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Friday, Jul 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Depending on the circumstances, I may not be blogging on Monday. I could be out of wireless range. We’ll see.

* This one’s for Rod


We pay our debts sometime

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Friday afternoon video slam

Friday, Jul 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Oof


…Adding… Because it’s late Friday afternoon, let’s have some more brutal fun. From Dave Clarkin’s Facebook page

BREAKING NEWS: Mark Kirk’s campaign releases eyewitness photo of near-death boating accident: http://tinyurl.com/26w2unj

Heh.

  34 Comments      


Another day, another lie

Friday, Jul 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Scott Lee Cohen has yet another explanation for why he quit the lt. governor’s race

“I was forced off the ticket by the Democratic Party,” he said Tuesday, noting this didn’t happen prior to the primary because the party didn’t believe he had a chance in the world of winning in April.

“When I won, they turned everything upside down because I’m not a career politicians, and because I stood for honesty and integrity. That’s something the Democratic Party does not like.

“You laugh, but it’s the truth,” he added.

I think somebody laughed because it was an enormous lie.

  42 Comments      


Question of the day

Friday, Jul 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* One of the least-commented Questions of the Day in memory was this past Tuesday

Say something positive about both Pat Quinn and Bill Brady. No snark, please. And include both in your answers.

* The Question: Why was this question so difficult to answer?

  67 Comments      


More on the special election

Friday, Jul 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Jim Allen of the Chicago Board of Elections explains what’s going on behind the scenes in the case that’s attempting to force a special election for US Senate. As we’ve already discussed, the appellate bench has ruled that the trial judge can order a special election and that federal laws outweigh state concerns. From an Allen e-mail…

Technically, the new opinion is silent on the question of whether a special primary must be conducted, leaving the District Court to resolve the process of determining who the candidates would be for the Special Election for the last weeks of the current term. However, in District Court this week, the attorneys and Judge John Grady were contemplating an order that would have the parties select the nominees by Aug. 19. They also discussed how such an order might have any independent candidates who qualify for the general election ballot also appear on the special election contest just above it.

Under this scenario, the Nov. 2 ballot would have voters first make a selection for the unexpired portion of the current U.S. Senate term, and then, directly below that, make a selection for the full six-year term.

The trial judge has moved the next status hearing up to Monday.

* In other federal-level political news, our quote of the day goes to Republican congressional candidate Adam Kinzinger, whose claims about his military service record were recently slammed by his Democratic opponent’s campaign…

“You say you honor veterans — until a veteran gets in your way and threatens you politically,” Kinzinger says.

The background…

Kinzinger, 32, who jumped into politics at age 20 to win a McLean County board seat and is challenging Rep. Debbie Halvorson (D-Ill.), answered the call of Sept. 11, 2001, and enlisted in the Air Force. When his campaign website went up last year, a staffer wrote that reserve officer Kinzinger “now serves as a pilot with the Air Force Special Operations Command.” Indeed, at the time Kinzinger was on Special Ops duty. It was a temporary assignment, but after he returned to civilian life, the wording was not changed. When a complaint surfaced that Kinzinger was trying to make Special Ops seem like a permanent posting, the wording on the website was changed to “has served” and added his work in other units.

Kinzinger says that produced online chatter and e-mails alleging he inflated his record. Kinzinger, with 140 combat missions over Afghanistan and Iraq and duty ferrying wounded warriors out of Afghanistan, understandably takes umbrage at attempts to disparage his service. This allegation is as flimsy a political charge as I’ve seen in five decades in journalism.

I’ve seen flimsier, but I get the point. Unlike the very serious and perplexing Kirk problem, this is a matter of semantics, and, unlike Kirk, there doesn’t seem to be a pattern of untruths here. Debbie Halvorson’s campaign deserves all the heat it gets for this one unless they can prove otherwise.

More from Kinzinger in a recent SouthtownStar editorial

“Going from an honorable military servant to a fraud … they’re trying to place that seed in people’s minds, and there’s no reason to do it. It’s absolutely wrong,” Kinzinger said.

We agree. Kinzinger’s military record is impressive, it’s solid, and it deserves respect, not denigration.

Halvorson should battle for the issues she believes in, not drag a worthy opponent through the muck and mire.

