Foundation trip or flight scandal? Pritzker pushes back on Clinton claim


Former President Bill Clinton mentioned he might have traveled on Epstein’s plane with JB Pritzker and his wife. A spokesperson for Clinton quickly clarified the former president was referring to a trip he took with Pritzker to Africa in 2008.


Ben Szalinski
Capitol News Illinois


SPRINGFIELD - Gov. JB Pritzker denied a since-recanted comment by former President Bill Clinton that Clinton thought the pair may have traveled together on a plane owned by convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.

His denial was in response to a 90-second video clip of Clinton’s closed-door deposition before the U.S. House Oversight and Government Reform Committee that began circulating online Monday night.

“No, I have never, had never met Jeffrey Epstein,” Pritzker said Tuesday. “I was never on Jeffrey Epstein's plane. I was never on any plane with Jeffrey Epstein or with Ghislaine Maxwell. Never met her.”

Pritzker added he had never heard of Epstein until about 2019 when Epstein was indicted for child sex trafficking in the early 2000s.

Clinton’s testimony

In his deposition, the ex-president was asked to recall who he brought on more than two dozen flights he took on Epstein’s plane. He said it was often people who worked with him, for his foundation, including staffers and Secret Service agents, but also the governor of Illinois and his wife.

“On occasion, I had people who had volunteered to help us and wanted to see what we were doing,” Clinton said. “For example, I think it was on one of these trips — I think — that I had my first trip for a man who is now the governor of Illinois, JB Pritzker, and his wife. They gave me — they helped me get started.”

Speaking to reporters Tuesday in Chicago, Pritzker said Clinton “clearly was mistaken.”

A spokesperson for Clinton on Tuesday also reframed the president’s comments.

“President Clinton was simply giving an example of the many people he traveled with to see the Clinton Foundation’s work,” spokesperson Angel UreƱa said in a statement to Capitol News Illinois. “Gov. Pritzker joined a Clinton Foundation trip in 2008. Not on Epstein’s plane. Not with Epstein. Not with Maxwell.”

Clinton has said he cut ties prior to when Epstein was first arrested in 2005 for sex crimes and first sentenced to 18 months behind bars in June 2008. Clinton and Pritzker were photographed by Getty Images together in Rwanda in August 2008 on a Clinton Foundation trip. Pritzker said the plane for that trip was donated by Google.

Neither Pritzker nor the Clintons have been accused of any wrongdoing related to Epstein. The Illinois governor’s name appears about two dozen times in the Epstein files — all references to news stories with Pritzker in the headline. The governor’s last name appears more than 7,100 times, likely in relationship to the governor’s cousin, Thomas Pritzker, who has acknowledged a connection with Epstein.

Illinois GOP response

Illinois Republicans still pounced at the chance to tie the governor to Epstein.

“Time to do some explaining! Why were you on pedophile Epstein’s plane?” Rep. John Cabello, R-Machesney Park, posted at Pritzker on X.

One person who is mentioned in the more than 3 million Epstein documents released so far is President Donald Trump, whose name appears 38,000 times, according to The New York Times. Trump has denied any wrongdoing.

Illinois Republicans skipped a vote on a nonbinding resolution in the Illinois House last week that called on the Trump administration to release all files related to Epstein with redactions only for victims.

“It's a wag the dog,” Pritzker said. “Let's, you know, ‘look over here, look over here.’ Don't look at the leader of their party, the leader of this country, who is a Republican, Donald Trump, who clearly is somebody that needs to be investigated, needs to be answering for his relationship with Ghislaine Maxwell, with Jeffrey Epstein, and has done none of that. You saw other people testifying. Where is President Trump’s testimony?”

Pritzker’s relationship with the Clintons

Pritzker’s relationship with the Clintons dates back two decades. According to the Washington Post, Pritzker connected as a political ally with then-New York Sen. Hillary Clinton in 2006 through a mutual friend.

Hillary Clinton then asked Pritzker to be co-chair of her 2008 presidential campaign in the Democratic primary against then-Illinois Sen. Barack Obama. Pritzker remained a top fundraiser and advisor to her unsuccessful 2016 campaign against Trump.

Pritzker and Hillary Clinton even watched part of the 2024 Democratic National Convention together from balcony seats at the United Center in Chicago.

Pritzker, who is worth $3.9 billion, according to Forbes, and is one of the wealthiest elected officials in American history, also gave $17 million to the Clinton Foundation between 2002 and 2016, according to a 2018 Illinois Answers Project investigation.

