|
Welcome to The Joe Birkett Resource Center
|
|---|
|
Joe Birkett wants to be Attorney General of Illinois. Today, most voters are seeking more substantive information about those who would govern them. That is why this site has been made available to the public; So you, the voter, may become better educated about Joe Birkett. All of the information below is documented. Please take the time to read the supporting documentation we have provided, many of which via hyperlink. |
|||||||||||||
| Birkett's Campaign Contributors |
“Under fire for accepting contributions from defense attorneys, DuPage County State's Atty. Joe Birkett also accepted a $10,000 loan for his Republican campaign for attorney general from a sitting judge in his home county, campaign records show. Birkett on Wednesday acknowledged soliciting the loan from DuPage County Circuit Judge John Elsner, who lent the money through his campaign committee,” Birkett defends $10,000 loan from DuPage judge, Chicago Tribune, 9/26/02, http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi0209260287sep26,0,4625136.story?coll=chi%2Dnews%2Dhed “A group supporting the Democratic slate in the Nov. 5 election today will call for an investigation into a loan Republican attorney general candidate Joe Birkett accepted for his campaign fund. Independent Voters of Illinois-Illinois Precinct Organization said Wednesday it will ask the state's Judicial Inquiry Board to investigate a $10,000 loan from DuPage County Circuit Judge John Elsner to Birkett, the DuPage County state's attorney,” Voters Group Wants Loan Investigated, Daily Southtown, 10/3/02 “’A loan from a sitting judge to any political candidate is problematic and to a state's attorney in the judge's county is even more problematic in a way that contributions would not be,’ said Steven Lubet, a law professor at Northwestern University. ‘It creates a relationship in which the judge doesn't get the money back unless the candidate pays it. So there's a set of reciprocal obligations,’ he said. ‘The relationship between a judge and a state's attorney should be limited to the courtroom. They shouldn't have financial entanglements.’” Birkett defends $10,000 loan from DuPage judge, Chicago Tribune, 9/26/02, http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi0209260287sep26,0,4625136.story?coll=chi%2Dnews%2Dhed
“During the last year, DuPage County State’s Attorney Joe Birkett has received more than $50,000 in campaign contributions and another $110, 000 in loans from criminal defense attorneys and firms that cut plea bargains with his office,” A Look at Key Names on Birkett’s Campaign Donor List, Rich Miller, Daily Southtown, 9/2/02 (http://www.dailysouthtown.com/southtown/miller/x08-mlr1.htm)
“At issue is Mr. Birkett’s practice of regularly accepting donations from attorneys who want to get the best possible deals for their clients from prosecutors who work for Mr. Birkett,” Lawyers Ante Up For Birkett, Crain’s Chicago Business, 8/26/02
“Three defense attorneys who contributed or loaned money to Birkett’s election fund were able to broker seemingly light sentences for their clients, including one defendant who attacked and pushed his wife into a fire in 1999 but served only 34 days in jail and 30 months’ probation,” Madigan Allies Bash Rival on Abuse, Copley News Service, 8/29/02
“Birkett insists that he sees no inherent conflicts of interest in taking money from lawyers who represent ready-to-confess criminals, even though most other Chicago-area state’s attorney’s accept very few dollars from those people,” A Look at Key Names on Birkett’s Campaign Donor List, Rich Miller, Daily Southtown, 9/2/02 (http://www.dailysouthtown.com/southtown/miller/x08-mlr1.htm)
“Mr. Birkett’s campaign committee received a $100,000 loan from the lead partner in a Wheaton law firm that boasts in promotional literature that it is "located directly across from the Court House" and has "the knowledge and ability to conduct very favorable plea negotiations,” Lawyers Ante Up For Birkett, Crain’s Chicago Business, 8/26/02
“In one case, a man whose wife was hospitalized with second-degree burns after he repeatedly threw her into a fire was sentenced to time already served and probation — not prison time — in a deal struck with the office by his attorney, whose firm had donated $3,100 to Mr. Birkett in the past year and $8,300 since 1998. The victim claims she was “betrayed” by the office,” Lawyers Ante Up For Birkett, Crain’s Chicago Business, 8/26/02 “Dawn Cavagnetto [is] a DuPage woman who suffered second degree burns and was hospitalized after being attacked by her husband, William Stoltz, in the garage of the family home on New Year’s Eve 1999. Mr. Stoltz hired prominent defense attorney John Donahue, whose firm has donated $3,100 to Mr. Birkett in the past year and $8,300 since 1998. In a plea deal, prosecutors dropped