* Related…

* Republican Kirk says he would support Kagan: In his announcement in support of Kagan Friday morning, Kirk quoted Alexander Hamilton in the Federalist papers: “To what purpose then require the cooperation of the Senate? I answer that the necessity of their concurrence would have a powerful, though in general a silent operation. It would be an excellent check upon a spirit of favoritism in the president, would tend generally to prevent the appointment of unfit characters from family connection, from personal attachment, and from a view to popularity.”

* Kirk Joins Giannoulias in Support of Kagan: The nomination was too careful, though, for the Green Party’s U.S. Senate candidate, LeAlan Jones. In a statement, the Jones campaign criticized the administration for “playing it ’safe’” with the Kagan pick, and expressed concern the president has yet to nominate an African American to the Supreme Court.

* Dems hit GOP candidates for votes on unemployment extension

* Krugman Vs. Kirk On The Federal Debt

* How Controversy-Plagued Candidates Are Winning The Money Race

* ADDED: DCCC buys time in 40 districts : The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has invested approximately $28 million worth of television air time to defend vulnerable incumbents running for reelection this fall, a senior Democratic official confirmed to POLITICO… Illinois Reps. Debbie Halvorson and Bill Foster [are two recipients of the funds].

  31 Comments      


No new Illinois jobs from first high-speed rail project?

Friday, Jul 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* On Tuesday, Gov. Pat Quinn’s office sent out a press release touting all the new jobs created with a $98 million dollar high-speed rail project…

Governor Pat Quinn today announced that construction will begin in early September on the Chicago to St. Louis high-speed rail route. An agreement between the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) and Union Pacific Railroad will allow upgrades to be made on an initial 90-mile segment of Union Pacific track to prepare it for high-speed rail. The $98 million dollar project is funded through the federal American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) and will support an estimated 900 jobs.

“Today’s announcement will create hundreds of jobs and is a major step towards making high-speed rail a reality in Illinois,” said Governor Quinn. “When the corridor is completed, travelers will be able to move from Chicago to St. Louis in under four hours, making Illinois the high-speed rail hub of the Midwest.”

Trouble is, no jobs may be created at all, particularly for Illinoisans

All of a $98.3 million federal grant for high-speed rail will go to the Union Pacific Railroad, and there are no assurances that anyone in Illinois will get a job as a result, under an agreement between the railroad and the Illinois Department of Transportation. […]

But Union Pacific will procure all labor under the contract with IDOT announced this week, and the labor will be provided under the railroad’s existing labor agreements. The contract also says the $98.3 million will go to the railroad to install concrete ties and new rail on an 89-mile segment between Alton and Springfield and between the capital city and Lincoln, and the railroad alone will own the improvements. […]

“I think it’s pretty transparent that that they’re talking about people who are currently gainfully employed,” said [Brad Schaive, business manager for Laborers Local 477 in Springfield], who worked as a Union Pacific conductor in the 1990s. “They’ll bring in their own rail crews — it’s almost all automated by machine now. You’ll see a lot of out-of-state people come in and put the rail in and leave.”

Schaive said his office hasn’t received any calls from anyone interested in hiring workers for high-speed rail construction.

Oy.

* And speaking of jobs, Pat Quinn’s running mate Sheila Simon visited Rock Island to tout a successful local business that’s doing well in the recession. But she heard something she may not have expected

Evans Manufacturing knows about the tough times in Illinois. The longtime Rock Island business is bouncing back from the recession. Orders are up 50% from last year, but the state’s financial instability and political mishaps are turning off other business growth.

“Some people are hesitating to make investments, make strong commitments, because of this situation,” said Stephanie Acri, president of Evans Manufacturing. “The sooner it becomes stable, the better off I think we all are.”

Above all else, businesses want stability. Quinn’s administration and Illinois politics in general are not in any way stable. Ms. Simon needs to take that message back to the governor.

* Also speaking of jobs, the federally funded state jobs program might not be all it’s cracked up to be

On Tuesday, Gov. Pat Quinn announced that more than 22,000 people have secured jobs through the Put Illinois to Work employment program.

Count LaWanda Banks among them.

Through the program, the resident of Chicago’s West Lawndale neighborhood worked five weeks for ABM Security, logging more than 190 hours.

Now, if she could just get paid.

The state isn’t paying these workers for four weeks after they get hired, which seems odd considering many of them are in desperate need for employment. The woman in this story had some additional paperwork problems and her first check arrived about a week late. She also didn’t receive a weekly bus pass promised by the program. She could no longer afford the commute, she said, so she quit.