Another Pritzker

The governor’s cousin, Thomas Pritzker, recently resigned from his role as the executive chairman of Hyatt Hotels after his association with Epstein and Maxwell came into clearer view through emails released in the Epstein files tranche.

When asked about his cousin’s connection to Epstein in a recent interview, the governor said anyone who has done something wrong should be held accountable.

“I’m not close to my cousin, but I can tell you that it’s very important that people be held to pay the price for whatever it is that they may have done,” Pritzker said.

Illinois Democratic lawmakers Monday joined advocates for women and survivors of sexual abuse to introduce House Bill 5723, called the Illinois Epstein Files Investigation Act.

The bill, if passed, would create a governor-appointed commission to investigate Illinois-based crimes connected to Epstein’s network. Those would focus primarily on the stories of victims in Illinois and crimes that may have occurred in Illinois.


Maggie Dougherty contributed.

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.

This article first appeared on Capitol News Illinois and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.




Tags: JB Pritzker Jeffrey Epstein plane denial, Bill Clinton deposition Illinois governor 2008 trip, Illinois Epstein Files Investigation Act House Bill 5723, Thomas Pritzker Hyatt resignation Epstein connection, Illinois political reaction to Epstein documents


IHSA Sectional Semifinals |
Boys' basketball scores for Tuesday


Here are the results from tonight's high school playoffs locally and around the state.


Local team results

Altamont 61, Tuscola 58
LeRoy 59, St Thomas More 51
MacArthur 85, Champaign Centennial 63


1A Scores from around the state

Ottawa Marquette 54, Hinckley-Big Rock 51
Waltonville 64, Hardin County 43
LeRoy 59, St Thomas More 51
Altamont 61, Tuscola 58
Fenger 77, Ida Crown 55
Tremont 49, Illini Bluffs 34
Routt 67, Bunker Hill 50
Pecatonica 70, Newman Central Catholic 66


2A Scores from around the state

Crane Medical 52, Christ the King 45
IIT Math & Science 55, Butler 51
Warsaw 71, Farmington 41
Manual 66, Riverdale 42
Rockford Lutheran 69, Oregon 67
Teutopolis 40, Warrensburg-Latham 39
Benton 41, Nashville 39
Quincy Notre Dame 59, Roxana 47
McNamara 61, Wilmington 24


3A Scores from around the state

Hyde Park 68, Little Village 36
Leo 68, Morgan Park 38
Hillcrest 62, Thornton 49
St Francis 52, Lemont 44
Lake Forest 59, St Viator 55
MacArthur 85, Champaign Centennial 63
Morton 69, LaSalle-Peru 48
Centralia 58, Triad 38
Kaneland 64, Rockford East 44


4A Scores from around the state

Glenbard East 68, Wheaton Warrenville South 61
Benet 67, Yorkville 30
Curie 64, St Laurence 57
Homewood-Flossmoor 64, Brother Rice 54
Edwardsville 52, Alton 51
Fremd 74, Stevenson 65
Hersey 64, Palatine 50
Richwoods 68, Normal Community 67
Rockford Auburn 84, Gurnee Warren 76
Guilford 65, Waukegan 57
DePaul 56, New Trier 38




TAGS: Tuscola eliminated from postseason basketball, St. Thomas More season halted after heartbreaking loss, Centennial basketball falls to Big Twelve rival, basketball semifinal scores for all four IHSA classes

Trippin' Tuesdays |
Plainfield Central's Kahmari Montgomery wins two state titles


Plainfield Central's Kahmari Montgomery
Photo: PhotoNews Media/Clark Brooks

Charleston - Plainfield Central's Kahmari Montgomery rests on the track of O'Brien Stadium after winning the 200-Meter Dash championship race at the IHSA State Track and Field State Finals on May 31, 2014. Montgomery won both the 200-meter and 400-meter Class 3A titles. (Photo: PhotoNews/Clark Brooks)



Illini Prairie Conference list all-conference players


St. Joseph-Ogden's Katie Ericksen dribbles the ball
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

St. Joseph-Ogden senior dribbles the ball down the court in the Spartans' home game against Sullivan. Ericksen and two other SJO seniors, Kayla Osterbur and Addy Brooks, were named to the Illini Prairie all-conference basketball teams. See the complete list of this year's first-team through honorable mention below.

