OrlandParkRecord.com  ·  Investigative Public Record

The Orland
Park Record

134 years of mayors, money, and power in one southwest Chicago suburb. Two generations of the Pekau family. A park named after the machine. A Cultural Center torn down. $33 million to a campaign donor. Every fact documented. Every source public.

134
Years
Documented
$33M
No Collateral
One Donor
$251M
Projected Debt
Pekau's Plan
47
Primary
Sources
57%
Voted Pekau
Out · Apr 2025
↓   scroll to read   ↓

The Lead Story  ·  November 6, 2023  ·  Village Board Vote

$33 Million.
One Donor. No Collateral.

On November 6, 2023 — after the election, so voters couldn't weigh in — Mayor Keith Pekau pushed a 6-to-1 vote committing $33 million in public funds to Edwards Realty. Developer Ramzi Hassan had donated to Pekau campaigns, sponsored his golf fundraisers, and personally maxed out his congressional contribution. The lone NO vote was cast by the man who would defeat Pekau eighteen months later: Jim Dodge.

$33M
TIF commitment
Nov 6, 2023
6–1
The vote
Dodge: NO
$0
Collateral
Required
$9,800
Edwards donation
Pekau for Congress
$5,800
Hassan personal
max contribution
$251M
Projected debt
under Pekau plan
The Debt He Left Behind · Documented by PMA Financial Consultants

From $67 Million to
$251 Million.

PMA Financial Consultants, hired by the Dodge administration, revealed what Pekau's full plan would cost: a trajectory from $67 million when he took office to a projected $251 million by 2027. The numbers were not fully disclosed until after Pekau lost the election.

Orland Park Village Debt — The Documented Record
2019 — Pekau enters office$67,000,000
$67M
↓   Eight years of "People Over Politics"   ↓
April 2025 — Pekau loses election, debt finally disclosed$90,670,000
$90.67M
↓   His full plan would add another $160 million   ↓
2027 — Pekau's projected trajectory (PMA Consultants)$251,000,000
$251M PROJECTED
↓   What Jim Dodge did instead   ↓
October 22, 2025 — Dodge board eliminates Triangle TIF+$2.5M Released to Schools
$2.5M BACK TO SCHOOLS

1969 – 2025 · 56 Years · Two Generations · One Playbook

A Pekau at the Beginning.
A Pekau at the End.

Donald Pekau Sr. first won a trustee seat in 1969. His son Keith Pekau was forced from the mayor's office in 2025. Between them: near-identical party names, the same selective enforcement of rules, the same use of government power for personal ends — and the same exit under pressure when the conduct became public.

"You have to wonder what incident marred Pekau's personality growing up as a child in this region. Was it that his father, who served as an undistinguished trustee for a few years until 1975, didn't get the recognition that the son believes he deserved?"
Ray Hanania · Suburban Chicagoland · May 1, 2024 · After Pekau removed Frederick T. Owens' name from Village Hall · suburbanchicagoland.com
The Complete Documented Record · All Sources Linked

Father & Son:
The Full Record

Every accusation below is drawn from a primary source — archived newspaper pages, court documents, official government websites, and investigative reporting. Every source is linked. Every fact is verifiable.

