FIFTH DIVISION
June 30, 2006
No. 1-03-1589
DEAN R. BAUER, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Appeal from the
) Circuit Court of
v. ) Cook County
)
STATE EMPLOYEES= RETIREMENT SYSTEM OF )
ILLINOIS, BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE STATE )
EMPLOYEES= RETIREMENT SYSTEM OF ILLINOIS, ) Honorable
and MICHAEL L. MORY, Executive Secretary of the State ) Julia M. Nowicki,
Employees= Retirement System, ) Judge Presiding.
)
Defendants-Appellants. )
JUSTICE O=MARA FROSSARD delivered the opinion of the court:
Dean Bauer, former Inspector General of the Illinois Secretary of State=s office (SOS or
Secretary=s office or office of the Secretary of State), pleaded guilty to one count of obstruction of
justice B tampering with a witness, a federal felony, in conjunction with a federal investigation into
the licensing process at the Secretary's office known as AOperation Safe Road.@ 18 U.S.C. ''
1512(b)(2)(B), 2 (2000)). In the instant case, the issue is whether Bauer=s conviction for obstructing
the federal investigation into corruption in the office of the Secretary of State was a Afelony relating
to or arising out of or in connection with his service@ as Inspector General for the Secretary of State
and, thus, required forfeiture of his retirement benefits under section 14-149 of the Illinois Pension
Code. 40 ILCS 5/14-149 (West 2002). In resolving this issue, we are not required to decide whether
Bauer properly investigated corruption in the Secretary=s office while he served as Inspector
General.
In his plea of guilty, Bauer admitted that he attempted to persuade Janet Carlson, his former
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secretary from the Secretary of State=s office, to destroy and conceal documents subpoenaed by a
grand jury during the federal investigation into corruption in the licensing process at the Secretary of
State=s office, so the documents Awould not be available to the grand jury.@ Upon retirement Bauer
received a monthly pension of $991.32 based on eight years of service to the State of Illinois.
Following Bauer=s conviction, the Board of Trustees of the State Employees= Retirement System of
Illinois (Board) terminated his retirement and health benefits because he had been convicted of a
felony Arelating to or arising out of or in connection with his service as an employee@ under section
14-149 of the Illinois Pension Code (Code). 40 ILCS 5/14-149 (West 2002). Bauer filed a
complaint for administrative review against defendants the Board, the State Employees= Retirement
System of Illinois (SERS), and Michael L. Mory, executive secretary of SERS, challenging the
decision to terminate his benefits. The trial court reversed the Board=s decision, and defendants
appeal.
BACKGROUND
Bauer served as Inspector General for the Secretary=s office from January 1992 to January
1999. The Department of the Inspector General (IG Department) was required to perform certain
functions for the SOS, including investigation of allegations of wrongdoing by SOS personnel. The
IG Department was authorized to refer matters to a state or federal prosecuting authority for further
investigation and possible prosecution if an investigation indicated an SOS employee had engaged in
criminal conduct.
During the spring of 1994, while Bauer was Inspector General, the IG Department was
investigating SOS employee Marion Seibel, from the McCook licensing facility, for fraudulently
selling commercial driver=s licenses. Bauer was aware of this investigation. In November 1994, a
truck driven by Ricardo Guzman was involved in a fatal accident in Wisconsin killing six children
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from the Willis family. IG Agent Russell Sonneveld undertook a preliminary investigation, which
revealed Guzman had obtained his commercial driver=s license at the McCook facility where Seibel
was working. On November 15, 1994, Sonneveld told Bauer the results of his preliminary
investigation and requested approval from Bauer to open a formal investigation into the Guzman
incident and travel to Wisconsin to consult with authorities. Bauer instructed Sonneveld not to open
an investigation but, rather, to let the Wisconsin authorities investigate.
The same day Bauer instructed Sonneveld not to open an investigation into the Guzman
incident, Bauer called Willie Thompson, chief deputy director of the SOS Department of Police.
During that conversation, Bauer told Thompson that: (1) Bauer was Aactively pursuing@ a case
regarding the Guzman incident; (2) SOS officials should immediately forward any information or
inquiries regarding the Guzman incident directly to Bauer; (3) there was a strong possibility that
Guzman obtained his license illegally; and (4) SOS officials should keep the Guzman incident as
confidential as possible.
On November 16, 1994, the day after Bauer called Thompson regarding Guzman, Thompson
sent a memo to his superior, Jack Peccararo, the Director of the SOS Department of Police. The
memo outlined what Bauer told Thompson during their conversation, including Bauer=s comments
regarding the IG Department=s Aactive@ investigation of the Guzman incident. Thompson copied
Bauer on this memo. The Thompson memo would later become part of the subject matter of Bauer=s
federal guilty plea to obstruction of justice, in that the memo was one of the documents Bauer
attempted to have his former secretary Janet Carlson conceal or destroy.
During the spring of 1998, federal investigators began AOperation Safe Road,@ an
investigation into corruption in the licensing process at the Secretary=s office. At the point in time
when this investigation began, Bauer was serving as Inspector General for the Secretary=s office.
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Regarding that investigation, a federal grand jury issued a subpoena to the custodian of records at
the IG Department. The subpoena sought case files and documents relating to the IG Department=s
investigation into the illegal issuance of commercial driver=s licenses at various SOS facilities. The
record custodian consulted Bauer, who was still serving as Inspector General, regarding the
requested documents. In November 1998, the custodian produced documents for the grand jury in
response to the subpoena.