* Back to Gov. Quinn, who has been touting government actions instead of making many campaign appearances of late. His use of the state plane for campaign-related purposes is an issue that won’t go away

Despite making two campaign-related stops during a trip to southern Illinois earlier this week, Gov. Pat Quinn Thursday brushed aside suggestions that he reimburse taxpayers for the use of the state plane.

“That’s totally ridiculous,” Quinn said during an interview on WFLD television.

On Monday, the Chicago Democrat flew on the state plane for an official government event with Southern Illinois University officials. Later, however, he met with supporters at a restaurant in Marion where Williamson County Democratic Party officials said fundraising activity for Quinn’s gubernatorial bid against Republican Bill Brady was discussed.

Quinn also visited the Williamson County Democratic Party headquarters, where he shook hands with precinct workers and gave a short speech.

Illinois Republican Party Chairman Pat Brady, who is not related to Bill Brady, said Quinn should not mix state business with campaign events.

“I think it needs to be looked into,” Brady said. “It just baffles me.”

* Related and a roundup…

* Quinn’s Office: No Medicaid Boost Equals Cuts: Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn’s office is, for the first time, acknowledging that the state may not get $750 million from Washington for the neediest families in Illinois. The so-called FMAP money — Federal Medical Assistance Percentage – has been tied up on Capitol Hill for months as states lobbied the federal government to extend the increased Medicaid reimbursements set to expire Dec. 31.

* Will lawmakers take more furlough days?: Steve Brown, spokesman for the Illinois House Democrats, said he was unaware if any of their members plan to. But, he said, House Speaker Michael Madigan has said he’ll talk to Quinn and lawmakers about the idea. Senate Republican spokesman Mark Gordon he doesn’t know of others, either.

* Study Aims to Find Best Way to Break Great Lakes-Mississippi River Link

* Quinn coming to Moline Friday to make funding announcement

* Metro East transit funding announced

* Money headed to Galesburg’s Amtrack station to renovate facility

* Quincy to get $6 million in state money to build ‘transit/Amtrak intermodal terminal’

* Quinn Defends Use of State Plane

* Quinn Mixing Bill Signings With Campaigning?

* State wants private firm to run Illinois Lottery, boost sales

* Field of Nightmares - the 2010 Gov Races

* Daley: “I’ve Never Had to do Fundraising”

* Higgins leading Mussman in 56th campaign contributions

* GOP has fundraising edge in Decatur-area races that are expected to be expensive

* State law: Newspapers’ public notices to appear online: Starting in December 2012, Illinois newspapers that print public notices — such as public hearing announcements or dates and details of real estate auctions — will also have to post them on PublicNoticeIllinois.com.

* Controversial new law aims to protect pedestrians: Illinois motorists must come to a complete stop for pedestrians in crosswalks, under legislation signed by Gov. Pat Quinn on Thursday. The measure requires a full stop even if the crosswalk doesn’t have a stop sign or traffic light.

* Coroner fees could rise under new state law

* Illinois drivers buckling up more than ever: DOT

* Quinn signs 2 pet-related bills: One of the laws signed Thursday requires the addition of a bitter flavor to antifreeze and engine coolant sold in Illinois. The other prohibits the private ownership of primates as pets.

* Jacobs bill to increase radiation safety measures signed into law

* How State Lawmakers Could Lead On Climate Change

* Budget boost probably won’t restore Collinsville pre-k

* SJ-R: FOIA process needs to move at faster pace

  26 Comments      


Morning Shorts

Friday, Jul 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Officer Bailey Funeral Today

* Mourners pay tribute to cop

The funeral home, at 7838 S. Cottage Grove, was a couple of blocks from Bailey’s home, where he — in uniform and fresh off guard duty at Mayor Daley’s home — was gunned down while tending to his new car, the target of carjackers at 6:30 a.m. Sunday.

And it’s the same venue in May that was the site of the wake for Police Officer Thomas Wortham IV, killed during the attempted theft of his motorcycle outside his parents’ South Side home. “How sick is it to say that we’re here again for the exact same thing?” said Wortham’s sister, Sandra. “This is ridiculous. If anybody feels safe in this city, they’re just not connected to what’s going on.”

Bailey, the third Chicago officer shot to death in two months, was weeks from retirement.