the attempted first-degree murder charge against Mr. Stoltz, who pleaded guilty to aggravated battery and agreed not to contest a charge of arson, according to court documents. A judge ended up giving Mr. Stoltz 30 months probation, but no prison time beyond the 34 days in jail Mr. Stoltz had served before posting bond,” Birkett Plea Sets Off Firestorm, Crain’s Chicago Business, 8/28/02 “A few weeks ago, a woman whose husband tried to murder her complained that Birkett's office had bullied her into agreeing to a ridiculously light jail sentence. The husband was represented by one of Birkett's campaign contributors. Birkett's office claimed the woman was mistaken. But the more stories I hear, the more I'm starting to think that maybe there’s something truly wrong with the way Birkett’s shop is run. It’s not just the good ol’ boys looking out for each other. It's the good ol' boys making sure the women don’t win,” More Details Emerge on Birkett Adviser's Battle with Ex-Wife, Rich Miller, Daily Southtown, 9/15/02 (http://www.dailysouthtown.com/southtown/miller/x15-mlr1.htm)
“For years, Carrie Gammell has been trying to convince a disinterested press corps to cover her battle with the DuPage County powers that be….. She was the woman who was married to Joe Birkett's former campaign manager, Terry Ekl….Birkett’s office declared a conflict of interest, rather than help Gammell increase her child support payments from Ekl. . . . Ekl allegedly physically attacked [Gammell] so forcefully that she had to go to the hospital. And . . . Ekl was never charged with a crime, allegedly after a top employee of the state’s attorney’s office and a local police chief talked Gammell out of filing a formal complaint while she sat in the emergency room, covered in blood. Ekl claims to this day that he meant to throw an object at a wall and hit her by mistake.” More Details Emerge on Birkett Adviser's Battle with Ex-Wife, Rich Miller, Daily Southtown, 9/15/02 (http://www.dailysouthtown.com/southtown/miller/x15-mlr1.htm)
“’[Birkett] and his predecessor [Ryan] tried to fry three innocent little kids,’ said Rob Warden, director of the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University’s School of Law.” The Cruz Factor, Chicago Sun-Times, 9/29/02
“’I don’t have any regrets – I did the right thing [in the Cruz litigation] and I would do it again,’ Birkett said,” For Birkett, A Prosecutor’s Zeal Forged in a Difficult Youth, Courier News, 9/22/02
“Republicans Jim Ryan and Joe Birkett are among the DuPage County prosecutors who helped keep the heat on Cruz, even after another man, convicted child killer Brian Dugan, confessed to the crime in 1985 and a 1995 DNA test bolstered his story.” 1983 Murder Haunts 2002 Races: Ryan, Birkett Have Ties to Rolando Cruz’s Overturned Death Sentence, Peoria Journal-Star, 10/2/02, http://www.pjstar.com/news/topnews/g113755a.html
“Birkett was serving as chief of the office's criminal division in 1995 during Cruz's third trial.” Role DuPage State's Attorney Played, Daily Herald, 2/24/02.
“Joe Birkett will not admit his office was wrong to prosecute Cruz three times despite mounting evidence of his innocence. [Birkett] will not even say he believes Rolando Cruz is innocent.” The Cruz Factor, Chicago Sun-Times, 9/29/02 http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-cruz29.html
“Birkett said Cruz's pardon request ‘is about getting money from the taxpayers,’ but he supported a $3.5 million settlement with Cruz and his co-defendants to avoid a civil trial against DuPage County.” 1983 Murder Haunts 2002 Races: Ryan, Birkett Have Ties to Rolando Cruz’s Overturned Death Sentence, Peoria Journal-Star, 10/2/02, http://www.pjstar.com/news/topnews/g113755a.html
“Birkett approved a $3.5 million settlement with Cruz and his co-defendants rather than stand trial in a civil suit that Cruz brought against his office.” The Cruz Factor, Chicago Sun-Times, 9/29/02 http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-cruz29.html
“Nearly seven years after Rolando Cruz was acquitted of the rape and murder of Jeanine Nicarico, and 17 years after Brian Dugan confessed to the crime and gave details only the killer could know, Joe Birkett still has not charged Dugan. Birkett’s critics say that’s because charging Dugan would mean admitting he was wrong about Cruz.” The Cruz Factor, Chicago Sun-Times, 9/29/02 http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-cruz29.html
“Cruz was twice convicted and sentenced to death for the 1983 murder of Jeanine Nicarico of Naperville. All the while, Birkett was moving up the ranks in the DuPage County state's attorney's office. When the decision was made in 1994 to try Cruz a third time, even though another man in prison, Brian Dugan, had confessed to Nicarico's murder, Birkett was the lead prosecutor on the case,” Madigan said. Madigan: Birkett Threatened Witness, Chicago Sun-Times, 9/24/02
