
Roti and "Outfit" front man Pat Marcy, secretary of the powerful 1st
Ward Democratic Organization, together were charged with accepting
and pawing bribes to influence the outcomes a 1989 case of Eldridge
v. Carr (Eldridge v. Carr was a fabricated case - an F.B.I. "sting,"
that captured on tape the discussions between Cooley, Roti, and
Marcy at Counselor's's Row Restaurant located in the same building
that housed 1st Ward Democratic Headquarters), flied in Chancery.
The Chancery Division is where important and often complex civil
cases are heard. Chancery is a highly coveted assignment for many of
the incumbent Judges marking time out at 26th and Cal, and the
outlying courthouses. It is has also proven not to be immune to
corruption as the 1991 conviction of former presiding judge David J.
Shields on bribery charges proved.
Among other things, Gambat revealed that Cooley agreed to pass
$10,000 to Judge Frank J. Wilson in order to secure an acquittal for
Harry Aleman, an accomplished Outfit assassin accused of murdering
truck dispatcher and Teamster Union steward William Logan in 1977.
The Aieman trial was originally scheduled to be heard by Judge
Bailey, but Harry Aleman's attorney, Thomas Maloney, filed a
petition to substitute judges. He did not want Bailey, a much-feared
"law and order" judge to preside over the trial. Curiously, Attorney
Maloney also named Frank Wilson as another jurist he did not wish to
plead Aleman's case before in trial proceedings - at the very moment
Cooley was attempting to suborn Wilson!
Robert Cooley and Judge
Wilson had become chummy over the years. They gambled and drank
together, and shared secrets in an atmosphere of collegiality.
Despite assurances to the contrary, Roti and Marcy were apprehensive
and unsure of Cooley's abilities to "deliver the goods" on the
Aleman case before Wilson. First Ward Committeeman John D'Arco, Sr.
warned Cooley of the likely consequences of a screw up. "This is a
very serious matter, some very important people are concerned about
this individual Aleman]...Don't say you can do it unless you can do
it. We have to know for sure." The important people were the top
"wise guys" - the Mob.
The deal to fix the murder
case was struck in the men's room at Greco s Restaurant. Wilson
agreed to "handle" the case for $10,000 provided that neither
Maloney nor Cooley represent Aleman a most feared Outfit enforcer.
He believed it would create a climate of suspicion. Pat Marcy
insisted that Maloney remain on the case. but Cooley reported back
that Wilson was adamant. Maloney was removed and Wilson received a
$2,500 "down payment."
"The question has always
been, how did the case get back to Frank Wilson?" Bailey wonders.
"At the time I never thought Frank Wilson was on the take. I knew
Frank very well. How in God's name this went down is beyond me."
It appears that after
Bailey and Wilson were named in the substitution of judges, the case
was reassigned to Judge Fred Suria. The defense filed another motion
to transfer the case but his was turned down. Suria later recused
himself from the case on his non motion and eventually it made its
way back to Wilson. Big-time "wise guy" attorney Frank Whalen
represented Harry Aleman who was disappointed to learn that Maloney
would have to be removed. "Well if that's the way it has to be..."
Aleman said. Judge Wilson approved the selection of Whalen, but
Formed Bob Cooley that he would deal directly with Cooley during
trial discussion.
Harry "the Hook" Aleman was
acquitted of the Logan "hit" despite overwhelming evidence to the
contrary. The judge alibied to the media by accusing state
prosecutors of failing to establish Aleman's guilt beyond reasonable
doubt even though the prosecution produced two eyewitnesses. The
newspapers were stunned and outraged. Chicago Tribune columnist Mike
Royko believed the fix was in from the very beginning and he said so
in his column. The pressure appeared to be getting to Wilson.
Judge Wilson did his Job -
he delivered the "goods" - but he soon demanded more than the
$10,000 he was to receive from the First Ward 'connection guys." "I
am a Judge" Wilson complained to Cooley after learning that a key
prosecution witness also received $10,000. "I am a full judge. I am
going to lose my lob on this thing and that's all I'm getting? It's
not fair. I deserve a lot more than this." Wilson was almost in
tears the night he received his remaining share of the bribe money
at a South Side restaurant. "You did this to me," Wilson whispered
to Cooley.
Judge Wilson retired from
the bench in 1980 and moved to Sun City Arizona where he was to be
interviewed by F.B.I. agents who demanded more information about his
First Ward criminal-political tie- ups. With the Feds closing in on
his doorstep, the corrupt judge blew his brains out in the backyard
of his hacienda on Feb. 5, 1990 - a compelling admission of guilt on
his part.
Attorney Thomas J. Maloney.
once described by Harry Aleman as a "part of us," was appointed by
the Illinois Supreme Court to fill a vacancy in the Circuit Court in
1977 with the help and sponsorship of former Alderman Ed Vrdolyak.
