From the Chicago Sun-Times
Feds: Ryan was at center of corruption
January 5, 2005
BY STEVE WARMBIR AND TIM NOVAK Staff Reporters
Year after year, the muck of dirty deals swirled around former Gov. George Ryan.
Now, he's been dunked into the thick of it. Thanks in large part to the man he
once treated like a son, onetime Republican golden boy Scott Fawell. Federal prosecutors
on Tuesday wielded detail after detail in a court filing to portray Ryan as the
controlling force behind systemic corruption that benefited himself, his family
and his friends, including businessman Larry Warner. The feds have never alleged
Ryan extorted cash for specific favors. He simply took care of his friends over
the years, the feds contend. Prosecutors' allegations Fawell -- Ryan's former
right-hand man, his keeper of the master list of favors, his detail guy -- has
talked and talked with investigators, and the most details yet have emerged of
Ryan's alleged involvement in the nitty gritty of the day-to-day corruption that
allegedly infected his office. Ryan allegedly ordered up a state lease for one
pal, Harry Klein, who played host to Ryan in Jamaica every January. Ryan even
got steamed when he didn't get to break the news to Klein that the deal had gone
through, prosecutors allege. Ryan, the feds say, had details rewritten in one
state contract to help Warner. And Ryan allegedly smoothed the way for a sweetheart
state lease for Warner, who later griped he should have never done it. Not because
Warner didn't make enough money. But because it was "too good a deal"
and could raise uncomfortable questions for Warner. Attorneys for Ryan and Warner
on Tuesday blasted the new details in the 114-page government court filing. Ryan's
lawyers fought hard in court to keep the filing secret until the trial for both
men starts in March. They argued the prosecution's version could bias potential
jurors. "George Ryan vigorously denies the hearsay allegations and innuendo
that make up the government's one-sided submission," said Bradley Lerman,
an attorney for Ryan. "We are confident that the government's case will not
withstand the scrutiny of a jury, and we look forward to our day in court."
"It's all a pack of lies," Warner's prominent attorney, Edward Genson,
said about the government's filing. Before, in public testimony and filings, Ryan
was portrayed at times as on the sidelines of corruption, allowing it to continue
through his silence. Now, he's calling out the plays, according to the latest
government filing. 'Let's help Larry if we can' Ryan gave the run of his secretary
of state's office to his lobbyist pals, the feds allege. Warner was so plugged
in he knew ahead of Ryan himself when plum, low-level license plate numbers were
available. Warner got private state information on contracts before the bidders
themselves. And he allegedly flaunted his power. At one Ryan fund-raiser, Warner,
near a group of secretary of state employees, bragged to a businessman who had
hired him that he could get "any of these people fired tomorrow," the
feds allege. Warner had good cigars and cheap cigars on him, and offered a good
one to the businessman. The cheap ones were for secretary of state employees,
explained Warner, who made millions from state contracts. If there was any question
as to Warner's power, Ryan made clear who should get what favors. "Let's
help Larry if we can," Ryan, in substance, supposedly told Fawell many times,
the feds contend. In the early 1990s, Fawell became concerned about Warner's role
in some of the sweetheart deals involving leases for secretary of state offices.
If Warner's role became known, Fawell worried about the political fallout. The
government filing contends that "Warner responded that no one would find
out about Warner's involvement because there were various layers of paperwork
and Warner's name was buried in the various layers." "Ryan was present
for this conversation," prosecutors allege in their filing. Fawell allegedly
carried out the orders of Ryan, his political mentor. Even when Fawell had been
sentenced to 61/2 years behind bars in 2003 for using state employees to do political
work for Ryan, Fawell balked at talking to the feds. It was the jail time that
Fawell's fiancee faced for a conviction in the corruption probe that prompted
Fawell to flip and help prosecutors last year. In the government's filing, and
with Fawell's perspective, prosecutors assert that Ryan not only benefited from
state workers doing political work for him on the public's dime but had a "cavalier"
attitude toward it. Ryan even instructed Fawell to siphon some money from campaign
spending by Phil Gramm in 1996 and give some to Ryan's children. Ryan had endorsed
Gramm for president and was working on Gramm's Illinois campaign. Feds: Ryan's
relatives gained too The Ryan family benefitted in other ways as well, mainly
from Ryan's lobbyist pals, the feds allege. One lobbying friend allegedly paid
$2,200 for Disney World accommodations for the family of one of Ryan's daughters.
The same pal, Ron Swanson, who has pleaded guilty in the corruption probe, gave
Ryan and his wife plenty of goodies: a St. John's dress, a limoge box, Cuban cigars,
golf bags and ornate figurines. Swanson got nice perks too, including a parking
space at the State Capitol, even though he was a lobbyist. Warner helped the Ryan
family too. He fronted money to Ryan to have his roof fixed, shelled out money
to help a Ryan daughter with a flooding problem and invested $6,000 in the cigar
business of Ryan's son. Ryan may have paid part of the money for the roof back,
the feds say. When outside investigators began looking into what was going on
in Ryan's office, even at a low level, Ryan bristled, the feds claim. At one point,
the Cook County state's attorney at the time, Jack O'Malley, and his public integrity
chief, Patrick Quinn, were talking to Ryan about bringing more prosecutions of
crooked employees in the secretary of state's office. Ryan had a blunt reply.
