Crooked Politics in Northwest Indiana
By Jerry Davich
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About this ebook
Defined by a tangled web of deception for more than a century, Northwest Indiana's political culture involved secret handshakes, tapped phone calls, backroom deals and murder.
Found submerged in his car with a rock on the gas pedal, city official Babe Lopez's execution-style murder rocked East Chicago. Shot and killed at a political fundraiser, power broker Jay Given's murder occurred while four hundred guests mingled in a neighboring room. Former Lake Station mayor Keith Soderquist stole thousands of dollars from his reelection campaign and the city's food pantry account to gamble at local casinos. Author Jerry Davich explores the hidden political scandals and highly publicized court cases of public servants once sworn to serve and protect.
Jerry Davich
Jerry Davich was born and raised in Gary, Indiana. Since 2006, he has worked as a metro columnist with the Gary News-Tribune. He has won more than forty state and national awards from various journalism organizations for his work, including many columns on the Steel City.
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Crooked Politics in Northwest Indiana - Jerry Davich
Lois.
Introduction
Public corruption: A crime involving a breach of public trust and/or abuse of position by federal, state or local officials and their private sector accomplices.
Steel mill barons and other entrepreneurs converged at the southern tip of Lake Michigan for good reason at the turn of the twentieth century. It seemed an ideal location to build factories along the lakeshore, to house workers in nearby towns, to produce endless tons of steel and, of course, to make a tidy profit for stockholders. Plus, it was the perfect location in proximity to Chicago for its big-city perks while avoiding the Windy City’s blowhard politics. The plan worked to perfection, except for that last part.
Chicago’s infamous reputation for shady elected officials, rampant public corruption and rough-and-tumble politics soon seeped over the state line into—appropriately named—East Chicago, Indiana. The two cities shared not only a name but also an identity that stretched from Illinois into Indiana like a pickpocket’s hand into an innocent bystander’s purse.
In no time, public corruption became a familiar buzz phrase in East Chicago, as well as in other Lake County cities, such as Gary and Hammond. This hardscrabble, urbanized area in the northern part of the county created a kind of Bermuda Triangle for crooked politics. Unfortunately, an ungodly amount of taxpayer dollars disappeared there over several decades. It was never recovered.
Elected officeholders and public servants who were sworn to serve, protect and uphold our laws instead conducted backroom deals with street thugs, white-collar criminals and deep-pocketed businessmen. Some of these elected officials got caught. Others slipped through the cracks of the U.S. justice system. At least one high-profile former mayor escaped conviction and jail time, but his legacy has been imprisoned in shame ever since he left office.
Some historians believe the true beginning of public corruption in Lake County took place with John Dillinger—the infamous Depression-era gangster—and his notorious escape from the Lake County Jail in Crown Point. His chummy relationship with certain law enforcement officials in 1934 was captured in a now iconic photo of a grinning Dillinger arm in arm with Lake County prosecuting attorney Robert Estill. Other historians go back even further to Chicago mobster Al Capone and his gang, which had a heavy influence in this region’s crooked politics. Still, other observers trace our region’s corruption to its earliest agricultural days before big industry became its cash cow.
Crooked Politics in Northwest Indiana traces our region’s deep history with public corruption while fast-forwarding to modern-day convictions. By doing so, this book is similar to my previous book, Lost Gary, Indiana, bridging our past to our present while offering a peek at our future.
As I write these words, former Lake Station mayor Keith Soderquist still awaits sentencing for his public corruption conviction, which is outlined in a subsequent chapter in this book. Will Soderquist’s conviction and sentencing serve as a warning to other elected officials currently in office who may be involved in similar crimes at this very moment? Probably not, as history has taught us.
Greed, ego and arrogance often trump doing the right thing when no one is watching, which is the very definition of ethics.
Why do some of these officeholders gamble with such high stakes knowing full well they could be caught with their hands in the public’s kitty? This intriguing issue also is examined in this book from several different perspectives, not only from a jaded newspaper columnist who has learned to trust no one, especially politicians.
This book’s sources include county officials, former police chiefs, local historians, defense attorneys, political consultants, research librarians, political science professors, veteran journalists and current elected officials. Together, they weave a tapestry of insights, anecdotes and possible explanations as to why this region—and especially Lake County—has been poisoned by this scourge of crime.
Other invited sources make a solid case in defense of this region’s elected officeholders, citing a reputation that has been overhyped and unfairly exaggerated, they claim. Some of the public servants who have been convicted of criminal acts didn’t deserve to be dragged through the mud of their predecessors’ dirty deeds, according to their supporters. They have been pinched by the feds for relatively minor offenses, compared to other white-collar criminals and corporate thieves in this state, they insist.
In recent years, several indictments have been issued by this area’s U.S. district attorney, followed by splashy newspaper headlines, laborious court hearings and eventual jail time for public servants who insist they have done nothing wrong. Until, that is, they later admit their guilt in an attempt to reduce their looming prison time.
Some of these corrupt politicians—or pols
(another glossary term), as they are known—have hidden behind the Bible after being charged. Others have claimed they were wrongly marginalized in this region, so they did what they had to do to climb the ladder of success. Many of them obviously knew they were committing serious crimes, yet after being apprehended by authorities, they defended their actions through delusion or became intoxicated by bottomless rationalizations.
Many of the old-world Europeans, including my ancestors, who immigrated to this region during the early part of the last century, felt that anything was negotiable in life. Anything. This bargain basement attitude oozed into their workplace under the wink-and-nod rule: You do something for me and I do something for you.
Because everything seemed to be negotiable in life, this evolved into negotiating for, say, city jobs and work in the political world. Back in the day, these old-school pols may not have readily understood the word nepotism, but they clearly lived by it and flourished through it.
This included my own grandfather George Davich, a Gary official whose infamous reputation of accepting bribes, kickbacks and dirty money tarnished our family’s name. It also brought him power, albeit briefly, which is the true aphrodisiac for most officeholders who turn corrupt.
They simply, and stupidly, can’t say no to their lust for power, regardless of its price.