First-team all-conference

School Name Year

Central Catholic, Emme Hurie SR
IVC Anna Foster, JR
IVC Alayah Nelton, SO
Monticello Ali Weidner, JR
Pontiac Trinity Miller, SR
SJO Katie Ericksen, SR

Second Team All-Conference

Central Catholic Allison Emm, JR
IVC Kayt Miller, JR
Pontiac Grace Lanning, SR
Prairie Central Addi Donley, FR
Rantoul Josie Roseman, SR
SJO Kayla Osterbur, SR
Unity Grace Bickers, JR

Honorable Mention All-Conference

Central Catholic Taylor Cook, JR
Monticello Sarah Cresap, JR
PBL Hallee Johnson, JR
Pontiac Bailee Branscum, SO
Pontiac Morgan Dewald, SR
Pontiac Araceli Serna, SO
Prairie Central Jayla Hammond, JR
SJO Addie Brooks, SR
STM Leighton Clark, JR


16 teams advance to basketball state championships in Normal


The field is set for this weekend's IHSA Girls Basketball State Finals in Normal. Sixteen teams, 16 games tip off on Thursday at 10am.

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Loyola's Emily Naraky tries to grab the ball away from Fremd's Anna Montella during their Class 4A state semifinal game in 2025. After placing 4th last year, Naraky and the Ramblers head back to Normal after defeating St. Charles East, 56-34.


1A Supersectional scores

Mt Pulaski 48, Edwards County 38
Rockford Christian 52, North Shore Cty Day 20
Deer Creek-Mackinaw 45, Wethersfield 43
Brown County 51, Bluffs 39


State Semifinal Pairings

Brown County ~vs~ Mt Pulaski
    .::. at Normal (CEFCU Arena)

Rockford Christian ~vs~ Deer Creek-Mackinaw
    .::. at Normal (CEFCU Arena)

*All games played on Thursday, March 5


2A Supersectional scores

Breese Central 46, Teutopolis 33
Pleasant Plains 54, Tri-Valley 37
St Edward 57, Phillips 51
Byron 66, Pontiac 40


State Semifinal Pairings

Breese Central ~vs~ Pleasant Plains
    .::. at Normal (CEFCU Arena)

Byron ~vs~ St Edward
    .::. at Normal (CEFCU Arena)

*All games played on Thursday, March 5


3A Supersectional scores

Glenwood 62, MacArthur 35
Washington 73, Providence 47
Trinity 50, Glenbard South 36
St Viator 46, Geneva 43


State Semifinal Pairings*

Glenwood ~vs~ Trinity
    .::. at Normal (CEFCU Arena)

Washington ~vs~ St Viator
    .::. at Normal (CEFCU Arena)

*All games played on Friday, March 6


4A Scores from around the state

Belleville East 54, Homewood-Flossmoor 47
Rolling Meadows 41, Carmel 37
Loyola 56, St Charles East 34
Nazareth 54, Waubonsie Valley 42


State Semifinal Pairings

Nazareth ~vs~ Belleville East
    .::. at Normal (CEFCU Arena)

Rolling Meadows ~vs~ Loyola
    .::. at Normal (CEFCU Arena)

*All games played on Friday, March 6



State advances on legislation to regulate data centers to protect the environment and natural resources


Governor JB Pritzker recently halted tax incentives for data center construction in Illinois for two years due to energy concerns.

Photo: Geoffrey Moffett/Unsplash

Ireland has 134 data centers operated by 28 providers like Prescient Data Centres in Coleraine in Northern Ireland. Data centers are looking to expand in Illinois and environmental groups are trying to pass laws regulating them to prevent ecological and economic damage to the state.


by Judith Ruiz-Branch
Public News Service


CHICAGO - As data centers continue to expand rapidly, environmental justice groups are working to pass legislation to regulate them in Illinois.

The state is a top-five market for data centers and backers cited the tax revenue and jobs the facilities bring to some areas.

Lucy Contreras, Illinois state program director for the environmental policy group GreenLatinos, said the centers' increased demand for energy also brings concerns about utility affordability and environmental impacts for Illinois residents. She pointed out it disproportionately affects communities of color as more facilities are being built in or near low-income neighborhoods.

"If we don't mandate that they bring their own clean energy and that they pay for their own costs, then who ends up footing that bill tends to be the communities," Contreras explained.