"F--- you, Jack, these are my guys," Ryan allegedly said, according
to Quinn. O'Malley, though, did not recall the comment, prosecutors said. THE
CAST OF CHARACTERS These are a few of the many people involved in the case of
the United States of America vs. Larry Warner and George H. Ryan Sr. GEORGE RYAN
Former governor and secretary of state charged with racketeering for allegedly
letting his friends cash in on state contracts while providing cash benefits to
Ryan and his family. Ryan left office two years ago, and is living on his state
pension worth more than $185,000 a year, the richest for any retired Illinois
governor. SCOTT FAWELL Ryan's former top aide, Fawell is serving a six-year prison
sentence for corruption. Often described as having a father-son relationship with
Ryan, Fawell is squealing on his former boss to save his fiancee, Andrea Coutretsis,
from prison. DONALD UDSTUEN One of Ryan's closest advisers and a top honcho at
the Illinois State Medical Society, Udstuen pleaded guilty more than two years
ago, admitting he took more than $300,000 in kickbacks on state contracts issued
under Ryan. Udstuen is cooperating with federal authorities, hoping it will keep
him out of prison. LARRY WARNER Ryan's co-defendant in the racketeering case,
Warner was also a close Ryan adviser who allegedly demanded money from companies
seeking business with the secretary of state's office. He allegedly split the
cash with Udstuen and Ryan. ARTHUR "RON'' SWANSON Once served with Ryan in
the state Legislature, Swanson became fast friends with Ryan. Swanson allegedly
landed several lobbying contracts with Ryan's help, including a deal at McCormick
Place that required him to do little or no work. Swanson pleaded guilty last spring,
admitting he lied to a federal grand jury about the job. HARRY KLEIN A currency
exchange mogul who opened his Jamaica home to Ryan and Fawell, Klein allegedly
concocted a scheme to make it look like they were paying to stay there. Ryan allegedly
ordered his staff to give Klein a lucrative, unbreakable lease for a driver's
license facility in South Holland. Ryan also agreed to boost fees at currency
exchanges. ROGER KILEY Mayor Daley's former chief of staff is now a partner at
the law firm of Mayer Brown Rowe & Maw, the exclusive lobbyist for McCormick
Place and Navy Pier. While Fawell was running McCormick Place, he asked Kiley
to hire Ron Swanson as a lobbyist, fulfilling a request from Ryan, prosecutors
say. Swanson allegedly did little or no work under the deal that cost taxpayers
$5,000 a month. ROBERT KJELLANDER A top state Republican Party leader who ran
President Bush's Midwestern campaign. Kjellander was a lobbyist for IBM in the
early 1990s when Udstuen and Warner helped the company win a lucrative computer
contract with Ryan's office. ANTHONY DESANTIS The owner of the Drury Lane Theaters
wanted to donate $2,000 to Ryan's campaign for governor, but didn't want the contributions
publicly disclosed. Ryan allegedly told DeSantis to issue four checks each worth
$500 payable to Ryan, his wife, his son and daughter-in-law. The checks were cashed,
prosecutors claim, but Ryan didn't disclose the gifts on his state ethics statements
until four years later, amid the federal investigation. FEDS: RYAN'S FAMILY SHARED
IN THE GOODIES These are some of the gifts George Ryan and his family allegedly
got from his close advisers, Lawrence Warner and Arthur "Ron'' Swanson, who
the feds say profited by peddling their influence in the secretary of state's
office under Ryan. Ryan's daughter, Lynda Fairman, got $8,326 from Warner after
a flooding problem. Fairman's husband, Michael, got a $5,000 loan from Warner
but never paid it back. Warner gave Ryan the money for a new roof on his home.
Ryan may have repaid part of it. Ryan's son got a $6,000 investment for his cigar
shop from Warner. Comguard, a company owned by Ryan's brother, Tom, got $145,000
in loans from Warner, but $41,500 was never repaid. Comguard got contracts to
monitor prisoners on electronic detention. Ryan got a $3,185 check from Warner
for his daughter's wedding expenses. Ryan filled in parts of the check. One Ryan
daughter got $2,200 from Swanson to cover accommodations at Disney World. Ryan
and his wife got a free stay at Swanson's condo in Cancun. Ryan got gambling money
from Swanson during a trip to Lake Tahoe. Ryan's wife got a $550 gift from Swanson,
who wrote it off on his taxes as a business expense. Ryan and his wife got numerous
undisclosed gifts from Swanson, including a St. John's dress, limoge box, Cuban
cigars, Lladro figurines, golf bags and cuff links. And those friends, including
Warner, took care of Ryan and his family.