“For [Joe Birkett’s] entire six-year tenure as state's attorney, his office has let the Nicarico case languish officially open and unsolved. After Cruz was acquitted and released from Death Row . . . the logical move was against [Brian] Dugan, whose story [confessing to the crime] starkly contradicted the version of events that DuPage authorities had been pushing for more than a decade. But Birkett did not reopen plea negotiations with Dugan, who had offered to plead guilty in exchange for a life sentence. [Birkett] has not indicted [Dugan], and there are no reports that he has even tried. His office has not even requested to talk to Dugan about the case, according to Dugan's attorney Tom McCullough. . . . And as long as the case remains technically open, Birkett remains able to offer vague insinuations, as he did again Monday, that he doesn't buy the story that Dugan acted alone and Cruz and his former co-defendants weren't involved.” Birkett is Still Dodging Issues in Nicarico Case, Eric Zorn, Chicago Tribune, 9/24/02 (http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/chi-0209240287sep24(0,6138426).column?coll=chi%2Dnews%2Dcol)
“Joe Birkett, the Republican candidate for Illinois attorney general, says his opponent should not be asking questions about his role in the notorious prosecution of Rolando Cruz. . . . Birkett, currently state's attorney in DuPage County, was chief of the major crimes unit in that office from 1985 to 1986, deputy chief of the criminal division from 1986 to 1991 and chief of the criminal division from 1991 to 1996. During those years, Cruz was tried and convicted twice of the rape and murder of 10-year-old Jeanine Nicarico in 1983. A third trial ended in acquittal after DNA evidence proved that Cruz was innocent and implicated another man, Brian Dugan, who was already serving life in prison for a similar murder. Dugan admitted killing Nicarico, but no steps have been taken by DuPage County officials to prosecute him in the case. . . . In our view, Birkett's role in the Nicarico case, the prosecution of Cruz and the decisions so far not to prosecute Dugan are relevant issues in this election. His attempt to deflect questions by calling them exploitative look like an effort to dodge the issue. The DuPage County state's attorney's office stubbornly insisted on retrying Cruz despite mounting evidence of his innocence and has refused to prosecute Dugan despite what appears to be a strong case against him. It is entirely appropriate for Madigan to ask questions about what role Birkett played in those decisions. . . . A candidate's record in previous offices is always a legitimate issue in a campaign. In this election, in which Birkett is seeking to become the state's lawyer, his record as the top attorney for DuPage County could not be more relevant.” Birkett’s Record is a Relevant Issue, Editorial, Daily Southtown, 9/25/02
“Birkett repeated for the umpteenth time yesterday that he had ‘ordered’ the DNA test which eventually exonerated Rolando Cruz for the abduction, rape and murder of 10-year-old Jeanine Nicarico. But it was Cruz's lawyers who asked for the test and Birkett had no choice but to agree to it. And then after the DNA test showed that Cruz wasn't involved, Birkett refused to admit the obvious and pressed ahead with a third trial,” Rich Miller, Capitol Fax, 10/2/02 “Birkett obviously does not want to admit the DuPage County state’s attorney’s office made a mistake [in the Cruz case]. His prosecutorial career has been unencumbered by conscience,” How a Death Row Appeal Changes A Lawyer’s Life, Daily Southtown, 9/27/02
“Birkett last week told reporters that he would not ‘stand in the way of clemency’ for Cruz . . . but that’s not enough. Ryan and Birkett should announce their support for Cruz’s petition,” Ryan, Birkett Should Back Cruz Clemency, Thomas Frisbie, Chicago Sun-Times, 9/29/02 http://www.suntimes.com/output/otherviews/cst-edt-fris29.html
“’[The prosecution of Rolando Cruz by Joe Birkett and Jim Ryan] calls into question their interest in justice and their integrity when it comes to a very vital issue in law enforcement,’ says Chicago Tribune columnist Eric Zorn, who has written extensively about the Nicarico murder. . . . ‘I think that it is a window into their character, myself,’ he said.” 1983 Murder Haunts 2002 Races: Ryan, Birkett Have Ties to Rolando Cruz’s Overturned Death Sentence, Peoria Journal-Star, 10/2/02, http://www.pjstar.com/news/topnews/g113755a.html