One year later Maloney was slated by the Democratic Party and
elected to a full term as Circuit Court Judge.
During the next 13 years, the Honorable Mr. Maloney "fixed" three
murder trials (possibly six according to recent Justice Department
allegations). Payoffs were allegedly funneled to him by two
convicted Gambat attorneys, William A. Swano and Robert McGee, who
shared office space with none other than the good government
advocate and radio talk show host Vrdolyak. This is the same "Eddie"
who is strongly tied to
Cicero Town President
Betty Loren Maltese, whose
late husband Frankie labored in the vineyards of Mob boss
Rocco Infelise's street crew
for many years.
Thomas Maloney retired in
1990, and has spent the last three years fighting to stay out of
prison. He was convicted in April 1993 of accepting $10,000 to fix
the double murder trial of two former El Rukn gang leaders;
receiving a cut of a $100,000 bribe to acquit three New York gang
members in 1981; and $4.000 for a favorable verdict in a voluntary
manslaughter case dating back in 1982. Mr. Maloney will be sentenced
by Judge Harry Leinenweber in July.
What safeguards, if any,
presently exist to prevent individuals of the caliber of a Tom
Maloney or Frank Wilson, from ascending bench? None, actually. The
Judicial Inquiry Board, which Is responsible for ferreting out
corruption and monitoring the conduct of judges has seen its
resources depleted as a result of budgetary cutbacks in recent
years. James Bailey doesn't believe the Board has been or is very
effective at all, and would like to see some other internal
mechanism put into place. "The Inquiry Board is not very active and
they really don't go Into something and find out what really is
going on as well as they should. [Former Chief Judge John Boyle had
a great system of finding out what was happening. He knew everybody.
If a judge was doing something wrong he would bury them." Boyle was
hard and tough - a knowledgeable political insider from the old
school.
The Solovy Commission
favors the appointment of an Inspector General and Merit (or
appointed) Selection of all Judges. Bailey endorses these
recommendations with reservations "The Circuit Court of Cook County
should go ahead and institute some type of "G-2" of their own," he
said. "Let's find out what is going on in traffic Court and out in
all the Districts. Do we have any problems? Is someone getting to
chummy? Are there favors being done out there?"
As to the hotly debated
issue of Merit Selection which the reformers have been pushing for
years, Bailey has his doubts. "I don't think that the merit
selection of judges will do anything for the simple reason that most
of the judges would score very high on a merit board exam." he said.
"Most of them would have been judges anyway through their strong
political connections. One person ultimately has to do the
appointing. Let's face it. They say that the federal Judges are
appointed by Merit. That's simply not true. They're appointed
because they happen to know one person over the other."
Thus far, thirty-five
states in the U.S. have enacted some form of merit selection in the
various judicial circuits and sub-circuits. Merit selection will
minimize some of the risks, but it will never prevent a dishonest
judge from being appointed to office.. It is a pie-in-the-sky
scenario to believe otherwise.
When Greylord first broke,
James Bailey recalls a meeting in Harry Comerford's office where the
chief judge expressed the hope that the problem would be confined to
the so called "lesser" courts. "I left the meeting at that time
because I knew that it was going to go a lot further. I said to
Judge Comerford, 'no, unfortunately this is only the beginning.' I
had talked to some of the defense lawyers and they all told me the
same thing," Bailey remembers. "The corruption was a lot more
widespread than what was let out."
Are there any more Judicial
scandals coming down the road? The judges who weathered the storm of
Greylord and Gambat are much more aware of their vulnerability. It
is unlikely that they would risk their professional careers and
reputations pocketing $50 bribes as in the days of old.
The Circuit Court of Cook
County's Criminal Division randomly assigns cases, and the "let's
make a deal" army of attorneys comprising the "Hustlers Club" at
Traffic Court have been weeded out and removed for the most part.
However, institutionalized graft as it has been refined in Cook
County government over the years will always find new and ingenious
methods of eroding the system - especially when the judiciary is
unable to divorce Itself from politics.
Without a workable system
of judicial rotation, and the creation of the type of Inspector
Generalship Judge James Bailey, the Chicago Crime Commission, and
the Solovy Commission envision for Chicago, it is probable that such
scandals will occur again. "Time will only tell," Bailey cautions.
But it would not surprise me." It should really not surprise anyone
-Cook County being what It is unable to divorce Itself from
politics..
Without a workable system
of judicial rotation, and the creation of the type of Inspector
Generalship Judge James Bailey, the Chicago Crime Commission, and
the Solovy Commission envision for Chicago, it is probable that such
scandals will occur again. "Time will only tell," Bailey cautions.
But it would not surprise me." It should really not surprise anyone
-Cook County being what It is.
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