On October 7, 1999, approximately nine months after Bauer left his position as Inspector
General and while he was working for the Department of Transportation, Bauer spoke by telephone
with his former secretary, SOS employee Janet Carlson. Unknown to Bauer, Carlson was
cooperating with federal prosecutors from Operation Safe Road regarding the driver=s license
scandal at the SOS, and the conversation was being recorded. In February 2000, federal prosecutors
filed a six-count indictment against Bauer in federal district court resulting from the Operation Safe
Road investigation of corruption in the Secretary=s office. The indictment included a count for
obstruction of justice-tampering with a witness based on the telephone conversation between
Carlson and Bauer. In April 2001, Bauer pleaded guilty to only the count of obstruction of justice
based upon the October 7, 1999, telephone conversation he had with his former secretary, Carlson.
In exchange for Bauer=s plea of guilty, the remaining counts of the indictment were dismissed.
Bauer admitted in his plea of guilty that Carlson told him during the telephone conversation
that she had come across Asensitive documents.@ According to Bauer=s plea of guilty, the documents
Bauer and Carlson discussed were responsive to the 1998 federal grand jury subpoena and
Aincluded, among others, a Bauer-related memo referring to the Guzman investigation and the
likelihood that Guzman obtained his license fraudulently at the McCook facility.@ Carlson informed
Bauer that Bauer had been copied on the memo and told him the memo caught her attention because
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of Astuff in the newspapers.@ Bauer further admitted in his plea of guilty that after Carlson asked him
what to do with the documents, Bauer suggested to her that she dispose of the documents, Aintending
by that suggestion to corruptly persuade [Carlson] to destroy or otherwise conceal the documents the
best she could so that they would not be available to the grand jury.@
On April 27, 2001, pursuant to the plea agreement, the federal district court entered a
judgment of conviction against Bauer for obstruction of justice.
After Bauer=s plea of guilty, the State Employees= Retirement System of Illinois (SERS)
notified Bauer that as a result of his felony conviction his retirement and health insurance benefits
would be terminated. The SERS Executive Committee conducted a hearing at which Bauer
submitted a position statement, exhibits, stipulations to testimony, and the argument of his counsel.
The Executive Committee neither requested nor called any witnesses. In January 2002, after the
hearing, the Executive Committee issued a ARecommendation@ concluding that Bauer was convicted
of a felony relating to or arising out of or in connection with his service as a state employee and that
his pension benefits should thus be forfeited pursuant to section 14-149 of the Illinois Pension Code,
except to the extent that his retirement and health insurance benefits should be extended through
January 31, 2002.
In its recommendation, the Executive Committee noted that counsel for Bauer contended
during the hearing that section 14-149 of the Code did not apply to Bauer's case because the
obstruction of justice was committed by Bauer on October 7, 1999, nine months after he left his
position as Inspector General. The Executive Committee rejected this argument, concluding that the
fact that Bauer did not obstruct justice until after he left the office of the Secretary of State Adoes not
mean that it was not connected to his employment. To the contrary, the conduct for which he was
convicted was directly and inherently related to his actions while in State service.@ In support of this
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conclusion, the Executive Committee placed Bauer=s obstruction of justice felony in context as
follows:
AMr. Bauer pled guilty to a felony alleging that he encouraged the
disposal or destruction of certain documentation related to an
ongoing investigation by the federal government. That
documentation and evidence dealt with facts and circumstances
which occurred while Mr. Bauer was employed as the Inspector
General for the Secretary of State=s Office.
*** the Plea Agreement clearly show[s] that there was a
memorandum created while [Bauer] was the Inspector General of the
Office of the Secretary of State. This memorandum dealt with the
Ricardo Guzman incident and was one of the documents which Mr.
Bauer suggested be disposed of. ***
***
*** [T]he actions of [Bauer] were clearly related to
documents and evidence dealing with his service as the Inspector
General of the Office of the Secretary of State. The felony conviction
of Mr. Bauer related to his efforts to obstruct justice by having
evidence and documentation developed during his service as the
Inspector General of the State of Illinois disposed of in order to
protect parties.@
On January 22, 2002, the Board of Trustees of the State Employees= Retirement System of
Illinois adopted the Executive Committee=s recommendation to terminate Bauer=s pension and health
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benefits under section 14-149 of the Code. On January 31, 2002, Bauer filed his complaint for
administrative review seeking reversal of the Board=s decision by the circuit court.
On May 5, 2003, the circuit court concluded the de novo standard was the appropriate
standard of review for the interpretation of section 14-149 of the Code and reversed the Board=s
decision. In support of its reversal of the Board=s termination of pension benefits, the court stated in
relevant part:
AThe SERS= broad interpretation of the statutory language
remains unsupported and contrary to the legislative intent even if the
question at issue was considered to be one of mixed law and fact,
thereby necessitating application of the clearly erroneous standard.
City of Belvidere [v. Illinois State Labor Relations Board], 181 Ill. 2d
[191,] 204 [(1998)]. Bauer=s felony conviction, although arguably
related to his former position as Inspector General, did not occur
>with his service as an employee,= but occurred nine months after he
retired from employment with the state. Again, as a former
employee, Bauer was no longer serving the public as a government
employee and no longer held a position of trust with the state when
he engaged in the felonious conduct. Under either standard, this case
raises the question of what amount of time after termination of state
employment can the pension board reach out to revoke benefits.