Contreras noted legislation known as the Power Act, now in the General Assembly, would address the concerns by establishing accountability measures and mandating community benefits. She added the bill is one of the most ambitious for data center regulation. Advocates are aiming to pass it this spring.

Data center developers heavily rely on nondisclosure agreements to build, manage and operate facilities.

Mayra Mendez, executive director of the advocacy group Clean Power Lake County, said it often leaves local communities at a disadvantage. And as the proliferation of data centers has made people more conscious of potential effects, she stressed the Power Act would also require greater transparency.

"We hosted a workshop specifically going over bills, and people were like, ‘My bills are going up because of data centers.’ So, they're seeing the direct links," Mendez recounted. "And I think sometimes other environmental issues are a little more abstract, but we're seeing the real impacts of data centers here and now, and people are just more aware."

The federal government has identified data center development as a national priority and some states have offered companies incentives to build more facilities. But Governor JB Pritzker recently halted tax incentives for data center construction in Illinois for two years due to energy concerns.




Guest Commentary |
Stay alert for evil


Glenn doesn't like war or people being killed. Iran has been a constant supporter of terrorism and he hopes America's recent attack motivates Khamenei supported terrorists to chill out.


by Glenn Mollette, Guest Commentator




Glenn Mollette
President Donald Trump is obviously hated by some people on the planet. Anyone connected to the Ayatollah Khamenei most likely hates him. Anyone connected to Iranian terrorism hates him. Sadly, many American Democrats hate him. There have already been attempts to kill him and I fear there will be more from those connected to Iranian terrorism causes. Our Secret Service, FBI and others involved in protecting him are obviously aware that he is in constant danger. Let’s all please pray for his safety and for there to be no complacency in protecting him.

The news media is always reporting where he is located. I don’t think that wise. Whether he is in Mar-a-Lago, DC or New York City, is it really important that we all know? I don’t see how detailing his every location bodes well for his security. I am just a lowly voting citizen and what do I know? Not much, but I do belief these are perilous times as hostility from Iranian regime sympathizers is surely beyond the boiling point.


I doubt that the evil will all be totally destroyed and eliminated. We have to realize that in some way and some form there will be blowback.

We hope and pray that Iran can become a country run by the people of the country. Who knows how long and what this will involve. We were in Iraq and Afghanistan for a very long time. Can we really point to those countries and boast of success? Both countries are still a mess and we lost thousands of lives and spent trillions of dollars.

I do hope that President Trump is successful and that the Iranian people can take back their country. This would be good for them and the world.

In the meantime, while you are praying for the safety of our President, look over your own shoulder. All of us are vulnerable. The TSA needs our utmost support emotionally and financially. Surely by the time you read this Congress will have restored their pay. We are all vulnerable whether flying or being in any public place where people gather. School and churches are extremely vulnerable. Please increase your attention to security.

Terrorism extremism can raise its ugly head any place at any time. Crazy people do crazy stuff and many seem to be happy to sacrifice their own lives to further their causes.

I don’t like war or people being killed. However, Iran has been a constant supporter of terrorism. Khamenei has been the central figure and leader in the world of terror for about 37 years. That was far too long and there wasn’t any end in sight.

My prayer is that the attack will end and this will soon be over. However, I doubt that the evil will all be totally destroyed and eliminated. We have to realize that in some way and some form there will be blowback. Therefore, be alert, practice safety and try to help and look out for each other. The world doesn’t have to be a bad place. We can’t give up. Keep treating each other respectfully and kindly and stay alert to evil.


About the author ~

Glen Mollett is the author of 13 books including Uncommom Sense, the Spiritual Chocolate series, Grandpa's Store, Minister's Guidebook insights from a fellow minister. His column is published weekly in over 600 publications in all 50 states.




TAGS: Donald Trump is hated by people around the world, Iranian sympathizers are mad, American Democrats hate President Trump, terrorism can happen at any time, Americans should look out for each other

IHSA Sectional Championships
Scores from Thursday's girls basketball finals


Here are the results from last Thursday's girls basketball sectional title games and tonight's pairings across Illinois for each of the IHSA super-sectional championships. The winners of tonight's contest advance to CEFCU Arena at Illinois State University for a shot at a state title.