“Birkett's ties to the Cruz case could alienate minorities, particularly Hispanics, says Charles Wheeler, a former Statehouse reporter for the Sun-Times who runs the public affairs reporting program at the University of Illinois in Springfield. And even non-minorities may ponder why prosecutors dug in against Cruz and Hernandez after Dugan confessed, he adds. ‘I think people who are concerned about the death penalty and people who are concerned about issues of justice and fairness might ask themselves the same question,’ Wheeler said. ‘The average person might find it hard to understand why Birkett has not gone after Brian Dugan and has left this case officially unsolved.’” 1983 Murder Haunts 2002 Races: Ryan, Birkett Have Ties to Rolando Cruz’s Overturned Death Sentence, Peoria Journal-Star, 10/2/02, http://www.pjstar.com/news/topnews/g113755a.html
“A former cellmate of Rolando Cruz said Joe Birkett came to his house and threatened him with arrest if he did not sign a statement saying Rolando Cruz confessed in jail to the Nicarico murder.” The Cruz Factor, Chicago Sun-Times, 9/29/02 http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-cruz29.html “DuPage County State's Attorney Joseph Birkett went to the home of a witness in the Rolando Cruz case and threatened to arrest him unless he signed a statement saying Cruz confessed to the murder of Jeanine Nicarico, Birkett's opponent Lisa Madigan said Monday. Birkett said later Monday that, yes, he went to Steve Schmidt's house and took a statement from him, but, no, he did not threaten him to get the statement.” Madigan: Birkett Threatened Witness, Chicago Sun-Times, 9/24/02
“The DuPage County State's Attorney's Office tried to fill in these voids [in the third prosecution of Rolando Cruz] with the testimony of yet another jailhouse snitch. The prosecution informed the defense prior to Mr. Cruz's third trial that a man named Stephen Schmitt would be testifying that . . . Mr. Cruz committed the crimes . . . [but] that Mr. Dugan was the rapist. This new twist by the latest snitch provided a way for the prosecution to explain away the anticipated DNA results which excluded Mr. Cruz (whom both of the earlier snitches had claimed was the rapist). As it turns out, though, Mr. Schmitt did not testify at the third trial. Prior to the trial, he has a crisis of conscience and refused to go along with the false story. In sworn statements to his own lawyer, Mr. Schmitt explained how his false statement implicating Mr. Cruz had come about. Mr. Schmitt stated that First Assistant State's Attorney Joseph Birkett and Detective Warren Wilkosz had come to his home one evening and had aggressively threatened to arrest Mr.Schmitt for withholding evidence unless Mr. Schmitt agreed to sign a statement reporting that Mr. Cruz had confessed to him in the County Jail. Mr. Schmitt told Mr. Birkett and Detective Wilkosz that such a statement would be a lie, but Mr. Birkett and Detective Wilkosz insisted that he write a statement and fed him the information to include. Based on Mr. Schmitt's account, the trial judge ruled that no evidence about Mr. Schmitt's statement to Mr. Birkett and Detective Wilkosz could be admitted at the third trial,” Clemency Petition of Rolando Cruz (Sec. IV-H), 9/18/02 (http://ericzorn.com/extra/cruz/)
“Steve Schmitt . . . answered the door of his apartment early on the evening of July 21, 1994, and found a DuPage County sheriff's detective and an assistant state's attorney wanting to talk to him. . . . Schmitt said the prosecutor, Joe Birkett, and the detective, Warren Wilkosz, told him 'If you won't give a statement, you could get arrested for withholding evidence,’ . . . . The result was a damning piece of new evidence: A one-page, signed statement from a jailhouse snitch saying Cruz spontaneously admitted to having been a go-along observer as Brian Dugan committed the horrible crime . . . . What may seem striking about this statement is how perfectly it met DuPage County's new needs: In overturning Cruz's conviction, the state high court had said that in his next trial . . . the jury or judge would be allowed for the first time to consider the compelling criminal history of serial rapist and murderer Brian Dugan, the man who has long said he alone committed the Nicarico crime and whose DNA puts him among the 1 in 3,333 men who could have raped the girl. . . . In the context of the long history of the case, however, it is less striking. The jailhouse snitches who have come forth against Cruz have always told stories that roughly match whatever the prosecution's current theory of the case happens to be. None, for example, mentions Dugan until Dugan was arrested and had confessed, more than two years after the crime. And what seems downright ordinary by now is Schmitt's claim that he altered his testimony under pressure from those determined to convict Rolando Cruz,” Latest Recantation in Cruz Case Sows New Seeds of Doubt, Eric Zorn, Chicago Tribune, 10/11/95 (http://www.ericzorn.com/columns/nicarico/page2.html)
“And among those officials who were not indicted in the case, but were accused by a witness of suborning perjury against Cruz, was Joe Birkett himself,” Chicago Tribune, 6/2/98.
