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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Jon Seidel

Another key player in CPS’ Barbara Byrd-Bennett scandal gets to leave prison because of COVID-19

Gary Solomon leaves the Dirksen Federal Courthouse in 2016. | Sun-Times file

A key player in the scandal that brought down one of then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s handpicked schools chiefs is set to leave prison three years early because of the coronavirus, court records show.

Gary Solomon, 52, will be moved to home confinement Sept. 22 after securing approval on Aug. 27, according to a joint status report filed Monday by prosecutors and Solomon’s attorney. That approval followed a Bureau of Prisons review of inmates with COVID-19 risk factors.

The result of that decision is that all three defendants in the kickback scandal that once left the Chicago Public Schools reeling will be out of prison five years after they were charged in October 2015.

Officially, Solomon’s sentence still runs until October 2023, prison records show. After that, a judge also sentenced him to serve a year of supervised release. However, prosecutors asked a judge earlier this year to reduce Solomon’s seven-year prison sentence because of “substantial assistance” he’d provided to an investigation in Maryland.

That investigation led to the conviction of Dallas Dance, once the superintendent of the Baltimore County Public Schools, according to records filed by Solomon attorney James Fieweger in July.

Fieweger on Monday told the Chicago Sun-Times that Solomon still intends to pursue a further sentence reduction. Fieweger also called the decision to transfer Solomon to home confinement a “purely internal” move by the Bureau of Prisons.

Solomon has been held at a minimum-security prison camp in Duluth, Minnesota.

Former CPS CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett left prison in May and moved to home confinement after the coronavirus cut short her time in prison. A judge had sentenced her to 4 ½ years behind bars. A third defendant in the case, Solomon business partner Thomas Vranas, completed his 18-month sentence in 2018.

Byrd-Bennett steered $22 million in no-bid contracts to businesses run by Solomon and Vranas, a pair of consultants who had once employed her. In return, she expected to receive hundreds of thousands of dollars in kickbacks, quipping in one email that she had “tuition to pay and casinos to visit (:”.

She destroyed her career and never saw a dime.

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