Here, this Court finds the termination date could arguably provide a
bright line test. However, certainly felonious conduct occurring nine
months after termination from state employment is far beyond that
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line. As such, this Court reverses the decision of SERS revoking
Bauer=s retirement benefits.@
ANALYSIS
Under the Administrative Review Law (735 ILCS 5/3-101 et seq. (West 2002)), we
review the Board=s decision rather than the trial court=s decision. Calabrese v. Chicago Park
District, 294 Ill. App. 3d 1055, 1065 (1998). The issue before us is whether Bauer=s conviction
for obstructing the federal investigation into corruption in the office of the Secretary of State was
a Afelony relating to or arising out of or in connection with his service@ as Inspector General for
the Secretary of State and, thus, required forfeiture of his retirement benefits under section 14-
149 of the Illinois Pension Code. 40 ILCS 5/14-149 (West 2002). Interpretation of a statute is a
question of law, and we agree with Bauer that we review the Board=s decision under the de novo
standard. Shields v. Judges= Retirement System, 204 Ill. 2d 488, 492 (2003).
AStatutory construction requires courts to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the
legislature.@ Shields, 204 Ill. 2d at 493. AIn determining the intent of the legislature, we begin
with the language of the statute, the most reliable indicator of the legislature's objectives in
enacting a particular law." Michigan Avenue National Bank v. County of Cook, 191 Ill. 2d 493,
504 (2000). AWhere the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, a court must give it
effect as written, without >reading into it exceptions, limitations or conditions that the legislature
did not express.= @ Garza v. Navistar International Transportation Corp., 172 Ill. 2d 373, 378
(1996), quoting Solich v. George & Anna Portes Cancer Prevention Center of Chicago, Inc., 158
Ill. 2d 76, 83 (1994). When the language of a statute is clear, resort to other aids of statutory
construction is unnecessary. Henry v. St. John=s Hospital, 138 Ill. 2d 533, 541 (1990). AWhen
construing a statute, we may consider >the reason and necessity for the statute and the evils it was
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intended to remedy.= @ Seasons-4, Inc. v. Hertz Corp., 338 Ill. App. 3d 565, 571 (2003), quoting
In re Marriage of Beyer, 324 Ill. App. 3d 305, 309 (2001). The reason and necessity for pension
forfeiture statutes is Ato discourage official malfeasance by denying the public servant convicted
of unfaithfulness to his trust the retirement benefits to which he otherwise would have been
entitled.@ Kerner v. State Employees= Retirement System, 72 Ill. 2d 507, 513 (1978). AThe
language of pension statutes must also be liberally construed in favor of the rights of the
pensioner.@ Shields, 204 Ill. 2d at 494.
Defendants rely on Devoney v. Retirement Board of the Policemen=s Annuity & Benefit
Fund, 199 Ill. 2d 414 (2002), Bloom v. Municipal Employees= Annuity & Benefit Fund, 339 Ill.
App. 3d 807 (2003), and Goff v. Teachers= Retirement System, 305 Ill. App. 3d 190 (1999), in
support of their contention on appeal that the trial court=s decision should be reversed and the
Board=s decision terminating Bauer=s retirement benefits should be reinstated. In addition,
defendants rely on the plain language of section 14-149 of the Code.
Bauer=s primary contention on appeal is that the trial court correctly construed section 14-
149 not to authorize forfeiture of his retirement benefits because the conduct underlying the
obstruction of justice occurred nine months after Bauer left his job as Inspector General for the
office of the Secretary of State. In support of this contention, Bauer emphasizes the absence of
case law applying section 14-149 to Aan employee whose conduct occurred after he left the
relevant state employment.@ Bauer argues that Devoney, Bloom, and Goff are distinguishable
from the instant case because, unlike those cases:
AMr. Bauer did not use his state employment to accomplish the
misconduct at issue. Nor was the misconduct born, in any sense,
from Mr. Bauer=s status and position as a state employee. The
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reason is simple. At the time of his October 7, 1999, conversation
with Ms. Carlson, Mr. Bauer had no status as a state employee. He
had been absent nine months from the IG department where Ms.
Carlson worked. Thus, Mr. Bauer had no ability to direct Ms.
Carlson to do anything.@
Bauer further argues that termination of his benefits is inconsistent with the purpose underlying
section 14-149 of the Pension Code because he was not convicted of unfaithfulness to his trust
since he was not employed as Inspector General when he committed the felony of obstructing
justice.
Section 14-149 of the Pension Code states in relevant part:
ANone of the benefits herein provided for shall be paid to
any person who is convicted of any felony relating to or arising out
of or in connection with his service as an employee.@ 40 ILCS
5/14-149 (West 2002).
The plain language of section 14-149 of the Code provides that pension benefit
disqualification can occur under three circumstances: (1) when the individual Ais convicted of
any felony relating to*** his service as an employee,@ (2) when the individual Ais convicted of
any felony *** arising out of *** his service as an employee,@ or (3) when the individual Ais
convicted of any felony *** in connection with his service as an employee.@ (Emphasis added.)
40 ILCS 5/14-149 (West 2002).
The Code does not define Arelating,@ Aarising,@ or Aconnection,@ and accordingly we look
to their plain and ordinary meanings. See Gem Electronics of Monmouth, Inc. v. Department of
Revenue, 183 Ill. 2d 470, 477-78 (1998) (noting that A[u]ndefined terms in a statute must be
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ascribed their ordinary and popularly understood meaning@). Merriam-Webster=s Collegiate
Dictionary defines Arelate@ as Ato have [a] relationship or connection.@ (Emphasis added.)
