41 min

A.D. Q&A with new Chicago Inspector General Deborah Witzburg A.D. Q&A with A.D. Quig

    • Política

Chicago's Office of the Inspector General has published many blockbuster reports over the years. Its job is to investigate corruption, misconduct, waste, fraud and abuse big and small. In recent years, it's found a culture of sexual harassment in the Chicago Fire Department, blasted the Chicago Police Department’s response to summer looting in 2020, and helped U.S. Attorney John Lausch secure indictments of City Council members. But despite its importance to chipping away at city waste, the office’s top post was left vacant for roughly eight months. Deborah Witzburg, this week's guest, was confirmed to take over in late April. She headed up the IG’s public safety section starting in the Spring of 2020, but left when the last IG, Joe Ferguson, announced he was stepping down. She wanted the job. And she got it. But what’s she in for? It’s no secret that Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Ferguson had a rocky relationship in the last few months of his tenure. She suggested Ferguson wasn’t staying in his lane and hadn’t delivered on all of the investigations he said he would. We’ll talk to Witzburg about whether she thinks the IG’s office swerved out of its lane while she was there, how she plans to counter the “trust deficit” that’s built up among citizens after years of Chicago corruption, and what it’s like being the first woman to lead the office.

Chicago's Office of the Inspector General has published many blockbuster reports over the years. Its job is to investigate corruption, misconduct, waste, fraud and abuse big and small. In recent years, it's found a culture of sexual harassment in the Chicago Fire Department, blasted the Chicago Police Department’s response to summer looting in 2020, and helped U.S. Attorney John Lausch secure indictments of City Council members. But despite its importance to chipping away at city waste, the office’s top post was left vacant for roughly eight months. Deborah Witzburg, this week's guest, was confirmed to take over in late April. She headed up the IG’s public safety section starting in the Spring of 2020, but left when the last IG, Joe Ferguson, announced he was stepping down. She wanted the job. And she got it. But what’s she in for? It’s no secret that Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Ferguson had a rocky relationship in the last few months of his tenure. She suggested Ferguson wasn’t staying in his lane and hadn’t delivered on all of the investigations he said he would. We’ll talk to Witzburg about whether she thinks the IG’s office swerved out of its lane while she was there, how she plans to counter the “trust deficit” that’s built up among citizens after years of Chicago corruption, and what it’s like being the first woman to lead the office.

41 min