Ray Klingbiel

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Ray I. Klingbiel (1901–1973) was the Chief Justice of Illinois from 1956 to 1957, and again from 1964 to 1967. In 1969, while Klingbiel was still sitting on the Supreme Court of Illinois, a major state scandal erupted when conspiracy theorist Sherman Skolnick revealed that Klingbiel and Chief Justice Roy J. Solfisburg, Jr. had corruptly accepted stock from the Civic Center Bank & Trust Company (CCB) of Chicago at the same time that litigation involving the CCB was pending at the Illinois Supreme Court. The scandal forced Klingbiel to resign.

Background

Klingbiel was born on March 2, 1901 in East Moline, Illinois. He attended public school in East Moline and then attended the University of Illinois, which awarded him a law degree in 1924. While there he was a member of the Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity. After law school, Klingbiel returned to East Moline and served as a city attorney there for twelve years. From 1939 until 1945 he served as mayor of East Moline. During this period Klingbiel established a reputation as a kingpin in the Rock Island County and Downstate Illinois political power structure.

Judicial career

In 1945 Klingbiel won election as an Illinois circuit judge, a position which he held until 1953 when he joined the Supreme Court of Illinois. He served as member for the 4th District from 1953 to 1963 and then, following an amendment to the judicial article in the Illinois Constitution in 1962, as member for the 3rd District from 1963 to 1969. He served as Chief Justice for the 1956–57 term and again from 1964 to January 1967.

He received an honorary doctorate of law from the Chicago-Kent College of Law and was active with the Rotary Club and the Masonic Lodge.

The 1969 scandal

In 1969 Sherman Skolnick, head of the Citizens' Committee to Clean Up the Courts, examined the stockholder records of the Civic Center Bank & Trust Company (CCB) and discovered that both Klingbiel and Chief Justice Roy Solfisburg owned stock in the CCB. This made him suspicious, because in People v. Isaacs the Supreme Court had upheld a dismissal of charges against Theodore J. Isaacs, the general counsel of the CCB, and the records showed that the two justices acquired the stock shortly before their decision in Isaacs. Klingbiel's CCB stock was worth approximately $2500. Skolnick contacted several members of the media, and the story was broken in the Alton Evening Telegraph before being picked up by all the major papers.

The Illinois House of Representatives unanimously voted to appoint a special committee to investigate the matter; but before it could act, the Supreme Court, acting on its "inherent powers", granted a motion filed by Skolnick to appoint a special commission to investigate. (Ironically, the regular commission that investigated judicial malfeasance was chaired by Klingbiel.) The commission was co-chaired by the president of the Chicago Bar Association and the president of the Illinois State Bar Association. They named John Paul Stevens, a private practitioner with a thriving antitrust practice, as their independent counsel, thus setting the stage for Stevens' meteoric rise to the Supreme Court of the United States.

During the course of the investigation, Klingbiel initially said that he had purchased the stock long after the decision in Isaacs, but when it was revealed that he had received the stock as a gift before the decision, he claimed that the stock was a campaign contribution, which did not seem plausible since it was received after the campaign was over and his campaign fund still had a lot of money in it. Stevens' investigation further revealed that Klingbiel was assigned the decision in Isaacs even though it wasn't his turn in the court's rotation, and he discovered evidence of Solfisburg suggesting that CCB officials "do something nice" for Klingbiel. When the commission reported back it recommended that both Klingbiel and Solfisburg resign, which they grudgingly did a short while later.

Klingbiel remained bitter about the "political push" which took him from the bench, and to the end refused to admit that he had done anything wrong.

External links

References

  • Kenneth A. Manaster, Illinois Justice: The Scandal of 1969 and the Rise of John Paul Stevens (University of Chicago Press, 2001)