• Illinois
    • Local
    • East Central Illinois
    • Capital Area
    • West Central Illinois
    • Metro-East
    • Southern Illinois
  • Missouri
    • Northeastern Missouri
    • East Central Missouri
    • St. Louis Metro
    • Southeast Missouri
  • Weather
  • National
  • World
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • OPINION
  • Radio
    • Stations
      • Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
      • Revolution Radio
    • Network Schedule
    • Podcasts
      • Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
      • Heartland Newsfeed Podcast Network
      • Revolution Radio
    • Friends of the Stations
  • Features
    • Classifieds
      • Job Board
    • Live Video
    • Newsfeeds
    • Puzzles & More
  • Calendar
  • Advertising
    • Why Advertise With Us?
    • Digital/Web
    • Radio and Podcasts
May 13, 2024 12:49 pm CDT
Heartland Newsfeed
  • Illinois
    • Local
    • East Central Illinois
    • Capital Area
    • West Central Illinois
    • Metro-East
    • Southern Illinois
  • Missouri
    • Northeastern Missouri
    • East Central Missouri
    • St. Louis Metro
    • Southeast Missouri
  • Weather
  • National
  • World
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • OPINION
  • Radio
    • Stations
      • Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
      • Revolution Radio
    • Network Schedule
    • Podcasts
      • Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
      • Heartland Newsfeed Podcast Network
      • Revolution Radio
    • Friends of the Stations
  • Features
    • Classifieds
      • Job Board
    • Live Video
    • Newsfeeds
    • Puzzles & More
  • Calendar
  • Advertising
    • Why Advertise With Us?
    • Digital/Web
    • Radio and Podcasts
No Result
View All Result
Plugin Install : Cart Icon need WooCommerce plugin to be installed.
Heartland Newsfeed
No Result
View All Result

McCann to represent himself in corruption trial

McCann fires court-appointed attorneys on trial’s scheduled start date

Hannah Meisel, Capitol News Illinois by Hannah Meisel, Capitol News Illinois
November 27, 2023 - Updated on November 28, 2023
in Illinois
Reading Time: 5 mins read
Donate
0

SPRINGFIELD (Capitol News Illinois) — Monday was supposed to have been the first day in the weeklong federal corruption trial of former Republican state Sen. Sam McCann, who allegedly misused more than $200,000 in campaign funds for personal expenses.

A pull-down projector screen in the Springfield courtroom of U.S. District Judge Colleen Lawless stood ready to play host to prosecutors’ presentation prepared to accompany their opening statements.

But in a bizarre turn of events as Lawless took the bench on Monday morning, McCann presented a pair of last-minute motions to represent himself – ditching his latest court-appointed attorneys – and delay the trial for at least the 13th time.

“I’m not a professional…but I care about the outcome,” McCann told the judge, acknowledging he isn’t an attorney, nor did he finish college.

Lawless chided McCann for not actually answering her question of whether he was familiar with the federal rules of evidence, later adding that a “trained lawyer” would represent him far better than any defense case he’d put on as a pro se litigant.

“I think it is unwise for you to represent yourself in this proceeding,” Lawless said before ultimately approving both of McCann’s motions and rescheduling the trial for the week of Feb. 5. 

During a final pretrial conference last week, Lawless had already approved McCann’s request to have the case heard in a bench trial setting, instead of a trial by jury.

After the hourlong court session Monday morning, McCann briefly explained to reporters outside the courthouse that he’d come to his decision over the long Thanksgiving holiday weekend, when he’d hoped “a better defense” would materialize from his court-appointed attorneys.

“I’ve been counting on other people to do everything they could do for me,” McCann said. “And that hasn’t worked out. And so now I’m going to do everything I can do. And we’ll let the good Lord take care of the rest.”

Sam McCann
HANNAH MEISEL/CAPITOL NEWS ILLINOIS PHOTO VIA TWITTER Former Illinois state Sen. and 2018 Conservative Party gubernatorial nominee William “Sam” McCann spoke to the media after his hearing Monday in federal court.