* Michael Bailey remembered as a calm, caring colleague

* Wake Held for Slain Officer, Reward Rises to $70k

* 25 men charged for drug, weapons crimes

* FBI, Chicago Police Team Up for Weapons Investigation

* Local home sales up for 12 straight months

In the nine-county Chicago region, sales of single-family homes and condominiums rose more than 27% to 9,085, compared to 7,140 homes sold in June 2009, according to a news release Thursday from the Illinois Assn. of Realtors.

In the city of Chicago, sales similarly jumped 27.5% to 2,526, compared to 1,981 homes sold in June 2009, the 10th consecutive month of higher year-over-year sales for the city.

* Chicago neighborhoods foundering in wave of foreclosures

Why? Because Belmont Cragin and many other neighborhoods north and northwest of the Loop suffered the untimely misfortune of tumbling headlong into the abyss of foreclosure too late in the crisis, after most of the funding had been committed to the early subprime loan fatalities of 2006 and 2007. In the last two years, foreclosure filings in Belmont Cragin exceeded 1,600, tripling the combined number of filings reported in the neighborhood in 2006 and 2007.

* Redevelopment begins to stir in northwest suburbs

* Community Contacts helps low income residents save energy, income

* 400 CPS teachers to get the ax this week

But according to Alicia Winckler, the district’s chief human capital officer, a second round of layoffs affecting staff at about 400 schools that return after Labor Day is expected to claim 1,000 classroom teachers and “a few hundred” school clerks and assistants. Those staffers will get notices in two to three weeks.

Once projected as high as 2,700 teachers, Huberman recently said layoffs could exceed 1,200. Winckler on Wednesday said layoffs of teachers and support personnel “could exceed 1,500.” But counting staff already canned, it appears closer to 2,000.

* 600 being laid off at Chicago Public Schools

* Sun-Times: If teachers freeze pay, reverse some layoffs

* Tribune: $100,000 teachers?

* Union to protest today at Hyatt hotels

* Daley has little to say about 2nd conviction for Sanchez

“You know him because every storm, he was out there. During the summer and during the winter, he was out there. That’s the Al Sanchez I know. He worked very hard. He’s very proud that he’s Hispanic. That’s my Al Sanchez,” the mayor said.

* Alleged torture victim sues Daley, Burge

Exactly 24 years ago Thursday, Michael Tillman says, he was beaten, burned, smothered and threatened with death in a police interview room as Calumet Area detectives working for then-Chicago Police Lt. Jon Burge tried to coerce him to confess to the rape and murder of a South Side woman.

Tillman’s eyes welled with tears as he sat with his daughter and sister while his attorneys announced the filing of a federal lawsuit against Burge, Chicago Mayor Richard Daley and other Chicago police detectives alleging that they conspired to cover up the torture and abuse of Tillman and others.

“As they speak, I’m reliving this in my mind, all that happened to me, all that was done to me, to my daughter,” Tillman said. “I missed my daughter. She wasn’t able to walk at that time, and she needed me there.”

Tillman was freed from prison in January after spending more than 23 years in prison for the 1986 rape and murder of Betty Howard after special prosecutors declined to retry him, saying there was little evidence he committed the crime and ample evidence that his confession was coerced.

* Man sues over alleged abuse by Chicago police

* West Nile showing up in area mosquitoes

* Conditions ripe for West Nile comeback

* Cook County Sees Spike In Rabid Bat Encounters

* Suspicious envelope at federal courthouse deemed safe

* Mayor urges council to approve third Wal-Mart

“If Mayor Daley does it, [you’d say], ‘The boss does it. He just like rams it down.’. . .Your headline would say, ‘Look at Mayor Daley. He doesn’t care about the people. He doesn’t listen to anybody.’ I know what you’re gonna do. I’m a ping-pong ball every day for you,” [Finance Committee Chairman Edward M. Burke] said.

* Daley Wants City Council to Sign Off on 3rd Wal-Mart

* [Chicago] Park District trying to get out of long-term $10-a-year lease

* Ethics complaint against Palatine mayor dismissed

Kostka, who served on the village council from 1997 to 2005, requested the commission assemble after seeing an advertisement by Schwantz’s employer in a recent Palatine Area Chamber of Commerce publication. Von Sydow’s Moving & Storage Inc. invited anyone with moving needs to call Schwantz, dubbing him both the sales manager and mayor of Palatine.