Village Trustee · 1969–1975
Donald Pekau Sr.
Son of the machine era · Served under Mayor Melvin Doogan · Disappeared as the 1975 scandal broke
  • 01 Zoning Board to Trustee Pipeline. Pekau Sr. served on the Village Zoning Board of Appeals — the body that reviewed all development applications — before running for trustee in 1969. He then voted on the same projects he had previously reviewed as a board member. Documented in his own League of Women Voters candidate biography. Suburbanite Economist, Apr 18, 1971, P.8 · newspapers.com/image/54234653
  • 02 The Rafacz Farm Annexation — Inside Deal. Pekau Sr. was a sitting trustee when the board approved the 1971 annexation of the Rafacz sod farm — the land that became Orland Square Mall. The Rafacz family had an existing snow removal contract with the village — a financial relationship confirmed in December 1974. Urban Investment and Development Company (Aetna subsidiary), Marshall Field's, and Sears moved in. The board that Pekau served on enabled the entire project. Southtown Star, Dec 11, 1974, P.2 · newspapers.com/image/537423370
  • 03 Private Developer Meetings Before Public Votes. Pekau's board colleague Trustee Roger Frantz held private meetings with developers before any public board vote on annexation. This was the normal operating procedure on the board Pekau served on — documented in the press in April 1974. Southtown Star, Apr 10, 1974, P.2 · newspapers.com/image/537448617
  • 04 Targeted Valentine Slachetka's Music Shop. As trustee, Pekau Sr. used his position to target Rogues' Gallery music shop (9959 W. 143rd St.) owned by Valentine Slachetka. In April 1974, he claimed the shop's posters depicted "sexual acts." By November 1975, Slachetka threatened to sue the village for discriminatory license conditions — arguing rules were applied differently to his business than to others. Tinley Park Star/Tribune, Nov 27, 1975, P.3 · newspapers.com/image/537462932
  • 05 "Government by Men, Not by Law." The December 21, 1975 Tinley Park Star/Tribune published the definitive account of Pekau's board era: Orland State Bank built a drive-in facility without the required special use permit — and the board looked away. Outsider builder Gidlund had his permit revoked for the same violation. A village trustee and village attorney admitted the zoning ordinance had been ignored "in other cases too, when village officials feel someone deserves a 'break.'" Tinley Park Star/Tribune, Dec 21, 1975, P.12 · newspapers.com/image/537451454
  • 06 "We Can Delay Anything We Want." Village official Pressler stated publicly in August 1972 — while Pekau was a sitting trustee — that the board could delay any development it chose. No permit, no sewer connection, no building. This was the machine's explicit power over the entire residential building boom. Suburbanite Economist, Aug 23, 1972, P.56 · newspapers.com/image/55157524
  • 07 The Disappearing Act — Gone As the Scandal Broke. The November 27, 1975 article names Pekau Sr. simultaneously as "an ex-trustee" AND "still on the board" — a direct contradiction suggesting a hasty or disputed departure precisely as the December 1975 scandal was being reported. He was never documented on the board again. His son Keith would later falsely claim he was "voted out because of growth and Orland Square." The dates don't match any election. Tinley Park Star/Tribune, Nov 27, 1975, P.3 · newspapers.com/image/537462932
Mayor · 2017–2025 · Son of Donald Pekau Sr. · Now in Colorado
Keith Pekau
People Over Politics · Lost 57%–43% · Court restraining order · Left the state
  • 01 2012 Bid Rigging — His Own Company. Pekau's groundskeeper landscaping company amended bids after seeing competitor pricing. Jones Day investigated. Village staff called the process "a department-wide joke." DCCC Research Book, September 2022
  • 02 $150,000 Salary Fraud. Campaigned against the $150,000 mayoral salary. Took every dollar. Collected over $600,000 his first term alone. DCCC Research Book, September 2022
  • 03 Horton Insurance — $4.5 Million No-Bid. Pekau's firm received ~$25,000 from Horton. Horton donated $13,000 to campaigns. Village paid Horton $4.5 million — no competitive bidding. DCCC Research Book, 2022; Patch Orland Park
  • 04 Klein Thorpe Jenkins — $3 Million, Two Losing Lawsuits. KTJ donated $22,000 to Pekau campaigns. Village paid KTJ $3 million+. Two KTJ lawsuits were described by a judge as having "negligible likelihood of success" — taxpayers absorbed $70,000+ in losses. DCCC Research Book, 2022
  • 05 Village Manager Hired Jones Day to Investigate Pekau — January 2019. Village Manager Peter La Margo, alarmed by Pekau's conduct, retained Jones Day to investigate the sitting mayor. An extraordinary act by a professional administrator. Patch Orland Park, 2019
  • 06 Ethics Rules REPEALED While Under Investigation — May 2019. While Jones Day was actively investigating him, Pekau led the board to repeal the ethics ordinance requiring conflict-of-interest disclosures. He eliminated the rules while being investigated for violating them. DCCC Research Book, 2022