McCann and his ‘scheme to defraud’

McCann had been out of public office for more than two years in February 2021 when a federal grand jury indicted him on seven counts of wire fraud and one count each of money laundering and tax evasion.

Read more: Former GOP state Senator, Conservative Party candidate for governor indicted

The president of his own construction company, McCann narrowly defeated popular Democratic state Sen. Deanna Demuzio in the Republican wave of 2010. He held that seat for eight years, stepping away from it only to run as a third-party candidate for governor in 2018.

McCann had established the “Conservative Party” that summer, leaving the GOP he believed wasn’t conservative enough under then-Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner. Two years earlier, Rauner had spent millions backing an opponent to McCann in 2016, but organized labor came through for McCann, who held onto his seat.

In 2018, organized labor again intervened on McCann’s behalf, seeking to siphon Republican votes away from Rauner, who was easily defeated anyway by Democrat JB Pritzker. McCann ultimately received 4.2 percent of the November 2018 vote, or nearly 193,000 votes.

But throughout the two political battles – through the spring of 2020, according to federal prosecutors – McCann had allegedly been mismanaging some of the more than $5 million that had been donated to his various political accounts.

According to state records, McCann’s construction businesses saw their corporate statuses dissolved by the secretary of state’s office in late 2013 for failure to pay taxes and file required annual reports. The federal Internal Revenue Service also began looking into McCann’s businesses, hitting him with hundreds of thousands of dollars in tax liens.

Against the backdrop of business troubles, the feds allege that beginning in 2015, McCann “engaged in a scheme to convert more than $200,000 in contributions and donations made to his campaign committees to pay himself and make personal purchases,” according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s office at the time of his indictment. 

McCann also allegedly concealed his fraud “from donors, the public, the Illinois State Board of Elections and law enforcement authorities,” according to the feds.

He allegedly used some of that money to pay his mortgage, personal debts, buy personal vehicles and even pay himself.

In addition to spending roughly $60,000 on a 2017 Ford Expedition and a 2018 Ford F-250 pickup truck – along with the fuel and insurance costs for the vehicles – McCann also allegedly purchased two recreational vehicles with campaign funds.

He sought to turn those RVs into a business opportunity, according to the feds, establishing an account with an RV rental business in Ohio to rent out the vehicles. He’d put that account under the name “Sam McCann.”

At that same company, McCann made another account as a potential renter under the name “William McCann” – his legal first name – and proceeded to “rent” the vehicles to himself, paid for by campaign funds. 

McCann also allegedly spent $50,000 in campaign funds on credit card payments related to a family vacation in Colorado and charges from Apple iTunes, Amazon, a skeet and trap club, Cabela’s, Scheels, Best Buy, a gun store, and cash withdrawals.

Shortly after being indicted, McCann claimed he was unemployed and had very little money to his name, while facing tens of thousands of dollars in debt.

His bleak financial picture earned him a court-appointed attorney, though he’s now been through five such attorneys, including those he ditched on Monday morning.

But McCann told reporters he wasn’t nervous about representing himself, saying “God’s got this,” and insisting he’s innocent.

“It’s obvious to me that no one is going to take this seriously, especially an appointed – I guess you get what you pay for,” he said. 

McCann’s campaign account was dissolved by the Illinois State Board of Elections in August after he didn’t file required paperwork for more than two years. Though his account has a little more than $32,000 in it, the letter notifying McCann of the account dissolution noted he owes the Board of Elections $9,250 in fines. 

The campaign account for McCann’s Conservative Party of Illinois, meanwhile, has a balance of $15.66, though it hasn’t filed its required quarterly reports since January 2022.

Hannah Meisel, Capitol News Illinois
Website | + posts

Hannah Meisel is a full-time state government and politics reporter for Capitol News Illinois.

