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Life Lessons

The Illinois Review Board has recommended the reinstatement of the former Deputy Chief of Staff of disgraced Governor George Ryan.

The petitioner was placed on interim suspension in 2002 and later consented to disbarment. He was convicted on a plea of guilty to mail fraud and testified as a cooperating witness at the Ryan trial.

The board was impressed with his efforts to turn his life around:

 Besides his own rehabilitation,  Petitioner has gone to great lengths to ensure that others, future lawyers in  particular, do not end up in a similar position.

In 2007, Petitioner was contacted by Henry Shea, a law school  professor and former AUSA. In the years since, the two men have done more than  two dozen presentations together, mostly to law students at schools across the  country, but also to others such as those attending a government ethics  conference held by the City of Austin, Texas and students interested in  government service attending Minnesota’s Boys State. Through questioning by  Professor Shea and questions from his audience, Petitioner tells his story, the  consequences that resulted, and the lessons he has learned from this experience.  He sums up those lessons in three rules: When you are told concerning something  questionable that “everyone is doing it,” or it is necessary to compete or that  no one will know, this is a red flag and another perspective is needed. Be  prepared to be scrutinized in everything you do and act in a way that you will  be able to explain your actions and be proud of them. If you continue to  encounter moral dilemmas in your professional life, walk away and get another  job. As a corollary he advises his audience to tell the truth, as he recognizes  that this is what has given him a second chance.

The Administrator points out that approximately half of these  presentations were done to fulfill Petitioner’s probation requirements. We do  not consider this to diminish the service that Petitioner has provided. His  sentence required him to perform community service. It did not require him, to  paraphrase AUSA Collins, to educate others as to how good people could go wrong  in a personally embarrassing way. Petitioner has continued to make these  presentations long after the early termination of his probation, and intends to  continue to do them in the future. Other than two $1,000 honorariums, he and  Professor Shea have received no payment except for their expenses.

Petitioner’s presentations with Professor Shea have not been  his only efforts to prevent conduct similar to what he engaged in. At the time  of his hearing, Petitioner had been employed by the American Road &  Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) for ten years and had become its  Senior Vice President of Strategic Initiatives, Managing Director of the  Contractors Division and a registered lobbyist on ARTBA?s government relations  team. In those roles, Petitioner has been responsible for raising awareness of  ethics issues within the transportation industry. ARTBA conducts a Young  Executives Development Program which brings the organization’s younger “rising  stars” to Washington, D.C. to learn about ARTBA and current issues concerning  federal policy and transportation. As part of that program, Petitioner moderates  a program he began with a former Department of Transportation Inspector General  where the ethical and legal issues facing their industry and the importance of  adopting ethics and compliance policies at their companies and how to implement  them are discussed. Petitioner has also worked with a group from the Federal  Highway Administration to put together a model ethics and compliance program for  the businesses that are members of ARTBA. In 2010, at the request of the  Department of Transportation’s Inspector General’s Office, he arranged a panel  session of ARTBA members to present the industry’s perspective on ethics and  compliance issues at a conference attended by approximately 400 people.

(Mike Frisch)