  • 07 Fired La Margo. Promoted His Replacement. After La Margo commissioned the Jones Day investigation, Pekau fired him. La Margo's replacement then cleared Pekau. The investigator appointed by the man who got fired resolved the case in favor of the man who fired him. DCCC Research Book, 2022
  • 08 COVID — 5th Highest Death Rate. $70,000 Wasted on Pointless Lawsuit. Orland Park had the 5th highest COVID death rate among Cook County municipalities over 40,000 population. Simultaneously, Pekau spent $70,000 in public funds on a lawsuit a judge said had "negligible likelihood of success." DCCC Research Book, 2022
  • 09 March 2021 — Edwards Realty $10K/Month. 6–1. Only Dodge Said No. Board voted to give Edwards Realty a $120,000/year consulting contract. Ramzi Hassan had donated to Pekau campaigns and sponsored his golf tournament. Jim Dodge: the only NO vote. Illinois Review, February 2023
  • 10 Zeigler Auto — $5,000 Donation, One Month Later $4.5 Million Village Deal. Zeigler donated $5,000 to Pekau. One month later the board approved a $4.5 million sales tax inducement for Zeigler. The pattern is identical to the Edwards Realty structure. DCCC Research Book, 2022
  • 11 November 2023 — $33 Million to Campaign Donor. No Collateral. Dodge: NO. Committed $33 million in public funds to Edwards Realty. No collateral. No lien. Performance-forgiveness clauses make repayment essentially optional. Debt trajectory: $67M → projected $251M. Vote taken after the election. Jim Dodge: the only NO. Illinois Review 2023; PMA Consultants Report July 2025
  • 12 February 2024 — Removed Frederick T. Owens' Name from Village Hall. Replaced It With His Own. The name had been on the building since 1993. Owens was the beloved reform mayor who died in office in 1992. Pekau also removed the names of other honored former officials and replaced them with his own name on village signage. 600+ petition signatures in four days. He moved the Owens sign to the rear of the building. Suburban Chicagoland, May 1, 2024; Patch Orland Park
  • 13 February 5, 2024 — "Go to Another Country." Open Meetings Act Violated. Arab American residents with 800 signatures were told to leave the country. Pekau ordered the police chief to clear the room. Reconvened in an empty chamber. Illinois AG ruled the Open Meetings Act was violated. CAIR-Chicago: "racist ugly rants from a tone deaf local official." Arab News, Feb 6, 2024; IL AG Advisory Opinion, Jul 2024; Patch Orland Park
  • 14 Used Village Website to Attack Private Citizen Complainant — On the Public Dime. Same day as the AG ruling, Pekau published an official village press release on orlandpark.org personally attacking the resident who filed the complaint — calling him a "convicted felon" — using government servers, staff time, and taxpayer resources to attack a private citizen. orlandpark.org official press release, July 19, 2024
  • 15 March 2025 — Followed Fire District Candidates Door-to-Door in His SUV. Pekau personally drove his gray Dodge Durango to follow Orland Fire Protection District candidates as they knocked on residents' doors. Trustee Sean Kampas rode shotgun. The sitting mayor stalking volunteer candidates through neighborhoods. Illinois Review, 2025
  • 16 April 1, 2025 — Lost 57% to 43%. Entire Slate Defeated. Jim Dodge won 9,500–6,940. Every Pekau trustee candidate lost. Incumbents Riordan and Kampas defeated. The voters rendered a comprehensive verdict. Illinois Review, Apr 2, 2025; Yahoo News/Daily Southtown, Apr 2, 2025
  • 17 Post-Election: Facebook War on Dodge and His Wife Linda. Moved to Colorado. Pekau immediately relaunched his campaign Facebook page, started "Dodgeing the Facts" and "Straight Down the Fairway" newsletters attacking Dodge — including personal attacks on Dodge's family including wife Linda. He relocated to Colorado but continued the attacks from out of state. "Jim Dodge and his goons just sent me a cease-and-desist letter." Will County Gazette, Jul 25, 2025; Regional News, Jul 22, 2025
  • 18 August 2025 — Court TRO for Publishing Confidential Village Documents. Cook County Judge issued a Temporary Restraining Order after Pekau published internal village litigation documents — details of active federal lawsuits — on his blog. Village attorney: "It's hard to fathom why Mr. Pekau would do this unless he is simply being vindictive." Pekau: "I will not be silenced." orlandpark.org, Aug 14, 2025; CBS Chicago, Aug 15, 2025
  • 19 January 20, 2026 — Court Upholds TRO. Second Ruling Against Him. Cook County court upheld the restraining order. Two separate judges. Two rulings confirming what 57% of voters already knew. The man who claimed to champion transparency was court-ordered to stop publishing documents about the village he once ran. Village of Orland Park official records, January 2026

