Former Illinois Secretary of State Paul Powell made headlines for the $800,000 in cash stuffed in shoeboxes found when he died. For more than half a century, a Powell-established $250,000 trust sustained his legacy. But the account that maintained his birthplace as a museum will soon run dry.
AP
How do you honor a legend?
Paul Powell was an Illinois Secretary of State, and a former Speaker of the state house, who famously picked up the scent of political deals and said, “I can smell the meat a-cookin’!”
He left behind plenty of smokin’ pork. When Paul Powell died in 1970, about $800,000 in cash was discovered in shoeboxes and attachรฉ cases in his closets. He also had a million dollars in racetrack stock. Horse racing is a state-regulated enterprise.
I just stored baseball cards in shoeboxes. Why didn’t I think bigger?
The IRS, lawyers, and the state of Illinois took their cut of Paul Powell’s ill-gotten gains, and the rest of his estate has been used to maintain his home in southern Illinois as a museum for his memorabilia (shoeboxes not included). But that fund has run out. Paul Powell’s home may go on the block.
A University of Illinois study finds that despite all vows to abolish shoebox and pork-barrel politics, Chicago remains the most corrupt city in the nation, judged by the per capita number of indicted officials. Illinois is the third most corrupt state.
Four of Illinois’s last ten governors have gone to prison, three Democrats and one Republican. It says “LAND OF LINCOLN” on state license plates, but perhaps there should be fine print below: “HANDMADE BY A FORMER GOVERNOR.”
I will attest, as a son of Illinois, that many citizens are appalled by corruption. Yet we can also be slightly…
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