Merriam-Webster=s Collegiate Dictionary 987 (10th ed. 1998). Merriam-Webster=s Collegiate
Dictionary defines Aconnection@ as Athe state of being connected as [a]: causal or logical relation
or sequence.@ (Emphasis added.) Merriam-Webster=s Collegiate Dictionary 245 (10th ed. 1998).
Merriam-Webster=s Collegiate Dictionary defines Aarise@ as Ato originate from a source.@
Merriam-Webster=s Collegiate Dictionary 62 (10th ed. 1998). Merriam-Webster=s Collegiate
Dictionary defines Aoriginate@ as Ato take or have origin@ and defines Aorigin@ as Asomething that
creates, causes, or gives rise to another.@ (Emphasis added.) Merriam-Webster=s Collegiate
Dictionary 820 (10th ed. 1998). Each term references Acausal@ or Acause.@
We note that Illinois courts have previously construed retirement benefit forfeiture
statutes that were nearly identical to section 14-149 and that included the phrases Arelating to,@
Aarising out of,@ and Ain connection with.@ See Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d 414; Bloom, 339 Ill. App.
3d 807; Goff, 305 Ill. App. 3d 190. In resolving the issue before us, we rely on the plain
language of the Pension Code, as well as the applicable case law.
In Devoney, a police lieutenant was convicted of federal mail fraud as the result of his
involvement in a scheme to defraud an insurance company. Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 415.
Although the conduct underlying the fraud did not occur while the lieutenant was on duty, the
board overseeing the policemen=s annuity and benefit fund terminated the lieutenant=s pension
benefits. Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 415-17. The board based its termination upon section 5-227 of
the Illinois Pension Code, which includes language that is nearly identical to that at issue in the
instant case and that provides for forfeiture of retirement benefits when an officer is convicted of
a felony A >relating to or arising out of or in connection with his service as a policeman.= @
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Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 417, quoting 40 ILCS 5/5-227 (West 1998).
The Illinois supreme court upheld the termination of benefits, concluding that Athe
circumstances surrounding the crime establish that the offense was related to Devoney=s work as
a police officer.@ Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 423. In reviewing the board=s determination, the
supreme court stated that A[w]hen applying the pension disqualification statutes, *** the pivotal
inquiry is whether a nexus exists between the employee=s criminal wrongdoing and the
performance of his official duties.@ Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 419. The supreme court found that
the requisite nexus was present concluding as follows: ABecause Devoney=s participation in the
scheme to defraud was the product of his status as a law enforcement official, we believe that the
nexus required by section 5-227 of the Pension Code (40 ILCS 5/5-227 (West 1998)) was
present.@ Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 423.
In support of its finding that the requisite nexus was present, the supreme court observed
that the lieutenant=s codefendant cultivated a friendship with him because he was a criminal who
considered it advantageous to have police connections. Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 423. In addition,
the supreme court observed that the lieutenant was aware of his codefendant=s criminal past and
the two men had a A >long and unsavory= @ relationship during which Devoney had used his
position for his codefendant=s benefit. Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 423. The court in Devoney noted
that Devoney=s federal indictment did not identify him as a police officer, proof of his
employment as a police officer was not necessary to establish his guilt, and his association with
Chicago=s police department was not mentioned in his written plea. Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 422.
However, the court believed that Athe circumstances surrounding the crime establish[ed] that the
offense was related to Devoney=s work as a police officer.@ Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 423. Based
upon the circumstances surrounding the lieutenant=s crime, the supreme court found ample
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support for the board=s Afinding that >but for the fact that Devoney was a [p]olice [o]fficer of high
rank,= he >would not have been in a position or selected to participate in the scheme to defraud
[which led to his conviction.]= @ Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 423. The court concluded: ADevoney=s
felony conviction in federal court was >relat[ed] to or [arose] out of or in connection with his
service as a policeman= so as to render him ineligible for his police pension benefits.@ Devoney,
199 Ill. 2d at 423-24, quoting 40 ILCS 5/5-227 (West 1998).
The dissent, in discussing the Abut for@ standard used by the majority to determine
whether the requisite nexus existed, noted as follows:
AThe majority adopts a >but for= standard that equates an
individual=s employment status to his service to the state, and
requires only a nexus between the individual=s conviction and the
employment status. However, the nexus requirement of section 5-
227 entails more than a connection between the individual=s
employment status and the conviction. Were it not so, the
legislature could simply have provided that benefits would not be
paid to any individual convicted of a felony. The majority=s
interpretation of section 5-227 renders superfluous the additional
provision that the felony relate to or arise out of or in connection
with the individual=s service to the state. It also does not reflect
the intent of the legislature.@ Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 428-29
(Freeman, J., dissenting, joined by Kilbride, J.).
Under the test articulated by the Devoney majority, the requisite nexus exists if the facts
and circumstances establish that but for the pension claimant's status as a state employee, he
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would not have been in a position to commit the felony in question. Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 423
(but for the fact Devoney was a police officer, he would not have been in a position to defraud).
The Devoney majority found the nexus required by the Pension Code was present A[b]ecause
Devoney=s participation in the scheme to defraud was the product of his status as a law
enforcement official.@ Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 423. Under the test articulated in the Devoney
dissent, the nexus Aentails more than a connection between the individual=s employment status
and the conviction,@ and must satisfy the intent of the legislature as reflected by the plain
language of the statute in that the felony conviction Arelate[s] to or arise[s] out of or in
connection with the individual=s service to the state.@ Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 429 (Freeman, J.,
dissenting, joined by Kilbride, J.).
