|
| | HR0904 | | LRB102 28470 MST 40346 r |
|
|
1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION
|
2 | | WHEREAS, Future Attorney General Jim Ryan was born on |
3 | | February 21, 1946; a native of Illinois, he was born in |
4 | | Chicago; he moved to the suburb of Villa Park with his family; |
5 | | and
|
6 | | WHEREAS, Growing up in the church, young Jim Ryan found a |
7 | | series of mentors and inspirations in the DuPage County |
8 | | educational institutions affiliated with the Order of Saint |
9 | | Benedict; he attended Saint Procopius Academy, an all-boys |
10 | | school at the time of his attendance, and then Saint Procopius |
11 | | College; and
|
12 | | WHEREAS, With his home in Villa Park and his place of |
13 | | schooling in Lisle, before his eyes, Jim Ryan could see how |
14 | | DuPage County and the United States were growing and changing |
15 | | in the 1950s and 1960s; throughout his life, he would be a |
16 | | voice for ordered change and thoughtful continuity; and |
17 | | WHEREAS, Graduating from college in 1968, Jim Ryan chose |
18 | | the law for his life and began his studies at Chicago-Kent |
19 | | College of Law; in 1971, he received his degree and passed the |
20 | | bar exam, soon commencing work as a prosecutor within the |
21 | | Office of the DuPage County State's Attorney; and |
|
| | HR0904 | - 2 - | LRB102 28470 MST 40346 r |
|
|
1 | | WHEREAS, After experience as both a senior member of the |
2 | | DuPage County State's Attorney's office and in private |
3 | | practice, Jim Ryan sought the nomination of the Republican |
4 | | Party for DuPage County State's Attorney in 1984 and was his |
5 | | party's nominee in the general election; he became the chief |
6 | | prosecutor in Illinois's second-most-populous county; and |
7 | | WHEREAS, During Jim Ryan's legal leadership in DuPage |
8 | | County, the population of the county grew from 658,835 in the |
9 | | 1980 United States Census to 781,666 in 1990, with further |
10 | | growth towards 904,161 in 2000; this growth created new |
11 | | opportunities and challenges, including the massive office |
12 | | move associated with the opening of the new DuPage County |
13 | | Government Center in 1990 on the outskirts of the county seat |
14 | | of Wheaton; and |
15 | | WHEREAS, As state's attorney, Jim Ryan won the praise of |
16 | | his neighbors for the operations of his key office during this |
17 | | time of growth and change, winning reelection in 1988 and |
18 | | 1992; also respected by his fellow state's attorneys, he was |
19 | | chosen as president of the Illinois State's Attorneys |
20 | | Association, thus becoming the chief voice in Springfield of |
21 | | solutions to the challenges faced by professional prosecutors; |
22 | | and |
23 | | WHEREAS, With a tough-on-crime image derived from his ten |
|
| | HR0904 | - 3 - | LRB102 28470 MST 40346 r |
|
|
1 | | years as DuPage County's lead prosecutor, Jim Ryan was |
2 | | nominated by the Republicans in 1994 to be the Attorney |
3 | | General of Illinois; when he won the statewide election in |
4 | | November 1994, this switched control of the Attorney General's |
5 | | Office between the two political parties; and |
6 | | WHEREAS, Despite the partisan nature of politics, as |
7 | | attorney general, Jim Ryan saw it as his mission to work |
8 | | closely with prosecutors, law enforcement officials, and |
9 | | leaders from all over Illinois, including his former fellow |
10 | | state's attorney Richard M. Daley of Cook County, a Democrat, |
11 | | who had become the mayor of Chicago; and |
12 | | WHEREAS, One of the newest authorizations granted to the |
13 | | Office of the Illinois Attorney General when Jim Ryan took |
14 | | over in 1995 was the authorization to convene statewide grand |
15 | | juries; the Statewide Grand Jury Act (1991) had raised serious |
16 | | concerns among many county state's attorneys; and |
17 | | WHEREAS, As an experienced former state's attorney |
18 | | himself, with ties of friendship and acquaintanceship across |
19 | | Illinois, Jim Ryan brokered the current system of written and |
20 | | unwritten agreements that has made the Statewide Grand Jury |
21 | | Bureau within the Office of the Attorney General a key element |
22 | | in the Illinois prosecution of multi-county cases, especially |
23 | | cases involving guns, drugs, or computers; and |
|
| | HR0904 | - 4 - | LRB102 28470 MST 40346 r |
|
|
1 | | WHEREAS, By 1995, Illinois and its Medicaid system, paid |
2 | | for by Illinois taxpayers, had incurred billions of dollars in |
3 | | current and future healthcare billings for treatments provided |
4 | | to Medicaid-eligible Illinois residents who had smoked |
5 | | cigarettes and who had then developed cancer and other health |
6 | | conditions related to smoking; and |
7 | | WHEREAS, In November 1996, the State of Illinois, with Jim |
8 | | Ryan in the lead in his capacity as attorney general, filed a |
9 | | major lawsuit against the U.S. tobacco industry, including all |
