EDWARD VRDOLYAK

'Edward Robert Vrdolyak' (IPA pronunciation: , born 1937) is a noted Chicago lawyer and politician. He was a powerful longtime Chicago Alderman and also head of the Cook County Democratic Party before running unsuccessfully for Mayor of Chicago as a Republican. He is of Croatian descent.
Vrdolyak at one point was studying for the Catholic priesthood. He graduated from the University of Chicago law school in 1963 (after having to sit out one year while defending himself on an Attempted Murder charge) and began a law career in private practice, specializing in personal injury cases. He also became actively involved in Chicago politics. In 1968 he was elected as Democratic Committeeman from Chicago's 10th Ward in the South Deering area, a position he held until 1988. In 1971 he was elected Alderman, and he served as President of the City Council from 1977 to 1983.
Vrdolyak earned the nickname "Fast Eddie" because of his ability to get his programs pushed through the city council. He is noted for leading the Chicago city council in opposing Mayor Harold Washington from 1983 to 1987. Some 29 aldermen were generally aligned with Vrdolyak, while 21 were aligned with Washington, giving Vrdolyak's faction a majority sufficient to pass measures but not to override a mayoral veto. This deadlock was characterised as the "Council Wars".
Washington's second term went more smoothly, and Vrdolyak's political clout decreased after he left the Chicago Democratic party. On November 25 1987, Mayor Washington suddenly died of a heart attack in his office. David Orr served as mayor for 8 days until the city council chose Eugene Sawyer to serve as mayor. In 1988, Vrdolyak was the Republican candidate for Circuit Court Clerk of Cook County, losing to Aurelia Pucinski. In 1989, Vrdolyak ran for mayor of Chicago and won the Republican primary as a write-in candidate, but then lost the general election to Democrat Richard M. Daley.
In the years since his election defeat, Vrdolyak has returned to his law practice, which has been a source of controversy. Some of Vrdolyak's clients allegedly have ties to the Mafia, and Vrdolyak has been criticized for the large legal fees he has received from the Chicago suburbs of Cicero and Berwyn.
Some have alleged that Vrdolyak was the "boss" of the Cicero Republican Party machine while Betty Loren-Maltese and Ramiro Gonzalez were committeemen.
In September 2005, the ''Chicago Tribune'' reported that Vrdolyak had agreed to a 30-day suspension of his law license for allegedly double-billing clients he represented in sexual harassment cases.
It was recently found out that Vrdolyak had assisted a construction company in purchasing land in the city of Cicero, where he was a town attorney. Doing this, ultimately led to ethics violations and a conflict of interest as town lawyers are not supposed to be partners with any people doing business with a city.
On May 10 2007, a grand jury handed down an indictment against Vrdolyak in another case.[1] Vrdolyak pleaded not guilty on May 17, 2007 to the fraud and kickback scheme in a real estate deal.[2] The case centers around property that was sold by the Chicago Medical School. The leading witness against Vrdolyak is Stuart Levine, a partner in the scheme.

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References


1. Vrdolyak indicted in real estate case ''Chicago Tribune'', May 10, 2007.
2. Vrdolyak denies U.S. charges ''Chicago Tribune'', May 18, 2007.

External links



Vrdolyak's Career Timeline

Vrdolyak Law Firm

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