Here, we look to the facts and circumstances surrounding Bauer=s felony conviction to
determine whether his obstruction of justice was the product of his state employee status as
Inspector General, thereby, under Devoney, satisfying the Abut for@ test and demonstrating the
nexus between Bauer=s criminal wrongdoing and Bauer=s service as Inspector General. We also
examine those facts and circumstances to determine whether Bauer=s obstruction of justice
satisfied the plain language of the statute as a felony relating to or arising out of or in connection
with his service as Inspector General, as articulated in the Devoney dissent.
The circumstances relevant to our resolution of the above issue are factually
demonstrated by the words of Bauer=s plea of guilty and by the words spoken by Bauer in his
telephone conversation with Janet Carlson, his former secretary. Bauer, in his plea of guilty to
obstruction of justice admitted, during the telephone conversation with Janet Carlson:
A[He] did corruptly attempt to persuade another person, and did
engage in misleading conduct towards another person, namely
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[Janet Carlson], with intent to cause and induce [Carlson] or
another to destroy and conceal an object with intent to impair the
object=s integrity and availability for use in the grand jury
investigation *** in that defendant Bauer attempted to persuade
[Carlson] to destroy and conceal certain documents *** which
documents were relevant to federal Grand Jury Investigation No.
98 GJ 596, which investigation related to corruption in the
licensing process at the SOS Office[,] in violation of Title 18,
United States Code, Sections 1512(b)(2)(B) and 2.
More specifically, on October 7, 1999, during a recorded
phone conversation between defendant Bauer and a cooperating
individual, [Carlson], who unbeknownst to defendant Bauer was
then cooperating with Operation Safe Road, the two discussed
sensitive documents *** which [Carlson] indicated [she] had come
across during the course of [her] work. During the conversation,
defendant Bauer requested, and [Carlson] provided, a description
of each category of documents. The documents discussed that
were responsive to the September 1998 subpoena included, among
others, a Bauer-related memo referring to the Guzman
investigation and the likelihood that Guzman obtained his license
fraudulently at the McCook facility. After [Carlson] requested
direction from defendant regarding what to do with the Asensitive@
documents, defendant suggested to [Carlson] that [she] dispose of
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that as best as [she] could, intending by that suggestion to
corruptly persuade [Carlson] to destroy or otherwise conceal the
documents the best [she] could so that they would not be available
to the grand jury.@
As Inspector General, Bauer headed the Department which was responsible for
investigating allegations of wrongdoing involving SOS employees. By the spring of 1994, Bauer
was aware his office was investigating Marion Seibel, who was employed by the SOS, for
fraudulently selling commercial driver=s licenses. In November 1994, IG Investigator Russell
Sonneveld reported to Bauer that Ricardo Guzman, a truck driver who had been involved in a
fatal collision killing six children, had obtained his commercial driver=s license from the same
facility where Seibel worked. In addition, Sonneveld indicated that Guzman possibly obtained
his license through the fraudulent conduct of SOS employees.
Bauer denied Investigator Sonneveld permission to open an IG Department case or
conduct further investigation. Thereafter, Bauer told Willie Thompson, the chief deputy director
of the SOS Department of Police, that Bauer himself was Aactively pursuing@ an investigation of
the Guzman incident. Following this conversation with Bauer, Thompson wrote a memo to the
Director of the SOS Department of Police, Jack Peccararo, stating that he had received a phone
call from Bauer and describing the substance of what Bauer told him during that call. The
Thompson memo noted that Bauer told Thompson he was actively pursuing the Guzman case
and Bauer believed there was a possibility Guzman obtained his commercial driver=s license
illegally from the McCook driver=s facility. The memo further noted that Bauer told Thompson
there was an ongoing internal investigation of that facility and that this information should be
kept as confidential as possible. The Thompson memo was in part the subject of Bauer=s federal
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plea of guilty to obstruction of justice. It was among the documents Bauer admitted in his plea
he intended to Acorruptly persuade Carlson to destroy or otherwise conceal,@ so Athat they would
not be available to the grand jury.@
As reflected in Bauer=s plea of guilty, Carlson told Bauer during the phone conversation
on October 7, 1999, that the Joliet Secretary of State=s office had sent a box of Asensitive@
documents, including the Thompson memo regarding Guzman. Carlson called Bauer to see what
he thought she should do with the documents. It was during that conversation that Bauer
attempted to have Carlson destroy or conceal documents including the Thompson memo. Bauer
asked Carlson what the memo said, and the following exchange transpired:
A[BAUER]: What does that say?
[CARLSON]: *** [I]t is a memo to Jack Peccararo from
Will Thompson regarding Ricardo Guzman[;] it says >Director
Dean Bauer - Inspector General=s Office called yesterday to advise
he is actively pursuing a case on those individuals - Guzman while
driving a tractor trailer truck in the state of Wisconsin sometime
during last week - lost a portion or an object of his load - the object
struck the van - puncturing the gasoline tank, creating a fire at
which time several individuals died. Director Bauer advised there
is a strong possibility that this individual obtained a CDL
[commercial driver=s license] illegally. Director Bauer advised any
information or inquiries regarding this individual be forwarded to
him immediately. At this time Director Bauer also believes that
this individual obtained a CDL from McCook Driver=s facility at
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which time there is also an ongoing internal investigation. Subject
matter should be kept as confidential as possible.= @
Carlson advised Bauer he had been copied on the memo and told Bauer the memo caught her
attention because of Astuff in the newspapers.@ After more discussion, the following exchange
took place:
ACARLSON: Well, okay, like I said I was trying to go
through some stuff[.] I wanted to make sure.