10 | | of the major firms that worked together at that time to |
11 | | dominate the manufacture and supply of cigarettes; and |
12 | | WHEREAS, This lawsuit required an unprecedented level of |
13 | | interstate cooperation between the attorneys general of the |
14 | | states that had filed lawsuits of this type; Jim Ryan and his |
15 | | colleagues had to deploy full-time coordination teams to share |
16 | | data and case-law information in order to create a united |
17 | | front for their litigation; and |
18 | | WHEREAS, Due in part to his own hard work and with the |
19 | | active cooperation of many other attorneys general from across |
20 | | the United States, Jim Ryan was able to reach and announce a |
21 | | landmark settlement with the tobacco companies in 1998; the |
22 | | agreement included a future cash flow for the plaintiff states |
|
| | HR0904 | - 5 - | LRB102 28470 MST 40346 r |
|
|
1 | | derived from moneys taken in by suppliers of cigarettes; and |
2 | | WHEREAS, Under this settlement, the industry also barred |
3 | | itself, on a nationwide basis, from many forms of tobacco |
4 | | advertising, including advertising featuring cartoons and |
5 | | anthropomorphic mascots (Joe Camel) designed to attract |
6 | | underage customers; and |
7 | | WHEREAS, During the 24 years since the announcement of |
8 | | this settlement, Illinois and its taxpayers have received |
9 | | payments from the tobacco industry that now total $9.1 |
10 | | billion, money that has not had to be levied in taxes; and |
11 | | WHEREAS, The Office of the Illinois Attorney General now |
12 | | routinely contacts, talks to, communicates with, and |
13 | | cooperates in a wide variety of policy activities and |
14 | | litigation activities with other attorneys general in other |
15 | | U.S. states; this pattern of interstate cooperation between |
16 | | the chief lawyers of the separate states is another enduring |
17 | | legacy of Jim Ryan and illustrates his commitment to |
18 | | cooperation, change, and continuity; and |
19 | | WHEREAS, After the announcement of the tobacco settlement, |
20 | | Jim Ryan ran for re-election in 1998, winning in a landslide; |
21 | | and |
|
| | HR0904 | - 6 - | LRB102 28470 MST 40346 r |
|
|
1 | | WHEREAS, Urged by many across Illinois to run for Governor |
2 | | of Illinois in 2002 upon the retirement of George Ryan, Jim |
3 | | Ryan did so and was the Republican Party nominee; |
4 | | unfortunately, the names of George Ryan and the Democratic |
5 | | nominee for the same office, Rod Blagojevich, echoed louder in |
6 | | the press and in the minds of voters than the honored name of |
7 | | Jim Ryan; and |
8 | | WHEREAS, After leaving the office of attorney general at |
9 | | the end of 2002, Jim Ryan returned to his educational home, now |
10 | | Benedictine University, as an instructor and teacher in |
11 | | political science and in criminal justice; and |
12 | | WHEREAS, In 2005, Jim Ryan and his friends established the |
13 | | Center for Civic Leadership at Benedictine University as an |
14 | | ongoing center of teaching and training for young adults, |
15 | | inside and outside the Benedictine student body, in civil, |
16 | | open dialogue across political boundaries; and |
17 | | WHEREAS, In the years following 2003, Jim Ryan also |
18 | | practiced law at Gardner, Carton & Douglas in Chicago and was |
19 | | of counsel at Jim Ryan & Associates in Naperville; and
|
20 | | WHEREAS, Throughout his life as a lawyer, public official, |
21 | | and teacher, Jim Ryan was sustained by the love of his family; |
22 | | in 2022, this included his wife, Marie; his son, John, and |
|
| | HR0904 | - 7 - | LRB102 28470 MST 40346 r |
|
|
1 | | John's wife, Stacie; his son, Jim, and Jim's wife, Jennifer; |
2 | | his son, Matthew, and Matthew's wife, Melissa; and his |
3 | | daughter, Amy Ryan; and many grandchildren; and
|
4 | | WHEREAS, Jim Ryan's life included the devastating losses |
5 | | of his daughter Anne Marie "Annie" Ryan and his son Patrick J. |
6 | | Ryan, whom he always loved; and
|
7 | | WHEREAS, On June 12, 2022, the life of former Attorney |
8 | | General Jim Ryan came to an end in DuPage County, his home |
9 | | county; in an hour of great partisanship, his legacy was |
10 | | praised by leading Illinoisans from both sides of the |
11 | | political aisle; therefore, be it
|
12 | | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE |
13 | | HUNDRED SECOND GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that |
14 | | we join in mourning the death of former Attorney General Jim |
15 | | Ryan, an honored son of Illinois; and be it further |
16 | | RESOLVED, That we remember the enduring contributions made |
17 | | by Jim Ryan to the professional operations of the lead |
18 | | public-sector attorneys of Illinois, states' attorneys, and |
19 | | the Office of the Attorney General alike; and be it further
|
20 | | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution should |
21 | | be presented to the wife of Attorney General Jim Ryan, Annie |