* Southtown Star: Tinley Park wise to proceed slowly on tax break bid

* New Hoffman Estates police station puts a focus on green

* [Du Page] Water Commission vacancies filling up

Under the commission’s structure, the DuPage County Board chairman selects six of the Lake Michigan water agency’s commissioners and its chairman, while municipal mayors and village presidents, divided by County Board districts, choose the other six commissioners. Suess was selected Monday by the mayors of Wheaton and village presidents of Glen Ellyn and Glendale Heights.

The commission’s board has one other vacancy. Longtime Commissioner Liz Chaplin, a county appointee who lives near Downers Grove, resigned last month as her term expired.

* Downers Grove police officer charged with misconduct

Officer Randall J. Caudill Jr., 34, is charged with four counts of official misconduct. Caudill, an 8.5-year police officer assigned to the patrol division, has been placed on paid administrative leave.

* Downers Grove police officer charged with felony misconduct

* Kane debate: Coroner or medical examiner

* Kane finance panel: Stop overspending

The judiciary, circuit clerk, state’s attorney and sheriff departments were highlighted Thursday as the departments with the most overspending concerns.

* Kendall denies refund to developer

* Carpenters’ strike stalls major projects throughout Q-C

* Aide to New U of I President Defends $195K Salary

* Manufacturing helps stabilize Macon County employment picture

* Zorn: Fate of a dotcom daily paper remains a work in progress

The decision of Advance Publications Inc., Ann Arbor News’ parent company, to close the struggling paper and replace it with the leaner, bloggier AnnArbor.com looked like a sharp turn on a rocky road to an all-digital future for print news.

Twelve months later, though, it looks more like a small fork. Through the newspaper business remains in transition, the funeral knells have quieted and struggling publications are riding the improving economy out of bankruptcy and into the black.

* Kate Sullivan to join WBBM-Channel 2

* Glenn Beck Calls Brian Urlacher a “Neo Nazi”

* ADDED: Worthy Causes: St. Joseph’s Home for Boys in Port-au-Prince, Haiti

  5 Comments      


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Friday, Jul 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Don’t believe a word he says, Part 6,493

Friday, Jul 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My Sun-Times column

Back when Rod Blagojevich was being impeached, he announced that he would refuse to testify or even put on a defense at his state Senate trial.

He said the system had been rigged against him. If the trial rules were fair, Blagojevich claimed at the time, he would’ve called White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. and President Obama’s adviser Valerie Jarrett to the stand. They would, he said, testify under oath that he did nothing wrong when he was caught breaking all sorts of laws.

If the Senate’s rules were more like a federal court’s, Blagojevich added, he would be happy to put on a full, aggressive defense and testify.

His argument was bogus from the start. The state Senate’s impeachment trial rules were copied almost completely from the U.S. Senate’s rules used when President Bill Clinton was impeached. Clinton won his trial. But Blagojevich said those very same rules were unfair to him.

Countless cable TV bobbleheads nodded in agreement with Blagojevich back in those days. They thrilled at his bravado at challenging what he claimed was an illegal legislative coup d’etat. And they all believed him when he emphatically declared that when it came time for his criminal trial, he would definitely testify.

Fast-forward a year and a half, and Blagojevich and his attorneys are confirming that they had issued subpoenas to — surprise! — Rahm Emanuel, Rep. Jackson and Valerie Jarrett.

And, of course, Blagojevich was continuing to say that he couldn’t wait to testify.

“I can’t wait to get on there, swear on the holy Bible to tell the whole truth and to begin to give clarification and explanations and confront my accusers and confront those who are lying,” he said last month.

Once again, the cable TV nitwits went into overdrive, declaring that the subpoenas were a major embarrassment to the Obama administration and that Blagojevich could very well undermine the president himself. Blagojevich was even roundly cheered by some rightist types for what they were certain was his potential to bring down Obama.

What just about everyone involved in all this hype failed to see is that Rod Blagojevich is a liar. Always has been. His lies were legion and quite well-documented before he was even arrested. And he has been lying ever since that fateful morning in December 2008 when the FBI came knocking at his door.

There was no inherent bias in those Senate trial rules. He lied about wanting to call Rahm Emanuel, Valerie Jarrett or anybody else to the stand in his own defense. He was just creating a diversion that he knew the national media would fall for whenever he trotted out those names.

The FBI surveillance tapes clearly show he was furious about being left behind by his fellow Chicagoans when Obama was elected president.

“The whole world’s passing me by and I’m stuck in this f - - - - - - job as governor now. Everybody’s passing me by and I’m stuck,” he was recorded as saying.

