Will County Clerk Nominee is a Lawbreaker

Your Democrat candidate Lauren Staley-Ferry has committed a felony and also has not the time to actually pay back the small business she stole money from.

If you as a voter and/or concerned citizen are as worried as we are please vote for the other candidate. For those who do not have the insight that Ferry had stolen a check from her place of employment and forged his signature. When caught she fled the scene of the crime and she went on to continue moving. When these issue was brought to light, Ferry said she was sorry, but not to the victim, and there was no attempt to pay off this debt, no attempt to remedy her wrong, rather she apologized and publicly talked about how difficult it was to be blasted with her own crimes.

This shows a lack of responsibility for her own actions aside from the way she might run the Will County clerks office, if she even can!



4 things to think about before you vote:

1. Lauren has perpetrated felony theft while the current County Clerk's office continues to be without corruption.
2. Ferry has not repaid her stolen gains to the victim.
3. Ferry may not even be bondable to be our clerk because of her felony criminalrecord.
4. Mike Madigan dispatched his team to stand behind Ferry only demonstrating this could bring more problems for Will County

Detailed news.

A Will County Board member running for the County Clerk was charged with felony forgery in 2003 but never appeared home in the courtroom for the summons.

Lauren Staley-Ferry, D-Joliet, was charged with the felony forgery in Maricopa County, Arizona. Staley-Ferry had lived and worked in Maricopa County but moved from there to Wisconsin before the charge was filed.

According to court documents, the charge alleged that, in July of 2002, Staley-Ferry removed a check from her employer at Independent Capital Group, then located in Scottsdale, Arizona, made it out to herself for an unknown amount and then deposited it into her personal checking account. The documents reported she did this without the knowledge or permission of her employer.

A warrant was issued for Staley-Ferry’s arrest in April 2003, according to Amanda Jacinto, the spokesperson for the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office. By then, Staley-Ferry claimed she had already left their explanation Arizona and was back in the Midwest, eventually going back to Joliet, her hometown.

.Jacinto said Staley-Ferry’s case predates the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office’s “records retention time,” but that it appears Staley-Ferry was never arrested. Instead, Jacinto said, it appears Staley-Ferry was sent a summons to appear in court, which she failed to do.

Also, Jacinto said, sentencing on a forgery conviction might probably be restitution and probation.

Staley-Ferry said she did not know about the charges until she had already left Arizona, although she said why not look here she did not recall exactly when she departed.

The charges were dropped in 2012, as specified in the court documents. Jacinto said, in March of 2012, the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office reached out to Independent Capital Group to let them know the change in the status in the case.

The Herald-News reached out to Staley-Ferry on Thursday, she said, while she cannot recall some of the details, she rejects the charge.

“I am alerted to that,” Staley-Ferry said. “Obviously, which was in the past.”

Lauren stated the particular criminal charges had been “misdirected” and that there was “nothing there” regarding the charge.

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