The Park Question · Was It Necessary — or Revenge?

Doogan Park.
The Cultural Center.
And a Son's Vindictiveness.

Doogan Park · 14710 Park Lane · Orland Park

The Park Named After the Machine Mayor
— and What Pekau Did to It

Doogan Park is named after Melvin Doogan — the man who ran Orland Park for 20 years (1965–1985), the mayor under whom Donald Pekau Sr. served as trustee. The Doogan era produced the machine documented in this record: the "government by men, not by law," the selective enforcement, the sewer tollbooth, the private developer meetings.

The park named for that mayor included the Orland Park Cultural Center — a mid-1970s building that housed the library, chess tournaments, and bagpipe classes for decades. In 2023, Mayor Keith Pekau — Donald Pekau Sr.'s son — ordered it demolished.

The Question the Community Is Asking

Was the Cultural Center Truly Unrepairable — or Was This Revenge?

Mayor Keith Pekau justified the demolition of the Orland Park Cultural Center by claiming it "needs several million dollars of repair." He said the village offered it to Orland Park School District 135 for one dollar — and the schools declined, he claimed, because the repairs were "too much for them to do."

The community has a different question. Keith Pekau is the son of Donald Pekau Sr. — a trustee who served under Mayor Melvin Doogan and disappeared from the board exactly when the December 1975 scandal broke. Doogan's name is on that park. The Cultural Center at Doogan Park was built during the Doogan era. Keith Pekau has shown a consistent pattern of erasing or demolishing anything connected to the mayors who came before him — he removed Frederick T. Owens' name from Village Hall and replaced it with his own. He removed the names of multiple honored former officials from village buildings.

The question is not merely whether the building needed repair. The question is: Was a community asset truly unsalvageable — or was this an act of political vindictiveness by a mayor whose father was associated with the very machine the park honors? The community never got an independent structural assessment made public. They got Pekau's word. And Pekau's word, as this record documents in 19 separate items, has not always been reliable.

"The old library needs several million dollars of repair. We did offer it to schools for a dollar and they declined because the repairs are too much for them to do. We think it's more appropriate to expand the park, so that's the plan."
Keith Pekau · Regional News · May 3, 2023 · Announcing demolition of the Orland Park Cultural Center at Doogan Park · No independent structural assessment was released publicly · southwestregionalpublishing.com
1970s
When Cultural Center Was Built
The building was constructed during the Doogan era — the exact period when Donald Pekau Sr. served as a trustee. It stood for nearly 50 years.
20
Years Melvin Doogan Was Mayor
Doogan ran Orland Park 1965–1985. Donald Pekau Sr. served under him from 1969 to 1975. The park carries Doogan's name. The building Pekau demolished was part of it.
$0
Independent Assessment Released
No independent structural engineering assessment of the Cultural Center was made public before the demolition vote. Residents got Pekau's word. The board voted unanimously.
3+
Names Pekau Removed from Buildings
Frederick T. Owens — removed from Village Hall. Multiple other former officials' names removed. Pekau's own name was added to the signage in their place.
February 5, 2024 · Attorney General of Illinois · July 19, 2024

"Chief, Clear
the Room."

Arab American residents of Orland Park came to a public board meeting with 800 signatures. They asked for a ceasefire resolution — the same kind the village had adopted for Ukraine. Pekau told them to leave the country. Then he cleared the room. The Illinois Attorney General ruled it violated the Open Meetings Act. Then Pekau used the village government website to attack the private citizen who complained.

"If you're an American citizen and you don't feel that way, you can certainly go and fight, go to another country and support that country, and all the power to you if you chose to do that."
Keith Pekau · February 5, 2024 · To Arab American Orland Park residents presenting an 800-signature petition · Recorded and broadcast on YouTube · Arab News, February 6, 2024
800
Petition Signatures
Residents signed asking the board to adopt a ceasefire resolution. The village had already adopted one for Ukraine.
0
Audience Left in Room
Pekau cleared the chamber. He reconvened and held the rest of the meeting before an essentially empty room.
AG
Illinois Attorney General Ruled
"The Board effectively closed the meeting to the public even though most of the attendees had not disrupted the proceeding." — AG Advisory Opinion, July 19, 2024.
$$
Village Website Used to Attack Complainant
Pekau published an official press release on orlandpark.org personally attacking the private citizen who filed the AG complaint — using government servers and taxpayer money.
Father to Son · 56 Years · Identical Pattern