BAUER: I just as soon this stuff - if it=s going to raise an
issue - we dispose of it as best we can.
CARLSON: Okay.
BAUER: I don=t want anyone to get in trouble either.@
That telephone conversation Bauer had with Thompson, together with the facts
surrounding Bauer=s felony conviction for obstructing justice, satisfiy the Abut for@ test
articulated by the Devoney majority. But for the fact that Bauer had been Inspector General, he
would not have been in a position to obstruct justice by attempting to have Carlson conceal or
destroy Thompson=s memo. See Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 423 (but for the fact Devoney was a
police officer, he would not have been in a position to defraud.) Indeed, Bauer was Inspector
General when the federal government=s investigation into the licensing process at the SOS
began and when the memo sought by the grand jury pursuant to that investigation was written
by Thompson, an SOS employee. The memo which Bauer attempted to have Carlson, his
former secretary, conceal or destroy reflected Bauer=s description of his conduct regarding the
Guzman case while performing his official duties as Inspector General. But for Bauer=s
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conversation with Thompson, which concerned Bauer=s official responsibilities and occurred
while Bauer was Inspector General, as reflected in the Thompson memo, Bauer would not have
been in a position to obstruct justice by attempting to have Carlson, his former secretary,
conceal or destroy the memo. Indeed, Bauer=s attempt to have Carlson conceal or destroy the
documents relevant to the federal investigation of the SOS was the product of his state
employee status as Inspector General.
For the reasons previously discussed, we find that there was a nexus between Bauer=s
obstructing justice by intending to persuade Carlson to dispose of the documents and his
employment status as Inspector General. The nexus required by the Pension Code was present
because Bauer=s obstruction of justice was a product of his status as Inspector General. See
Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 423. Thus, the facts satisfy the Abut for@ test articulated by the majority
in Devoney because but for the fact that Bauer had been Inspector General, he would not have
been in a position to obstruct the federal investigation of the Secretary of State=s office. See
Devoney, 199 Ill. 2d at 423.
The facts surrounding Bauer=s obstruction of justice further satisfy the plain language
requirement for pension forfeiture discussed in the Devoney dissent, namely, that the felony
relate to or arise out of or in connection with the individual=s service to the state. Devoney, 199
Ill. 2d at 428-29 (Freeman, J., dissenting, joined by Kilbride, J.). Under this standard, the nexus
requirement for pension forfeiture entails more than a causal connection between the
individual=s employment status and the felony conviction. The plain language of the statute
requires a causal connection between the felony in question and the employee=s service to the
state. As noted earlier, the plain meaning and definition of each of the applicable terms in
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section 14-149 reference Acausal@ or Acause.@
Applying the plain language of section 14-149 to facts of the instant case, we find that
there was a causal connection between Bauer=s felony and his service to the state. The record
reflects the federal grand jury subpoena sought documents created during Bauer=s tenure as
Inspector General. Bauer pled guilty to obstruction of justice for attempting to have Carlson, an
employee of the Inspector General=s office and Bauer=s former secretary, conceal or destroy
documents, including a memo that described Bauer=s conduct as Inspector General. The
obstruction occurred during the above-noted telephone conversation Bauer had with Carlson.
That telephone conversation directly related to Bauer=s official responsibilities while Bauer was
serving as Inspector General and was documented in the memo written by Thompson that Bauer
attempted to have Carlson conceal or destroy.
The documents, including the memo which Bauer attempted to have Carlson conceal or
destroy, were the subject of a federal investigation of corruption in the licensing process at the
SOS which began while Bauer served as Inspector General and was ongoing at the point in time
when Bauer obstructed justice by attempting to have Carlson conceal or destroy the documents.