“Back in 1998, the Elmhurst Press looked at contributions and loans to Birkett from attorneys representing the DuPage 7 - sheriff's deputies and former prosecutors who were charged with criminal conspiracy for allegedly “railroading” Rolando Cruz for murder. According to the paper, Birkett accepted over $31,000 in campaign contributions from the “D7” defense lawyers, plus another $10,000 no-interest loan from Terry Ekl, who represented Cruz’s lead prosecutor. Birkett lobbied the DuPage County Board hard to pay the seven defendants’ legal bills, and, according to the newspaper, some on the board saw “potential ethics problems” with Birkett’s actions,” Rich Miller, Capitol Fax, 9/10/02
DuPage County State's Attorney Joe Birkett is "absolutely unfit" to serve as attorney general if allegations that he coerced testimony in a notorious death row case are true, Birkett's opponent said Monday. Democratic attorney general candidate Lisa Madigan said Birkett needs to "come clean" about his role in the prosecution of Rolando Cruz, the man freed from death row in 1995 for the 1983 murder and rape of Jeanine Nicarico of Naperville. Cruz's release after 11 years behind bars became a symbol of a broken criminal justice system that prompted Gov. George Ryan in 1999 to halt all executions in Illinois,” Madigan Accuses Birkett of Coercing Testimony, Daily Southtown, 9/24/02 (http://www.dailysouthtown.com/southtown/dsnews/243nd1.htm)
During the criminal prosecution of the DuPage prosecutors and sheriff’s deputies for misconduct in the Nicarico case, Mr. Birkett repeatedly called for the County Board to pay millions to the defendants’ criminal attorneys to cover their legal fees. The trial judge handling the fees matter found that Mr. Birkett had a conflict of interest on this issue and entered two court orders explicitly prohibiting him from representing the County on all matters relating to the DuPage 7 prosecution and from communicating with the County Board or appearing in Court on behalf of the County, either personally or through his assistants or special assistants, on the issue of paying defense fees. Despite these clear orders, Mr. Birkett continued to appear in court and advocate for the County Board to pay the multi-million dollar fees. His conduct prompted the 2nd District Appellate Court to strike his appearance in an appeal relating to the fees issue and to state:
“State’s Attorney Joe Birkett has and continues to have a conflict of interest but continues to inject himself into matters concerning the criminal defense fees issue. State’s Attorney Birkett personally, and through his assistants, has openly and repeatedly failed to comply with the trial court’s orders. . . . Accordingly, we admonish State’s Attorney Birkett, personally and through his assistants, to adhere to his ethical obligation and to obey the trial court’s orders by not participating any further, either directly or indirectly, in the prohibited matters.” Maio v. Jegen, No. 97-MR-47 (Ill. App. 2nd Dist., Sept. 22, 1998).
“I know that we have the fairest system of capital punishment in the nation,” Birkett said. “I think it is time to move on with capital punishment,” Birkett Wants to Resume Executions, Daily Herald, 11/02/01.
“It does not take a moratorium to accomplish reform. No innocent person has been executed in this country in the last 100 years and with the additional safeguards already in place, that will never happen,” Seek Meaningful Reform, by Joe Birkett, Daily Herald, 8/6/00.