She previously covered state government and politics for NPR Illinois and Illinois Public Radio, The Daily Line, and Law360, as well as a temporary stint for Rich Miller's CapitolFax in 2018.

Hannah also holds a journalism degree from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where she was a reporter and managing editor at The Daily Illini. After college, she interned at NPR in Washington, D.C.

In 2020, the Washington Post named Hannah one of the best political reporters in Illinois, and in 2021, she won the Illinois News Broadcasters Association's Crystal Mic award for best small market radio reporter in the state. Hannah is a former host of WSEC-TV's weekly political roundtable program CapitolView and makes regular appearances on TV and radio stations across the state in addition to her role as a panelist and producer for NPR Illinois' State Week in Review.

  • Hannah Meisel, Capitol News Illinois
    https://www.heartlandnewsfeed.com/author/hmeisel/
    Judge denies McCann request for home confinement
  • Hannah Meisel, Capitol News Illinois
    https://www.heartlandnewsfeed.com/author/hmeisel/
    Former Sen. Sam McCann pleads guilty to corruption charges
  • Hannah Meisel, Capitol News Illinois
    https://www.heartlandnewsfeed.com/author/hmeisel/
    ONGOING COVERAGE: McCann misuse of campaign funds
  • Hannah Meisel, Capitol News Illinois
    https://www.heartlandnewsfeed.com/author/hmeisel/
    Illinois COVID-19 disaster proclamation ends in May

Like this:

Like Loading...
Tags: Bruce RaunerColleen LawlessConservative Party of IllinoisDeanna Demuzioillinois newsIllinois State Board of ElectionsInternal Revenue ServiceJB PritzkerSam McCann

ON AIR NOW

COMING UP

Categories

OPERATING HOURS

Online all the time
Office Hours: 8 AM to 8 PM

Sitemap | Published Press | Privacy Policy
Staff Email | Independent Media

Buy traffic for your website
Change privacy settings

LIVE WEBSITE VIEWERS

Some rights reserved 2017-2024 by Heartland Newsfeed, a Heartland Media Group of Central Illinois media property. Content published by Heartland Newsfeed staff is covered by the BipCot NoGov license. This allows use and re-use by anyone except governments and government agents. License on record. JNews theme designed and developed by Jegtheme.

Discover more from Heartland Newsfeed

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

No Result
View All Result
  • #1764258 (no title)
  • #1727566 (no title)
  • #1724373 (no title)
  • #1764535 (no title)
  • #1764288 (no title)
  • #1764345 (no title)
  • #1764419 (no title)
  • About Heartland Newsfeed
  • Account
  • Ads
  • Advertising
  • Classifieds
  • Closures and Cancellations Form
  • Community Calendar
  • Contact Us
  • Digital/Web
  • eMail Confirmation
  • eMail Unsubscribe
  • Ethics, corrections and fact checking
  • Evvnt Community Calendar
  • Friends of the Stations
  • Heartland Newsfeed Live
  • HLNF BipCot No-Gov License
  • Independent Media
  • Job Board
  • Mobile Confirmation
  • Mobile Unsubscribe
  • Network Schedule
  • Newsfeeds
  • Opinion
  • Podcasts
  • Privacy Policy
  • Puzzles & More
  • Radio
  • Radio and Podcasts
  • Regional Weather
  • Road Conditions
  • Sports
  • Support Us
  • VIDEO: Illinois Gubernatorial Forum – September 20, 2018
  • Viewdeos Test Page
  • Why Advertise With Us?
  • Write For Us

Some rights reserved 2017-2023 by Heartland Newsfeed, a subsidiary partnership by Heartland Internet Media Networks and Heartland Media Group of Central Illinois LLC. Content published by Heartland Newsfeed staff is covered by the BipCot NoGov license. This allows use and re-use by anyone except governments and government agents. License on record. JNews theme designed and developed by Jegtheme.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
%d