1A Scores from around the state

Mt Pulaski 37, Cumberland 36
Okawville 58, Bluffs 61
Brown County 54, Havana 45
North Shore Cty Day 47, Rochelle Zell 33
Deer Creek-Mackinaw 48, Heyworth 23
Wethersfield 60, Newman Central Cath 55
Rockford Christian 57, Midland 25
Edwards County 50, Brownstown 44


Monday's SuperSectional Pairings

Edwards County ~vs~ Mt Pulaski
.::. at Arcola

Rockford Christian ~vs~ North Shore Cty Day
.::. at Carpentersville (Dundee-Crown)

Wethersfield ~vs~ Deer Creek-Mackinaw
.::. at Manlius (Bureau Valley)

Brown County ~vs~ Bluffs
.::. at Pleasant Plains


2A Scores from around the state

Breese Central 58, Nashville 48
Phillips 59, Hope Academy 49
St Edward 57, Johnsburg 38
Tri-Valley 40, Hamilton 39
Byron 60, Riverdale 36
Teutopolis 40, Paris 30
Pontiac 46, Manteno 44
Pleasant Plains 57, Father McGivney 23


Monday's SuperSectional Pairings

Teutopolis ~vs~ Breese Central
.::. at Benton

Pleasant Plains ~vs~ Tri-Valley
.::. at Pleasant Plains

St Edward ~vs~ Phillips
.::. at River Forest (Dominican University)

Pontiac ~vs~ Byron
.::. at Wilmington


3A Scores from around the state

Glenbard South 43, Aurora Central Cath 36
Providence 72, Hillcrest 44
Geneva 43, Crystal Lake South 33
Washington 61, Galesburg 37
St Viator 43, Grayslake Central 38
MacArthur 38, Lincoln 32
Trinity 39, Fenwick 36
Glenwood 51, Quincy Notre Dame 36


Monday's SuperSectional Pairings

Glenwood ~vs~ MacArthur
.::. at Chatham (Glenwood)

Washington ~vs~ Providence
.::. at Kankakee (Sr.)

Trinity ~vs~ Glenbard South
.::. at River Forest (Concordia University)

St Viator ~vs~ Geneva
.::. at Woodstock (North)


4A Scores from around the state

Waubonsie Valley 45, Benet 37
St Charles East 53, Glenbard West 28
Homewood-Flossmoor 58, Marist 48
Nazareth 53, Downers Grove North 26
Loyola 48, Maine South 32
Belleville East 58, Richwoods 48
Carmel 38, Libertyville 35
Rolling Meadows 49, Fremd 42


Monday's SuperSectional Pairings

Belleville East ~vs~ Homewood-Flossmoor
.::. at Bloomington (Illinois Wesleyan U.)

Rolling Meadows ~vs~ Carmel
.::. at Carpentersville (Dundee-Crown)

Loyola ~vs~ St Charles East
.::. at Hoffman Estates (H.S.)

Nazareth ~vs~ Waubonsie Valley
.::. at LaGrange (Lyons)


Senior Salute
Winter warrior Nathan Daly


St. Joseph-Ogden wrestler Nathan Daly
Senior Nathan Daly finished the season with 31 wins against 12 losses. In his Spartan Senior Salute, the Illini Prairie Conference Second-Team nominee shared a little more about himself.


St. Joseph-Ogden senior Nathan Daley

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Wrestling at 150 and 157, Nathan Daly's 31-12 record was key to a successful 2025-26 campaign on the mats for St. Joseph-Ogden. He finished his final season for SJO, placing third at the Ridgeview regionals.

The senior competes in wrestling and golf with the same mental toughness that fuels his goal of one day joining MARSOC during an exciting military career. He keeps things simple when it comes to motivation, saying the reward of a good meal after the work is done is just one thing that pushes him to compete at his best. Before a match, he's blasting “Pocket Full of Sunshine” by Natasha Bedingfield to lighten the mood and locked in. Here is a closer look at Nathan Daly.


Sentinel: What is your dream job or career?

Daly: MARSOC


Sentinel: Where is your favorite place to eat?

Daly: Chili's


Sentinel: Where do you see yourself living in 20 years?

Daly: A small hut in Dagestan herding sheep.


Sentinel: If you could travel anywhere in the world, where are you going and why?

Daly: Canada for hockey games.


Sentinel: Name an Instagram handle everyone should follow.

Daly: Couldn’t tell ya.


Sentinel: What was the last movie you watched three or more friends?

Daly: Marty Supreme.


Sentinel: Which is better? Dr. Pepper, Coke or Pepsi

Daly: Coke.


Sentinel: What motivates you to be the best at what you do?

