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South Cook News

Friday, November 22, 2024

Tiffany Henyard and the art of improperly commingling public funds/resources


Tiffany Henyard’s rampant commingling of public funds, property, and personnel is nothing less than a contractual relationship, albeit an unwritten relationship, between two local governments spearheaded by the same person elected to head both units of local government.

Although the Attorney General has not (yet) written an opinion on the possible incompatibility of the office of Mayor and that of Township Supervisor, we doubt any one person has pushed the envelope this far in the history of this state.

While we admit the Public Officer Prohibited Activities Act does not prohibit a Mayor or Township Supervisor from holding an elected office in another unit of local government, the holding of the other elected office is conditioned on the fact that neither unit of local government have contractual relationships with each other. The Village of Dolton and the Township of Thornton have had weekly, and almost daily, “contractual relationships” with each other – even though not formalized relationships – thanks to Tiffany Henyard’s rapidly failing “leadership” model.

These commingling activities should be considered “conflicts of duties” which create incompatibilities in public offices.

This is but one of many forthcoming articles demonstrating that Tiffany Henyard, as the Mayor of Dolton and the Supervisor of Thornton Township, is currently serving in incompatible offices, based on her frequent and repeated actions of commingling funds, property, and personnel at a whim and without any board approval. We believe an informal or verbal “contract” has been established inside the mind of Henyard as she obviously cares not to separately protect the valuable taxpayer resources of the village and township and is not faithfully performing with undivided loyalty to her elected duties to each of the units of local government she serves.

“`[T]he common law doctrine of incompatibility * * * insure[s] that there be the appearance as well as the actuality of impartiality and undivided loyalty.'” (quoting O’Connor v. Calandrillo (1971). Another good case to read comes out of Harvey, Illinois, and explains the issues pretty well (here).

In the following photos and videos submitted by residents of Dolton and Thornton Township – and by Henyard’s own social media postings, you can clearly see improperly used township and village vehicles to perform work for each other, illegally used township road district funds to purchase two police cars and title them in the township’s name (instead of the road district), illegally placed police license plates on them and illegally used the activated police lights for personal gain, used at least six vehicles from the two local governments on a 10-day look-at-me trip to Springfield (pay special attention to the safety and traffic violations on the township trailer during this trip), and used government vehicles in an impromptu “parade” to intimidate people after the appellate court said she could stay in office.

Various photos and videos from the past few months – we will concentrate on each individual event in future articles:

Video clips of the various events and locations where village and township resources were commingled, including their unauthorized use on a 10-day event of Henyard’s newly formed alleged nonprofit. We will discuss these individually in future articles:

*This story was originally published by Edgar County Watchdogs. Read the original here.

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