United States v. Mullins

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Beginning in 2008 Mullins served as Cook County’s Director of Public Affairs and Communications. At that time, contracts requiring the county to spend $25,000 or more had to be approved by its Board of Commissioners. Contracts that required the county to spend less than $25,000 only required the approval of the county’s purchasing agent. The government charged Mullins and co-defendants—vendors to whom the county awarded contracts—with manipulating the system. Mullins helped these vendors obtain payment under county service contracts, without the vendors having to complete any work, and in exchange they paid Mullins $34,748 in bribes. Jurors convicted him of four counts of wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. 1343, and four counts of bribery, section 666. The Seventh Circuit rejected Mullins’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence and claim of prosecutorial misconduct. View "United States v. Mullins" on Justia Law