Bringing up those names again and again was his vengeance for being passed over. Nothing more.

We now know he has been lying about testifying at his criminal trial as well. He didn’t even put on a defense. That’s because he has no defense. Trying to prove his innocence would only prove just the opposite when the prosecutors had their turn at him.

I can only hope that everyone who has enabled this clown since his arrest will learn one lesson. Don’t ever believe a word he says.

…Adding… Roundup…

* Kadner: Millions feel betrayed, but that’s just tough

* Dawson: The truth comes out: There is no defense for Rod Blagojevich

* Daily Herald: What can we learn from Blagojevich?

* Pantagraph: Blank spot in hall of governors just fine with us

* Blagojevich trial closings set for Monday

* Closing arguments set in Blagojevich trial

* Blagojevich trial: Plans laid for closing arguments; Sam Adam Jr. to close for ex-governor

* Instructions to Guide Blagojevich Jurors

* Judge weighs jurors’ privacy

* Blagojevich trial: Newspapers argue to have juror names made public; Judge to rule by Monday

* Bloggers, Jilted Voters Would Contact Jurors, Zagel Says

* Judge unlikely to budge on names of jurors

* Judge Zagel: “Unpersuaded” by motions to drop charges, but will hold off on decision

* Judge doubtful on acquittal motion, but will rule later

* Blagojevich Attorney is “Big Believer in Repetition”, Says Judge

* Judge wants closings in one day; raps Blago lawyer for ‘repetition’

  26 Comments      


*** UPDATED x2 *** Kirk busted again - Defends himself

Friday, Jul 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

*** UPDATE 1 *** From the DSCC…

IS ANYTHING THAT COMES OUT OF MARK KIRK’S MOUTH THE TRUTH?

Kirk’s Embellishments, Lies, And Misstatements Could Fill A Phone Book

Illinois Voters Deserve Someone Who They Can Trust To Tell The Truth

Republican Congressman Mark Kirk, already under fire for embellishing details of his military and teaching records, found himself on the front page of the Chicago Tribune this morning, in an startling piece calling into question even further Kirk’s uncomfortable relationship with the truth. As the paper reported, Kirk repeatedly speaks of an incident in his youth, when a boat he was piloting capsized in Lake Michigan and was subsequently rescued by the Coast Guard. However, Kirk’s account of the story has changed over time and has been “embellished” frequently, to the point where Kirk’s account contradicts those of other bystanders and even contradicts the facts of medical science.

“Kirk’s embellishments, lies, and misstatements could fill a phone book,” said Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Communications Director Eric Schultz. “Mark Kirk may be on the wrong side of nearly every issue but he also has an aversion to telling the truth. The people of Illinois deserve a Senator who they can trust to always be honest.”

*** UPDATE 2 *** From the Giannoulias campaign…

In light of today’s story in Chicago Tribune regarding Mark Kirk’s latest embellishment, Alexi for Illinois spokesman Matt McGrath released the following statement:

“Now Congressman Kirk has been caught in another embellishment — this time an apparent fish story that was his basis for going into public service in the first place. Whether he’s lying about his military record or claiming to be a fiscal conservative when his votes helped triple the national debt, one thing is clear: Congressman Kirk apparently can’t tell the truth about anything.”

[ *** End Of Updates *** ]

* I highly recommend that you read the entire Tribune article about Congressman Mark Kirk today. He has obviously embellished his core story about why he decided to pursue a career in public service. Kirk has claimed from the time he first ran for Congress that being saved from drowning by the Coast Guard when he was a teenager changed his entire life.

It’s not a comfortable read at all, but it’s an absolute must-read. Excerpts…

In the most recent instance, the 50-year-old North Shore congressman told a boating magazine that he stood on his overturned sailboat and watched the sun set, when in fact he was rescued in midafternoon on June 15, 1976.

Kirk also has said he swam up to a mile in 42-degree water and that he was rescued with his body temperature hovering two degrees from death. Those declarations are questionable, based on interviews with an eyewitness and medical experts.

Those declarations aren’t just “questionable,” they sound impossible.

And he doesn’t just mention the darkness. It’s an important element to his story…

In the story, Kirk twice refers to being on the water as darkness fell.

“I lost the halyard and ended up watching the sunset standing on the upside-down boat with only a ski belt on,” Kirk said, according to the quote in the story and the recording Landry played for the Tribune.

