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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Andy Grimm

Ald. Proco ‘Joe’ Moreno hit with insurance fraud, obstruction of justice charges

Proco "Joe" Moreno | Chicago police

Ald. Proco “Joe” Moreno (1st) is due to walk out of the Leighton Criminal Courthouse sometime Wednesday afternoon, after a Cook County judge granted him an I-bond on charges connected to an alleged false police report he filed in January.

The alderman, who is set to leave office this week after losing a bid for reelection earlier this spring, nodded along as his lawyer spoke at a brief bond hearing earlier Wednesday, recounting how Moreno had cooperated with police shortly after a woman he had been dating was pulled over in his 2016 Audi A6 and charged with stealing the car.

Prosecutors say the woman had text messages that showed Moreno had loaned her the car, and was trying to make dinner plans with her — even after he reported the car stolen to both Chicago police and his insurance company.

Judge John Fitzgerald Lyke Jr. said the evidence as provided in court “outlines… if, true, at least a terrible lapse in judgment.”

Moreno faces charges of disorderly conduct, obstruction of justice and insurance fraud.

Lyke is the same judge who set $100,000 bail for “Empire” actor Jussie Smollett in another false police report case earlier this year.

Moreno, whose tenure as alderman ends Monday, was taken into custody on the felony charges Tuesday night, according to Chicago police. Attorney Camilo Oceguera told the judge that Moreno had immediately hired a lawyer and cooperated with police after the woman had been arrested while driving his car. But the lawyers said Moreno had heard nothing from police until he got news that an arrest warrant had been issued for him.

“For two-and-a-half terms, he has been an alderman and serving his constituents and been nothing but a perfect member of society,” Oceguera said.

On Jan. 4, Moreno had called 911 to report that his Audi had been stolen from his Bucktown home. But prosecutors said the night before, Moreno had invited the 35-year-old woman he had been dating over to his house, gave her the keys, took her to his garage and watched her drive away.

“The call operator informed Moreno that anyone found driving the vehicle would be arrested,” Assistant State’s Attorney Tom Simpson said in court.

A month later, the woman who said she was in an on-and-off relationship with the alderman, was pulled over on the Northwest Side. The woman begged police officers to look at texts from Moreno that showed he had loaned her the car. But the woman was arrested after police were unable to get the alderman on the phone or find him at his house, prosecutors said.

Moreno also told his insurance company that the car had been taken, and in a follow-up call about his claim nearly a month later, Moreno speculated that he had left the key in the car in his garage, and must have forgotten to close the overhead door to the garage or that someone had used a device to unscramble his door opener signal, Simpson said. The insurance company did not pay out on Moreno’s claim, Simpson said, but had been prepared offer the alderman as much as $30,000.

Moreno lost his re-election bid to challenger Daniel La Spata in February, just weeks after the news stories about the stolen car report surfaced.

Moreno had also faced political headwinds after a woman reported he had flashed a “peace officer” badge — which is issued to all alderman — and ordered her to give up a parking space near Wrigley Field. Moreno also was filmed taunting the owner of the Bucktown building that housed the famed Double Door music club, after the building owner had evicted the club owners.

Contributing: Sam Kelly

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