Bauer=s conduct as Inspector General regarding the Guzman case was specifically described in
the memo Bauer admitted he attempted to have Carlson destroy or conceal. He admitted in his
plea agreement that he intended that the Thompson memo together with other sensitive
documents relevant to the federal investigation would not be available to the federal grand jury
investigating corruption in the office of the Secretary of State. The record factually
demonstrates that Bauer in his plea of guilty admitted obstructing justice by attempting to have
Carlson destroy documents including, Aa Bauer-related memo referring to the Guzman
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investigation and the likelihood that Guzman obtained his license fraudulently at the McCook
facility.@ Bauer further admitted in his plea of guilty that he suggested that Carlson dispose of
these Asensitive" documents "intending by that suggestion to corruptly persuade [Carlson] to
destroy or otherwise conceal the documents the best [Carlson] could so that they would not be
available to the grand jury.@
The above facts and circumstances establish a causal connection between Bauer=s
conduct of obstructing justice and his service to the state as Inspector General. But for Bauer's
conversation with Thompson, which directly concerned Bauer's official responsibilities and
occurred while Bauer was serving as Inspector General, Thompson would not have written the
memo in question and Bauer would not have obstructed justice by attempting to have Carlson,
his former secretary, conceal or destroy the memo. Bauer=s obstruction was connected or
related to documents reflecting his service as Inspector General. The Thompson memo
reflected Bauer=s conduct as Inspector General regarding investigation of the Guzman accident
and the likelihood that Guzman obtained his license fraudulently at the McCook facility of the
Secretary of State=s office. Bauer attempted to conceal or destroy SOS documents, including
the memo, relevant to the federal investigation of corruption in the licensing process at the SOS
office to prevent their use by the federal grand jury in the investigation of the SOS which began
while Bauer was serving as Inspector General and was ongoing at the point in time when he
obstructed justice. In light of the causal connection between Bauer=s obstruction of justice and
his service as Inspector General, we conclude Bauer was convicted of a felony relating to,
arising out of, or in connection with his service as Inspector General. For the reasons
previously discussed, the facts in the instant case satisfy the Devoney Abut for@ test as well as
the plain language of the pension forfeiture statute in that Bauer was convicted of a Afelony
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relating to or arising out of or in connection with his service as an employee.@
The principles articulated in Devoney were further discussed in Bloom. In Bloom, a
Chicago alderman (Bloom) pleaded guilty to filing a federal income tax return for his private
real estate business which falsely listed payments from John Christopher as Arental income.@
Bloom, 339 Ill. App. 3d at 809, 812-13. In fact, Bloom accepted the money in exchange for
using his name, official position, and influence as an alderman to assist Christopher in obtaining
and operating sites for a private rock-crushing business. Bloom, 339 Ill. App. 3d at 810, 812-
13. In pleading guilty, Bloom admitted that some of the funds falsely categorized on his return
were amounts paid to him in exchange for his improper use of his public office. Bloom, 339 Ill.
App. 3d at 809. Following his conviction, Bloom was denied his pension benefits based upon a
Code provision which was nearly identical to the provision at issue in the instant case. Bloom,
339 Ill. App. 3d at 809. That provision provided for the forfeiture of benefits of A >any person
who is convicted of any felony relating to or arising out of or in connection with his service as a
municipal employee.= @ Bloom, 339 Ill. App. 3d at 810, quoting 40 ILCS 5/8-251 (West 1998).
On appeal, the reviewing court recognized that the issue before it, under Devoney, was
whether a nexus existed between Bloom=s wrongdoing and the performance of his official
duties. Bloom, 339 Ill. App. 3d at 814-15. The reviewing court noted that Devoney
Ademonstrates that analysis of the >relating to, arising out of or connected with= language of the
pension forfeiture statutes is not concluded upon a showing that the disqualifying felony, by its
own terms, does not call for proof of official misconduct.@ Bloom, 339 Ill. App. 3d at 812. The
court also recognized that Devoney did not mandate the application of the Abut for@ test in every
nexus analysis. In fact, the court in Bloom identified the Asubstantial factor@ test as an
alternative means for resolving the nexus issue. Bloom, 339 Ill. App. 3d at 815. Under the
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substantial factor test, Athe [causal] link is established if the questioned cause >was a material
element and a substantial factor= in bringing about the subsequent occurrence.@ Bloom, 339 Ill.
App. 3d at 815, quoting Thacker v. UNR Industries, Inc., 151 Ill. 2d 343, 354-55 (1992).
The court reviewed Bloom=s admissions and found that the improper payments which
Bloom received in exchange for using his official position and influence as an alderman to
assist Christopher in obtaining and operating sites for a private rock-crushing business were
material elements and substantial factors resulting in his tax conviction. Bloom, 339 Ill. App.
3d at 816.
Applying the substantial factor test, the court concluded that there was a nexus between
Bloom=s felony of filing of a false federal tax return and his public service. Bloom, 339 Ill.
App. 3d at 816.
Here, as in Bloom, there was a nexus between Bauer=s felony of obstructing
justice by attempting to persuade Carlson to conceal or destroy documents
subpoenaed by the federal grand jury and his service as Inspector General for the
Secretary of State. Bauer=s conduct as Inspector General was the subject of the memo
Bauer attempted to have Carlson conceal or destroy, thereby obstructing the
investigation of the federal grand jury. Bauer=s service, for the reasons previously
discussed, was a material element and a substantial factor in bringing about the
obstruction of justice.
The court in Bloom noted that an approach Aparallel@ to the Asubstantial factor@ test was
adopted in Goff, 305 Ill. App. 3d 190, appeal denied, 185 Ill. 2d 623 (1999). Bloom, 339 Ill.
App. 3d at 815. In Goff, the plaintiff, a retired school teacher and principal, pleaded guilty to
six counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse. Goff, 305 Ill. App. 3d at 191. The plaintiff first
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met the victims while volunteering as a Boy Scout leader and as a church camp counselor and
later abused them after they began attending the school where he was the principal. Goff, 305
Ill. App. 3d at 193-94. Although the conduct underlying the felonies did not occur on school
property or at a school-related event, the Illinois Teachers= Retirement System revoked the
plaintiff=s pension. Goff, 305 Ill. App. 3d at 191-92. Like the board in Devoney, it based its
revocation on a section of the Code that is nearly identical to the one at issue in the instant case
and that provides for forfeiture of pension benefits of A >any person who is convicted of any
felony relating to or arising out of or in connection with his or her service as a teacher.= @ Goff,
305 Ill. App. 3d at 193, quoting 40 ILCS 5/16-199 (West 1994).
Goff appealed the revocation, arguing that his pension could be revoked only if the
felony in question actually took place on school time or school grounds or during an
extracurricular activity for which he was serving as a school chaperon. Goff, 305 Ill. App. 3d at
195. We rejected his argument, concluding that such a construction was far too narrow and
noting that A >[a]n injury can be said to arise out of one=s employment if its origin is in some
way connected with the employment so that there is a causal connection between the
employment and the *** injury.= @ (Emphasis in original.) Goff, 305 Ill. App. 3d at 195,
quoting Consolidated R. Corp. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., 92 Ill. App. 3d 1066, 1068-69
(1981). Like the felonies in Goff, Bauer=s felony of obstruction of justice can be said to arise
out of his employment as Inspector General because, for the reasons previously discussed, the
origin of the felony of obstruction of justice was connected to Bauer=s employment so that there
was a causal connection between the employment and the felony of obstruction of justice.
