Former ComEd lobbyist John Hooker gets 18-month prison sentence for Madigan conspiracy

Former ComEd lobbyist John Hooker was sentenced Monday morning for falsifying ComEd’s books and records to hide a bribery scheme.

Hooker and three others were convicted in May 2023 of a conspiracy to illegally sway former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan.

ComEd’s former top lobbyist spent weeks in 2023 listening to the sound of his own voice, learning through secret FBI recordings how he sounded when he thought no one was listening.

The feds caught John Hooker boasting about a corrupt plan to sway then-Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan, calling it “clean for all of us.” He predicted that Madigan, if rebuffed, might conclude, “you’re not going to do something for me? I don’t have to do anything for you.”

Still, it wasn’t until Monday that Hooker finally faced a federal judge and the possibility of prison time for the conduct caught by the FBI. Hooker told U.S. District Judge Manish Shah, “I do not like the way I sound on those recordings.” They were “very humbling” to hear, he said.

But Shah concluded that Hooker participated in “secretive, sophisticated, criminal corruption.” And he said it was “imperative to disabuse anyone” of the notion that “this was just lobbying.”

Then he sentenced Hooker to 18 months in prison. It’s the first sentence to be handed down in a case that went to trial in 2023, ending with the convictions of four former top ComEd officials and lobbyists who plotted to illegally influence Madigan to benefit the utility.

“Lobbyists, corporate executives, public officials — whether in Springfield, Chicago or Washington, D.C. — should be reminded that there are still crimes on the books,” Shah said.

Hooker, 76, showed little reaction to the prison sentence. He left the Dirksen Federal Courthouse beside Jacqueline Jacobson, one of his defense attorneys. They both declined to speak to reporters on their way out the door.

Former ComEd lobbyist John Hooker chats with his attorney Jacqueline Jacobson as he walks out of the Dirksen Federal Courthouse on Monday after being sentenced to 18 months in prison. Zubaer Khan/ Chicago Sun-Times

Convicted along with Hooker in May 2023 was longtime Madigan confidant Michael McClain, ex-ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore, and onetime City Club President Jay Doherty. All three face sentencing in the coming weeks.

Madigan was convicted in part for his role in the conspiracy earlier this year and was sentenced to 7 ½ years in prison. The former speaker is due to surrender Oct. 13.

Hooker is now due in prison one day after that.

Because Hooker is the first of the four ComEd defendants to be sentenced, Monday’s hearing offered a preview of things to come for Hooker’s co-defendants. Lawyers representing McClain and Pramaggiore were spotted in the courtroom Monday.

The sentencings were long delayed because of machinations at the U.S. Supreme Court. The high court’s ruling in a separate corruption case led to the dismissal of a series of bribery counts in the ComEd case earlier this year.

That left the four defendants each convicted of conspiracy and four counts of falsifying books and records.

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