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Strip club consultant runs for Cicero office

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(MCT) — For years, political consultant David Donahue collected $1,500 a week from a booming suburban strip club that he helped create.

Now Donahue wants Cicero voters to elect him to the post of town collector — where he would help oversee more than $100 million in local taxes and fees.

To win, Donahue is leaning on political advice from Betty Loren-Maltese, the former town president who went to prison over a mob-linked insurance scheme that bilked taxpayers of millions of dollars.

"She is a valuable source of information," Donahue said of Loren-Maltese in a recent interview outside his Cicero apartment along bustling Cermak Road.

Even in this hardscrabble town legendary for colorful politicians, Donahue's run for public office represents one of the more baggage-heavy candidacies in suburban politics. Court records show that the strip club he helped start, Polekatz in Bridgeview, was bankrolled and run, in part, by felons.

Loren-Maltese, meanwhile, works as a consultant to Donahue, a reversal from when he was one of her top aides in Cicero. She continues to maintain that she is innocent.

The former town president — who said she consults with Donahue on real estate and politics — said she believes he would bring integrity to the collector's office, though she stopped short of giving an official endorsement.

"I mean, he's certainly qualified with his college (education) and all," she said in a telephone interview. "And let's face it: If you want things to work in a municipality, you have to have a relationship with state and even federal officials to get things done. He has a good reputation with people that can really help the town."

Donahue and Sharon Starzyk, the former head of Cicero's Animal Welfare Department, are facing incumbent Fran Reitz on the local ballot Feb. 26. Through a spokesman, Reitz declined to comment.

Starzyk, who sued Cicero and town President Larry Dominick for alleged sexual harassment and wrongful termination, settled her case last year. In the settlement, the town denies any wrongdoing.

"I want to make the town like it was when I was a kid — a safe place to live with good schools," she said.

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