Dec. 11, 2008

Don't Pardon George Ryan

National Review Online: An Illinois Congressman Tries To Stop Bush From Freeing A Corrupt Former Governor

  • Former Illinois Gov. George Ryan

    Former Illinois Gov. George Ryan  (AP (file))

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(National Review Online)  This column was written by David Freddoso.
Former Illinois governor George Ryan (R.) is living in a federal prison in western Indiana, convicted of racketeering, mail fraud, tax fraud, and lying to federal investigators.

Rep. Mark Kirk (R., Ill.) wants to make sure he stays there.

“George Ryan abused his public office and was convicted beyond a reasonable doubt by a jury,” Kirk tells National Review Online. “He should be released from prison the same way others are released - through the parole process. He should not be released as part of a political favor.”

Ryan, age 74, has served just 13 months out of his 78-month sentence. His troubles began 14 years ago with a fiery car crash. On Nov. 8, 1994, Ricardo Guzman was driving a semi-truck on Interstate 94 outside Milwaukee. As he drove, other truck drivers tried to warn Guzman on the CB that a metal assembly was dangling from the rear of his truck. Guzman, who barely spoke English, could not understand them. When the rear assembly finally came flying off and hit the pavement, it punctured the gas tank of a family’s minivan. The vehicle burst into flames, killing the six children inside and badly burning their parents, the Rev. Scott Willis and his wife, Janet.

Guzman and hundreds of other unqualified applicants had obtained their truck licenses in Illinois by bribing officials who worked under then-Secretary of State George Ryan. But that wasn’t clear at the time, and Ryan did a good job of keeping it that way: Months after Guzman’s accident, Ryan fired or transferred most of the employees in his office’s Inspector General department in order to quash the subsequent investigation.

The illegally licensed drivers had caused at least 55 accidents, including a 74-car pileup in California that killed two people and injured 51. As James Merriner recounts in his new political biography of Ryan, The Man Who Emptied Death Row, a total of eleven traffic deaths were attributable to the licenses fraudulently obtained from Ryan’s office.
Much of the bribe money was funneled into Ryan’s campaign coffers, and he was elected governor in 1998. It wasn’t until 2006 that Ryan was convicted on 18 federal counts, only some of which were related to the license scheme.

For years, Ryan had also been steering state business and leases to friends in exchange for cash and gifts, including trips to Jamaica, about which he lied to the FBI. Ryan spread his campaign’s funds among his family members. He ran his and his allies’ political campaigns on state time with state employees in state offices, and his aides shredded campaign records and wiped hard drives clean to cover it up. As Merriner recounts in detail, Ryan’s friends were selling favors out of his office, including low-digit license plates, in exchange for campaign contributions. They shook down companies that did or sought business with the state, demanding to be hired as “consultants” for five- and six-figure amounts in exchange for little or no work.

Media have described Ryan as “unrepentant.” He has never asked the Willis family for forgiveness or acknowledged his role in their children’s deaths. He has never apologized to the voters of Illinois, two-thirds of whom oppose a Ryan pardon today, according to a recent poll. Merriner writes that “when Ryan was sentenced to prison in 2006, his friends said he still did not think he had done anything wrong.”

After all, this was business as usual in Illinois, where a bipartisan coterie of crooked politicians known as “the Combine” has run both Chicago and Springfield for decades. U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, an outsider, has been raining on their parade in the Northern District of Illinois since his 2001 appointment. Fitzgerald’s prosecution not only of Ryan but also of other state and city officials from both parties has contributed mightily toward cleaning up a state whose politics remain filthy nonetheless.

Today, Ryan is seeking clemency from President Bush, and two of Illinois’s top Democrats, Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D.), and Sen. Dick Durbin (D.), support the idea. Durbin has written to President Bush that Ryan “has lost his state pension benefits and a commutation will not restore them. He would emerge from prison facing economic uncertainty at an advanced stage of his life. For those who would argue that a commutation makes light of his crimes, it is clear that he has already paid a significant price and will continue to do so as long as he lives.”

Kirk, a moderate Republican from Chicago’s northern suburbs, scoffs at Durbin’s language, which makes Ryan sound like a financially troubled Social Security recipient, rather than a criminal who is only in prison at such an advanced age because he succeeded in covering up crimes for so long. Kirk is so eager to prevent a commutation of Ryan’s sentence that he wrote his own letter, urging the president not to grant clemency.

Kirk wrote: “If we are to stop corruption at the highest levels and restore the public’s trust, then this prisoner should serve as similar criminals who cannot hope that political favor can adjust their sentence. Today, as U.S. Attorney Fitzgerald investigates and prosecutes further allegations of public corruption in Springfield, I urge you not to embolden the corrupt and criminal by pardoning or commuting George Ryan’s sentence.”

Kirk acknowledges that such an anti-pardon letter from a congressman is rare, but he tells NRO that it was necessary under the circumstances.

“A pardon for George Ryan would be like firing Eliot Ness,” Kirk says. “It would send a chilling message to Fitzgerald: You may work hundreds of hours on the case, you may go up against the best defense that Chicago machine money can buy, but we’ll just let it all go. . . . Knowing the president and how few pardons he’s granted, I hoped we could tip the balance and stop this one from happening.”

By David Freddoso
Reprinted with permission from National Review Online.



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by skeeter4419 December 13, 2008 5:17 PM EST
this recommendation by the current Governor to commute Ryan''s sentence probably won''t hold much water. Maybe he could get bush to make them cell mates.
Reply to this comment
by timothyone-2009 December 13, 2008 1:41 PM EST
The only people who could end pardons are the very ones who might use it and consider it their ace in the hole. The Republicans do a wholesale pardon after every administration, with nary a word of protest spoken. As long as the rich rule there will be no justice, no peace, and no true Democratic rule. Political bribery should be a capital offense with a harsh minimum sentence. After seeing a few dozen Congresspeople go to prison with long inescapable sentences we may begin to see America become the great nation we were once reputed to be. Political corruption is corruption at the very soul of the nation. As long as it is tolerated we have no hope for long term survival. The current system will destroy the world, in one way or another.
Reply to this comment
by tibu987 December 12, 2008 8:18 PM EST

No pardon for Ryan. Period.
Reply to this comment
by presjfk December 12, 2008 7:41 PM EST
Why would Bush pardon this guy?
Reply to this comment
by hober_mallow December 12, 2008 1:58 PM EST
I grew up in Illinois: The best government money can buy.

I''m surprised no one has mentioned the inestimable former Illinois Secretary of State Paul Powell.

After Powell''s death, over $300,000 in small bills was found in shoeboxes in his house.
Reply to this comment
by citizenusa-2009 December 12, 2008 12:44 PM EST
I PRAY that some day the headline will read: DON''T PARDON GEORGE BUSH...Cheney dies in Federal Prison at the hands of a Father who lost his son in Iraq.
Reply to this comment
by smb127 December 12, 2008 1:14 AM EST
Not only should this man NOT be pardoned but the whole notion of Presidential pardons should be abolished. NOW!!!
Reply to this comment
by usclimey December 11, 2008 8:01 PM EST
When everybody knows about "The Combine," why do the people of Illinois keep on voting charter members into power? Look at Drago now. Keep the bast@rd in for his full sentence.
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