We recognize Bauer was no longer serving as Inspector General when he committed the
felony of obstruction of justice, and that the pension claimants in Devoney, Goff, and
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Bloom
were still serving in the state offices to which their felonies related at the time they committed
their respective felonies. We also recognize that the passage of time between the date Bauer
stopped serving as Inspector General and the date he committed obstruction of justice is a
logical factor to consider in determining whether a nexus exists between his state employment
and his felony. We reject, however, Bauer=s argument that the passage of time between two
events is a dispositive factor for determining whether a nexus exists between them. Indeed,
neither the supreme court in Devoney nor the appellate court in Goff and Bloom stated that the
passage of time between state employment and the commission of felony somehow negates the
possibility that a nexus can exist between the two. Furthermore, the plain language of section
14-149 does not state that only those felonies which are committed while the pension claimant
is employed by the state may relate to or arise out of or in connection with his service as an
employee. Nor does section 14-149 state a felony cannot relate to, arise out of or in connection
with a particular state job if the felony occurs after the claimant has left the job. We decline to
read into section 14-149 a requirement for forfeiture which is inconsistent with its plain
language. The conduct for which Bauer was convicted was directly and inherently related to his
service as Inspector General for the Secretary of State. The investigation into corruption began
while Bauer was serving as Inspector General and Bauer=s felony obstructed that federal
investigation. The fact Bauer did not obstruct justice until after he left the office of the
Secretary of State does not mean the obstruction was not a Afelony relating to or arising out of
or in connection with his service as an employee.@
In further support of his contention that he was entitled to benefits, Bauer cites two non-
Illinois cases: Wallace v. City of Fresno, 42 Cal. 2d 180, 265 P.2d 884 (1954), and Landry v.
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Board of Trustees of Police Pension Fund, 58 So. 2d 296, 298 (La. App. 1952). Bauer=s
reliance on these cases is misplaced. The reviewing courts in both Wallace and Landry did
reverse the termination of pension benefits to police officers who committed felonies after they
had retired. Wallace, 42 Cal. 2d at 181, 186, 265 P.2d at 885, 887; Landry, 58 So. 2d at 297-98.
However, the language of the forfeiture provisions at issue in those cases was different from
the language at issue in the instant case and did not require those courts to review whether there
was a nexus between the felonies in question and the plaintiffs= service as officers. Wallace, 42
Cal. 2d at 182-83, 265 P.2d at 885, 886; Landry, 58 So. 2d at 298. In fact, in Wallace, the court
reinstated the plaintiff=s benefits based upon its finding that an amendment to the pension
ordinance made after the plaintiff began working as an officer unreasonably impaired his
contractual pension rights. Wallace, 42 Cal. 2d at 184-85, 265 P.2d at 886-87.
Finally, we reject Bauer's argument that he was not convicted of unfaithfulness to his
trust because he was not serving as Inspector General when he obstructed justice. Our decision
is consistent with the purpose underlying section 14-149 of the Pension Code, which is Ato
discourage official malfeasance by denying the public servant convicted of unfaithfulness to his
trust the retirement benefits to which he otherwise would have been entitled.@ Kerner, 72 Ill. 2d
at 513. Bauer=s malfeasance consisted of obstructing justice by attempting to persuade Carlson
to conceal or destroy SOS documents, including the Thompson memo, which concerned
conduct which occurred while he was employed as Inspector General and related to the
performance of his duties as Inspector General. These documents were relevant to the federal
government=s investigation into corruption at the SOS office.
We believe the trust citizens place in public employees can in some circumstances
extend beyond the period of employment with respect to certain types of conduct, including
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conduct by a former employee in response to an ongoing federal investigation into corruption in
that former employee=s office while he was working there. Construing section 14-149 of the
Pension Code to apply exclusively to felonies committed while a person is still employed in a
particular position would be inconsistent with its purpose of deterring state employees from
engaging in official malfeasance. Adoption of such a construction of section 14-149 would
send a message to state employees that their retirement benefits will not be jeopardized if, after
retiring, they obstruct justice by attempting to prevent a federal grand jury from obtaining
documents related to their former state service for purposes of a federal investigation into
corruption in a state office which began while they served that state office, and was ongoing at
the point in time they obstructed justice. Such a message was not the intent of the legislature
when it enacted section 14-149 of the Pension Code.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons previously discussed, in the factual context of this case, we find Bauer
was convicted of a Afelony relating to or arising out of or in connection with his service as@
Inspector General for the office of the Illinois Secretary of State. Accordingly, we conclude the
Board's decision to terminate Bauer's pension benefits pursuant to section 14-149 of the Illinois
Pension Code was proper.
We reverse the circuit court=s order and reinstate the Board=s decision.
Reversed.
McNULTY, P.J., and FITZGERALD SMITH, J., concur.
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