“After representing crime victims and their families in court, DuPage County State’s Attorney Joe Birkett has asked dozens of those same people to join him at his political fund-raisers. The practice has raised questions about whether the Republican attorney general candidate is, in the words of one murder victim’s mother, ‘using a tragedy and using it to his benefit,’” Birkett asks crime victims to fund-raisers, Sun-Times, 9/17/02
“In March, the GOP DuPage County state’s attorney asked his director of victim services while off-duty to invite some 50 victims and family members to a $75-a-plate fund-raiser. About 30 attended for free, but Jacalyn Arnold, mother of slain Addison resident Debra Evans, said she found it distasteful that he was ‘using a tragedy and using it to his benefit.’ ‘The only reason they had my name was the circumstances we were in. And I didn't want them to use our family's tragedy to gain political advantages,’ the Bourbonnais woman said,” Some Question Candidate’s Use Of Crime Victims, The Associated Press, 9/17/02
“Attorney general candidate Joe Birkett promised new rules on campaign donations Thursday but is not applying them to money he has accepted from a party leader under investigation….[Birkett] said he will not return money from Illinois House Minority Leader Lee Daniels, who stepped down as Republican Party chairman in July. Federal investigators are looking into whether Daniel’s legislative staffers worked political campaigns on state time in 2000,” Birkett Refuses to Return Money From Daniels Despite Pledge, Associated Press 9/06/02
“At the same time he was signing the “clean campaign” pledge, the DuPage County state's attorney said he would not return thousands of dollars in campaign cash he's received from former Illinois Republican Party Chairman Lee Daniels. Daniels is under federal investigation for possibly directing state workers to do campaign work.” ‘Clean Campaign’ Pledge Signed, but Cash Staying, Bloomington Pantagraph, 9/06/02
“Republican attorney general nominee Joe Birkett vowed Thursday not to accept campaign contributions from anyone “under major investigation,” but he intended to keep $32,000 from a top GOP leader whose office is the subject of a federal probe,” Birkett Won’t Return Daniels’ Donations, Sun-Times, 9/06/02
Birkett told his conservative supporters that he opposes House Bill 101, prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation . . .
The Illinois Family Institute asked Illinois statewide office candidates if they support or oppose “Adding sexual orientation to the existing Human Rights Act whereby homosexuals, bisexuals and transvestites would be granted protected-minority status (2001-HB101),” referring to Illinois House Bill 101. Joe Birkett responded: OPPOSE. Illinois Family Institute Voter Guide (http://www.illinoisfamily.org/vg-statewide.asp)
"’Just last week I spoke to Mike O'Donnell, Birkett's executive aide, who told me that Birkett and his opponent were on opposite sides of the gay agenda. She [Madigan] supports gay rights and he [Birkett] opposes them.’” Tribune Reports Birkett at Gay Parade – Campaign Denies Story, Illinois Leader (quoting Kathy Valente, State Director of Concerned Women for America) (www.illinoisleader.com/printer/article.asp?c=1200)
Then Birkett told the gay community he “would not stand in the way” of House Bill 101
According to Joe Birkett’s communications director, Birkett “wouldn't stand in the way” of House Bill 101 if and when the bill comes up for a vote in the legislature. Birkett’s Attendance at Pride Parade Stirs Controversy, Chicago Free Press, 7/31/2002 (http://www.outinstlouis.com/home/news.asp?articleid=2726)
As if those contradictory statements were not enough, Birkett showed up at a Gay Pride Parade event . . .
“Illinois state Sen. Lisa Madigan (D-Chicago) and DuPage County State’s Attorney Joe Birkett (R), went looking for [gay and lesbian] votes in Lakeview. Madigan rode her own float to widespread crowd approval, while Birkett attended [Equality Illinois’] traditional pre-parade reception at SideTrack but didn’t appear in the parade,” In Pride, Politicians, Candidates Show Their True Colors, Chicago Free Press, 7/3/02
Then Birkett told his conservative supporters he was not at the parade! . . .
“The Chicago Tribune reported today that Attorney General candidates Democrat Lisa Madigan and Republican Joe Birkett both participated in the Gay Pride parade on Sunday. But the Birkett campaign insists that their candidate wasn't there . . . . John Hoffman, campaign manager for Birkett, said this morning, 'Joe Birkett was not at the parade yesterday. There were supporters there, carrying banners for Joe Birkett, but Joe himself was not there.’” ” Tribune Reports Birkett at Gay Parade – Campaign Denies Story, Illinois Leader (quoting Kathy Valente, State Director of Concerned Women for America) (www.illinoisleader.com/printer/article.asp?c=1200)
Then Birkett told the gay community that he really was at the parade! . . .
“Officials with Republican Joe Birkett's campaign for Illinois attorney general bristled at allegations by Stonewall Democrats Chicago last week that Birkett, speaking to the right-wing Concerned Women for America, denied he attended Chicago's Pride parade June 30 . . . . ‘No, of course he's not denying that,’ [Birkett Communications Director Steve] Binder said.” Birkett’s Attendance at Pride Parade Stirs Controversy, Chicago Free Press, 7/31/2002 (http://www.outinstlouis.com/home/news.asp?articleid=2726)
|
||||||||||||
| Operation Dump Jim Ryan | |||||||||||||
| Visit our host site. | |||||||||||||