Daly: Eating food when I’m done.


Sentinel: What song gets you hyped before a game or match? Tell us the song title and artist, please.

Daly: Pocket Full of Sunshine by Natasha Bedingfield


Sentinel: What advice would you give yourself if you were a freshman again?

Daly: Don’t take Spanish.


Sentinel: What sports have you played in high school?

Daly: Wrestling and golf


Sentinel: What is the best coaching advice you have ever received?

Daly: Run through that mfer.



Season photo gallery


Season Highlights

150, Defeated Connor Mahaffey (Westville), Fall 01:39
150, Defeated Dukeman, Jaxson (Toledo (Cumberland)), Maj Dec 14-1
150, Defeated Dunner, Nick (Rantoul), Fall 00:53
150, Defeated Forfeit, (EPG), FORFEIT
150, Defeated Forfeit, (Hoopeston), FORFEIT
150, Defeated Forfeit, (Prairie Central), FORFEIT
150, Defeated Hilligoss, Alec (Champaign (St. Thomas More)), Fall 01:43
150, Defeated Martin, G (South Vermillion), Fall 02:53
150, Defeated McLaughin, C (LeRoy), Decision 4-2
150, Defeated Moore, Tyler (Chillicothe (Illinois Valley Central)), Fall 03:36
150, Defeated Opperman, Brayden (Pontiac), Fall 01:26
150, Defeated Ramirez, Isreal (Clinton), Tech Fall 16-0
150, Defeated Weeks, Drake (Monticello), Fall 08:008
157, Defeated Pamozzo (Clifton central), Fall 1:38
157, Defeated Simpson (Oakwood 2), Fall 00:10
157, Defeated Soto (Peoria), Fall 01:48
157, Defeated Zander, Lazzerick (Centennial), Fall 04:12

Postseason Highlights

Champ. Round 1 - Nathan Daly first-round bye
Quarterfinal - Won by major decision over Connor McLaughlin (LeRoy)(MD 10-1)
Semifinal - Lost by decision to Devin Glik (Unity) (Dec 5-0)
Cons. Semi - Pinned over Nate Godfery (Heyworth) 29-14 (Fall 5:27)
3rd Place Match - Pinned Isreal Ramirez (Clinton) 20-15 (Fall 3:51)

Season photo gallery



Letter to the Editor |
When transparency becomes the target, a whistleblower's view from the back row


A community whistleblower recounts the reaction to recording public meetings. In his letter, he argues that transparency should not provoke fear if the governmental body is operating above board.


Dear Editor,

Being a known whistleblower is a wild experience because, apparently, sitting quietly at a public meeting with a camera now counts as an act of aggression. I walk in, take a seat, hit record, and you would think I just pulled the fire alarm. Heads start swiveling, whispers start flying, and before long someone decides the real emergency in the room is me documenting what elected officials are saying into a microphone.

My personal favorite is when people start recording me while I am recording them, as if we have entered some strange standoff where the last camera standing wins. I am not sure what they think they are going to capture. A man sitting in a chair? A citizen listening? The suspense is unbearable.

Then there is the dramatic parking lot energy after adjournment, when a few brave souls suddenly find the courage to confront the man with the notebook. I usually make a polite early exit because I am not interested in late-night debates next to a shopping cart corral. I am there for one reason, and it is not small talk. I am there to go straight to the source of the problem and deal with it at the head, not nibble around the edges to make everyone feel comfortable.

Here is what makes it funny and telling at the same time. No one panics over a camera when everything is clean. No one cares about public records when there is nothing in them. The only time a whistleblower becomes the villain of the story is when the story has something in it worth hiding. If the strategy is to intimidate the person asking questions instead of answering them, that says more than any investigation ever could.

Every time the focus shifts to me instead of the issue, it confirms I am looking in the right place. Targeting a whistleblower does not protect the public. It protects whatever cannot survive daylight. And if that is the reaction, then I will keep showing up, keep recording and keep digging. Because if a camera and a notebook shake the room that much, imagine what the truth is doing.


Alec Severins
Georgetown


With over 17,000 followers, Alec Severins is the founder of the Vermilion County Watchdog community Facebook page, an independent media and investigative journalism organization.




TAGS:
  • letter to the editor about government transparency, whistleblower recording public meetings opinion, public records and open meetings accountability, citizen journalist documenting elected officials, intimidation concerns at local government meetings


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