Welcome to my home state of Illinois where you don’t have a real governor unless he (or she) has some kind of investigation under their belt. Looks like the current governor could face his own federal trouble.

Democrat Gov. J.B. Pritzker, his wife, and his brother-in-law have fallen into a federal investigation over the removal of toilets in a mansion in order to receive a property tax break.

You know what I love? The hypocrisy. Pritzker recently proposed a “fair tax,” which will raise income taxes on the rich in order to pay their fair share.

Pritzker is the richest man to become governor of Illinois. You want others to pay their fair share? How about you? I guess he exempts himself from that rule or at least he tries.

The Alleged Scheme

This scheme first came out in 2017, but in October 2018, Cook County Inspector General Patrick Blanchard “concluded that more than $330,000 in property tax breaks and refunds that Democratic gubernatorial candidate J.B. Pritzker received on one of his Gold Coast mansions — in part by removing toilets — constituted a ‘scheme to defraud.'”

The Chicago Sun-Times reported in May 2017 that Pritzker purchased the mansion from retired banker Burton Gordon and his wife next to his and purposely allowed it to “fall into despair” and then claim it as “uninhabitable” in order “to win what so far have been nearly $230,000 in property-tax breaks.” Here is more:

Pritzker refurbished the outside of the Federal-style home, where the Gordons raised their family. But the inside has fallen into disrepair. The toilets have been disconnected, and the home has “no functioning bathrooms or kitchen,” according to documents Pritzker’s lawyers filed with the office of Cook County Assessor Joseph Berrios. Arguing that the smaller mansion is “vacant and uninhabitable,” those lawyers convinced Berrios to slash its assessed value last year from $6.25 million to just under $1.1 million. That’s allowed Pritzker to get the nearly $230,000 in property-tax breaks and refunds, a Chicago Sun-Times analysis found.

Since the assessment went down by 83%, Pritzker only had to pay $19,719 in property taxes instead of $117,087.

That’s not all. Berrios then “cut the assessment on the bigger mansion where the Pritzker family lives — from $14.1 million to about $12.1 million, resulting in a 16 percent lower property-tax bill last year — $221,287 rather than $264,221.”

Berrios came to this decision based “on an appraisal done by a company hired by the billionaire, who refused to let the appraisers inside the home out of concerns for the security of his family.”

After an investigation, the watchdog wrote:

Blanchard writes in the report — obtained by the Sun-Times — that the assessor’s office was “the victim of sworn affidavits containing false representations. “The evidence indicates that the use of these affidavits was part of a scheme for obtaining money by means of false representations and, in executing the scheme, the responsible parties caused checks to be issued by the Cook County Treasurer and delivered by U.S. Mail according to the direction thereon. “As a result, the County ultimately fell victim to a scheme to defraud, executed in part through the use of affidavits, and which resulted in the property owner ultimately receiving property tax refunds totaling $132,747.18 for the years 2012, 2013 and 2014, as well as additional tax savings of $198,684.85 for the years 2015 and 2016,” the report states.

Federal Investigation

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WBEZ reported that an unnamed source confirmed the investigation “began last October and remains active,” but “no signs that criminal charges are imminent.”

Illinois First Lady MK Pritzker’s personal assistant Christine Lovely is also under investigation. Her lawyer is Reid Schar, the man who prosecuted ex-governor Rod Blagojevich.

The report states “Lovely and the governor’s brother-in-law, Thomas J. Muenster, made ‘false representations’ on tax appeal documents.” Muenster called himself “the owner and manager of the mansion.”

While the investigation started in October, it appears that not a lot has happened. WBEZ requested records, but found “no trail of any subpoenas either in the Cook County assessor’s office, which signed off on the Pritzker tax appeal, or the Cook County treasurer’s office, which cut refund checks in the case.”

Berrios said no federal investigators contacted him. His former top aide Thomas Jaconetty did not “confirm nor deny any interactions with investigators.”

Cook County’s State’s Attorney Kim Foxx’s office did not confirm or deny if the investigation exists. WBEZ pointed out her office spoke about the investigation last fall. Then again, Foxx has enough on her hands with the Jussie Smollett fiasco.

Pritzker Responds

Pritzker told the press that investigators have not contacted his family. He also said that he never knew the probe existed. From The Chicago Tribune:

At an unrelated Chicago news conference, Pritzker said he and his wife had not been contacted by law enforcement and were unaware of any review until WBEZ aired its report. “Let me be clear that I’m very confident that any review of this matter will show that all the rules were followed,” said Pritzker, who in the past contended the property tax situation was largely a political issue raised by then-Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner’s re-election campaign. Asked if he was concerned about the matter, Pritzker said: “No concerns at all. As I say … any review of this will show that all the rules were followed.”

The Pritzker’s lawyer Marc Elias, a partner at Perkins Coie, confirmed that law enforcement has not reached out to his clients.

Marc Elias…Perkins Coie….where have we seen these names before? Oh, that’s right!! Elias served as the general counsel for failed Democrat presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. He hired Fusion GPS to investigate Donald Trump, which wrote the infamous dossier.



