Politics in Lee County state's attorney's office?

Campaign documents on government computer

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DIXON – Former Lee County State’s Attorney Henry Dixon apparently had his secretary do campaign work at the office, even though state law bars using government resources for campaigns.

Through a public information request, Sauk Valley Media obtained documents related to Dixon’s re-election from the computer of his secretary, Sandie Cargill.

In one letter, Dixon wrote to ask an attorney why he contributed to the campaign of Dixon’s Republican opponent, Anna Sacco-Miller – a letter that one watchdog group suggested might be intimidating.

Dixon and Cargill declined to comment on the documents found on her computer. The county’s information technology director, Mike McBride, searched the computer for campaign-related documents; Cargill sent the results to Sauk Valley Media.

State’s Attorney Sacco-Miller, who took office Dec. 1 after defeating Dixon last month with nearly 59 percent of the vote, declined to discuss specifics in the documents.

“I find they speak for themselves,” she said in an email, “and as such, have no additional comments to make.”

Letter ‘could be seen as intimidating’

On Oct. 23, Dixon wrote to ask Sycamore attorney Rick Amato about his contribution to Sacco-Miller’s campaign. The Amato & Sheen law firm gave Sacco-Miller $350.

“I noted in the campaign contribution report of Anna Sacco-Miller that you are the highest contributor of money to her campaign,” Dixon wrote in the letter.

“I am curious as to why. Do you have some problem with the way Lee County criminal cases have been handled at this end?”

It’s not clear whether Amato received the letter or how he handled it if he did. He didn’t return a message for comment.

David Morrison, deputy director of the Chicago-based Illinois Campaign for Political Reform, questioned the letter.

“The [letter], asking someone who contributed to his opponent about objections to how he conducts the office, is sketchy and could be seen as intimidating and may be illegal, especially if the address atop the page corresponds to a taxpayer office,” Morrison wrote in an email.

Dixon used his personal address, 203 E. Fellows St., in all the letters, although they were produced on a government computer.

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