Juan Rangel, a political activist in Chicago, created the city’s largest charter chain, called UNO. Rangel was co-chairman of Rahm Emanuel’s mayoral campaign in 2011, when he first ran for mayor. UNO was an amazing cash cow. It collected $280 million over five years from the state. Governor Pat Quinn and House Speaker Mike Madigan took care of UNO, giving it a grant of $98 million to expand, a staggering amount for a single charter chain. Meanwhile, UNO fired its for-profit management firm and took charge of its operations, claiming 10% of all revenues for itself. None of UNO’s activities were monitored by anyone. Conflict of interest rules covered public schools, but not UNO.
Here is the ultimate nonpartisan article summing up the rise and fall of UNO and Juan Rangel. Here is my short summary of that brilliant article.
Once UNO won $98 million from the state, many friends and relatives got a piece of the action:
As the Sun-Times would reveal in February 2013, a long line of contractors, plumbers, electricians, security firms, and consultants tied to many of the VIPs on UNO’s organizational chart got a piece of the action. Rangel spelled out in tax documents and in later bond disclosures that the construction firm d’Escoto Inc.—owned by former UNO board member Federico d’Escoto, the brother of Miguel d’Escoto—was the owner’s representative on three projects funded by the grant. Another d’Escoto brother, Rodrigo, was paid $10 million for glass subcontracts for UNO’s two Soccer Academies and a third school in the Northwest Side neighborhood of Halewood.
The vendor lists were peppered with other familiar names: a $101,000 plumbing contract awarded to the sister of Victor Reyes, UNO’s lobbyist, who helped secure the state grant; a $1.7 million electrical contract given to a firm co-owned by one of Ed Burke’s precinct captains; tens of thousands in security contracts to Citywide Security, a firm that had given money to Danny Solis, and to Aguila Security, managed by the brother of Rep. Edward Acevedo, who voted for the $98 million for UNO.
As the scandals broke into public view, thanks to the enterprising reporting of the Chicago Sun-Times, Rangel resigned in December 2013.
Fred Klonsky writes about the consequences for Rangel. The SEC fined Rangel $10,000 while he admitted no wrong-doing. He is allowed to pay it off at $2,500 per quarter.
Klonsky writes in incredulity:
When he resigned from UNO he received a severance package of nearly a quarter million bucks.
$2500 a quarter?
That probably equals his lunch tab.
When Rangel ran UNO it was reported by the Sun-Times as having spent more than $60,000 for restaurants on his American Express “business platinum” card including thousand dollar tabs at Gene & Georgetti, the Chicago steak house.

The SEC always lets the powerful people and corporations off, letting them sign “no wrongdoing” papers. The case in this post. is just like other egregious cases, e.g. the recent SEC-settled “largest bribery case in Ohio history”. The SEC is nothing but a revolving door for industry insiders looking out for themselves and, the moneyed posse that surrounds Wall Street.
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If someone paid me $250,000, I’d be happy to pay out $10,000, whether I paid it off quarterly, or in a lump sum. I’ll take the first offer. Anybody? Anybody?
The SEC is useless.
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I had fervently wished that Bernie would become the Democratic nominee for president. He is ONE of the few in Washington that I believe is honest and his whole campaign was for money to get out of politics.
Again
I would post yet again that had he been we still would still have had to fight for rights as there are a great many politicians who obstruct good legislation as is happening right now in the House on the gun issue.
I would constantly urge the teacher’s unions to lead a dramatic, prolonged and comprehensive fight for what we know are good schools. ONLY with that kind of push back will anything happen in my view.
Politicians do what they think will keep or get them elected.
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Sixty grand spent on steakhouse lunches?
Well, you know those charter people: for them, it’s all about the kids…
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