While Ald. Danny Solis remains in hiding as a result of the lurid details that emerged when the feds tapped his phone, one self-described ally, Anthony Sutor, reveals who the alderman is supporting in the historic 25th ward race and makes other explosive allegations.

Sutor provided screenshots from his phone that show a line of communication among himself, the alderman, and candidate Aida Flores at the end of 2018. During this time, Sutor was brought onboard as Flores’ director of field operations, according to an internal document he provided. He stepped down months later, he said, citing differences.

At Flores’ request, Sutor contacted Ald. Solis to arrange a sit-down, with the apparent purpose of discussing his endorsement, as well as the financial support and manpower he would provide her campaign.

Ald. Solis and his communications staff refused to officially endorse a candidate before the alderman went MIA.

However, an excerpt of texts between Sutor and Flores, dated November 28, suggests that the candidate was seeking the alderman’s backing. To her credit, Solis’ cooperation with the FBI had not yet been uncovered.

Flores: How do I go about talking to Danny?

Sutor: You want me to set it up? You want me to give you his number?

Flores: Yes.

Sutor: (Number) ...

Sutor: He wants me to set up a meeting with you, he says somebody told him I was working on your campaign.

Flores: If you are talking to him, you can continue setting it up. Thank you.

In a thread of texts between the middleman and Solis, they agreed to meet Flores at Bridgeport Café the next morning.

Sitting in on the conversation, Sutor said Ald. Solis offered his precinct captains to Flores. In fact, he stated that Solis’ political operatives are currently working for her campaign in the Chinatown and Taylor St. areas of the 25th ward. Sutor identified the individuals in question as: Danny Moy, Jackson Chiu, Bob Klunk, Janet Esposito, and Francisco Lassio.

Multiple attempts to reach Flores to confirm the veracity of the conversation were unsuccessful.

In yet another bombshell, Sutor claimed Flores came forward with unexpected allegations at the meeting surrounding candidate Hilario Dominguez. She accused Dominguez of “sexually assaulting her daughter who was underage” while Dominguez was employed at The Resurrection Project (TRP) working with youth, Sutor said.

He did not wish to disclose the name of the victim and did not present documentation to corroborate the allegations, and neither Flores’ nor Dominguez’ campaigns could be reached to bring clarity to the matter despite the snowballing rumors.

Sutor did submit a video that places Dominguez and the minor walking next to each other, at one point touching each other’s arm, in a TRP march that he organized in 2017.

When contacting the non-profit organization, marketing manager Sarah Powell said TRP is not at liberty to discuss employment related matters for any current or former employees.

In a statement issued this past December, Ada Tong, spokesperson for State Rep. Theresa Mah, D-Chicago, said, “Rep. Mah and Mr. Raul Raymundo, Executive Director of The Resurrection Project, said they have conducted an investigation and found the claims to be false.”

Katrina, a Chinatown resident who did not wish to disclose her last name, said she first learned about the accusations through flyers that were distributed across the ward that characterized Dominguez as a predator of two underage girls.

She recently asked Rep. Mah about the issue in the presence of Dominguez, her endorsed candidate, and Mah denied that Flores even had a daughter, Katrina said. She later confronted Mah on her misleading statement, knowing that Flores has been candid about her motherhood during the race.

Mah’s office could not be reached for comment in time for this publication.

Both Dominguez and Flores did not attend the most recent candidate forum in the West Loop.

“Aida made the allegations, I didn’t. She told us, I didn’t,” Sutor defended himself. “She’s the one that put this out there.”

“I was hoping that it wouldn’t come to this. But people are going to the polls on the 26th… without this information,” he added.

Elections are Tuesday.

The other candidates on the ballot are Troy Hernandez, Alex Acevedo and Byron Sigcho-Lopez.