Kirk also noted a teenager on shore saw him struggling with the sailboat and called for help. “It was unusual because Sunfishes come home at night and this one wasn’t,” Kirk told the magazine.

And this is the most telling aspect of the Tribune piece. Kirk has to retract when he realizes the interview was recorded…

Pressed on the timing of the rescue, Kirk told the Tribune the magazine reporter must have made a mistake. Informed the interview was recorded, Kirk then said he did not watch the sunset but denied embellishing his story.

I’d be interested to know how much time transpired between those two statements. Seconds? Days?

Anyway, go read the whole thing.

…Adding… I just noticed a private e-mail from someone high up in the Kirk campaign. He claims statements and information the campaign provided weren’t included. Stay tuned.

…Adding more… Apparently, Kirk told the Tribune that he helped his friend swim to shore after the boat first capsized. He was on a private beach and decided he needed to go back out to the boat to avoid getting into trouble (he was 16, so that’s understandable) and that’s where the problems started.

Kirk has posted a statement on his campaign website

“Over 30 years ago, when I was 16 years old, I nearly drowned in Lake Michigan and was rescued by the Coast Guard. It was a life-changing experience. Multiple statements by eyewitnesses confirm my rescue. It’s unfortunate that some reporters had a pre-conceived premise that led to a ridiculous story about an event that is indisputable. Voters will see this story for what it is and I will continue to focus on the issues that matter and how I will serve the people of Illinois.”

Statement by his mother…

In the afternoon of June 15, 1976, I received a phone call from Evanston Hospital letting me know that my son, Mark, was in the Emergency Room. He had been rescued by the Coast Guard in Lake Michigan and was being treated for hypothermia.

When I got to Evanston Hospital, I saw my son in a hospital bed under a special warming blanket. His lips were blue. I had never seen that before. I remember his body temperature was in the 80s and they were slowly bringing him back up.

I stayed there, watching his color return to his lips and body. Later in the day, he was discharged and sent home. Mark’s father, Frank, was working downtown at the time and took an afternoon Metra to meet us. I remember Frank was very upset, saying again and again to Mark: You never leave the boat.

As a mother, this was a traumatic experience. It was a life-changing event for Mark and for our entire family.

Statement by his friend who was out on the boat with him…

In the early afternoon of June 15, 1976, I left Kenilworth Beach in a sunfish sailboat with my high school best friend, Mark Kirk, for an afternoon sail in Lake Michigan.

I learned a lot that day – about the unpredictability of weather and about the fragility of life.

During our sail, the weather turned and we encountered what I would describe as a squall. At some point, our sailboat capsized and we entered the cold water. Mark acted quickly to stabilize the boat and brought us to safety at a beach along the Winnetka shore.

Mark was concerned for my safety, and after warming up on the beach he urged me to walk home while he would get the sunfish back to Kenilworth.

I protested but Mark refused to let me go with him. I walked home and Mark took care of the boat.

A couple of hours later, I was in the Emergency Room at Evanston Hospital. I saw Mark under warming blankets – I remember his body temperature being roughly 89 degrees at the time. It was about an hour after he arrived in the Emergency Room and he was speaking gibberish.

It was a life-changing experience. At that moment, I realized we are not immortal – life is fragile at any age.

Later on, I remember recounting the experience with Mark. He told me how he thought he was going to die and had given up just before his rescue.

This was a major event in both of our lives – one I will never forget.

Statement about hypothermia…

Centers for Disease Control: Moderate hypothermia is diagnosed when the core body temperature is 82-90 degrees Fahrenheit.

Princeton University: 86-82 degrees – Symptoms: Muscle rigidity; semiconscious; stupor; loss of awareness of others; pulse and respiration rate decrease; possible heart fibrillation.

Statement by Dr. Jay Alexander

It is completely preposterous for anyone to say they can prove or disprove what Mark Kirk’s body temperature was on June 15, 1976 without knowing detailed statistics, including Mr. Kirk’s exact body mass index at the time, his exact time in the water, the exact temperature of the water, the exact weight and type of clothing Mr. Kirk was wearing, the exact wind speeds and air temperatures throughout the experience and the vigor and duration of any activity conducted by Mr. Kirk in the water. Body temperature reflects a balance between heat production and heat loss both of which would be almost impossible to predict without a detailed knowledge of all the factors and events that took place that day and short of having all of these facts certain or an official medical document from 1976, there’s no credible scientist or physician who could speak with certainty on this matter.

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