Like Father, Like Son

Element Donald Pekau Sr. · 1969–1975 Keith Pekau · 2017–2025
Party Name"People Responsible to Orland" — PRO"People Over Politics" — POP
Entry PathZoning Board of Appeals → Village TrusteeVillage landscaping contracts → Mayor
Developer PatternRafacz farm/Urban Investment annexation. Pre-vote developer meetings. Snow removal contract to Rafacz family.Edwards Realty $33M. Horton Insurance $4.5M. KTJ law firm $3M. Zeigler Auto $4.5M. All campaign donors.
EthicsZoning ordinance waived for Orland State Bank; enforced against outsider Gidlund. "Government by men, not by law."Ethics rules repealed while under investigation. Village manager fired for commissioning investigation.
Minority TargetingValentine Slachetka — music shop owner targeted with selective license conditions, 1975.Arab American residents — "go to another country," cleared from public meeting. AG: OMA violated, 2024.
Erasing HistoryLeft the board as the era was publicly exposed and documented.Removed Frederick Owens' name from Village Hall. Removed multiple honored officials' names. Added his own.
ExitDisappeared from board the exact month the scandal article published. Described as "ex-trustee" and "still on board" simultaneously.Lost 57%–43%. Court restraining order. TRO upheld. Moved to Colorado. Still attacking Dodge from out of state.
The Quote"A curious system of government by men, not by law... The situation mocks justice." — Tinley Park Star/Tribune, Dec 21, 1975"I will not be silenced." — Keith Pekau, after court TRO, August 2025
134 Years of Growth · The Community They Built

How Orland Park Became
What It Is

From a farming village of 500 to a 57,000-resident city anchoring southwest Cook County. Every annexation, every building permit, every sewer connection ran through a board where the rules applied differently depending on who you were.

Population Growth 1892–2026
White flight → Mall opens 1976 Dodge wins 1892 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2025 ~500 ~3,500 23,045 51,077 57,757
1892
~500 people · ~1 sq mi
Village incorporated May 31. Dutch and German farming families. One train depot. One school.
1947
Andrew Corp arrives
Victor J. Andrew buys 430 acres for $86,000 — $200/acre. The company that becomes worth $2.65 billion is already here.
1964
I-80 opens
The highway that makes everything possible. Without I-80: no mall catchment, no auto row, no regional hub.
1969–85
3,500 → 35,000
The Doogan Machine. White flight migration from Roseland. Every permit ran through a tollbooth.
1971
The Rafacz Annexation
Trustees annex the sod farm. Urban Investment + Marshall Field's + Sears. The mall is born. Pekau Sr. votes yes.
1975
The Scandal
"Government by men, not by law." Dec 21 article. Donald Pekau Sr. vanishes from the board simultaneously.
1985
Reform — Owens Wins
Frederick T. Owens defeats Doogan. 20-year machine ends. Lake Michigan water. Village Hall named for him in 1993.
2025
57,757 · 22 sq mi
Jim Dodge wins 57%–43%. TIF eliminated. Owens Hall restored. $2.5M back to schools. The machine is done.
134 Years · Complete Chronological Record

The Full Timeline

Every major event, sourced. Red markers indicate documented wrongdoing. Green markers indicate reform and accountability.

1892
Village Incorporated — May 31
~500 residents, Dutch and German farming families. Named for Civil War Gen. John Sedgwick's train depot "Orland."
1937
Andrew Corporation Founded
Victor J. Andrew starts in his Chicago bungalow basement. By 1947 buys 430 Orland Park acres for $86,000. Peak value: $2.65 billion.
1954
Carl Sandburg High School Opens
District 230's first high school, 450 students. Carl Sandburg attends the October 10 dedication. By 1958, enrollment exceeds 900.
1964
I-80 Opens
Interstate 80 through south suburban Chicago defines Orland Park's southern boundary. Changes everything.
1969
Doogan Machine Complete · Donald Pekau Sr. First Elected
Pekau Sr. wins 2-year trustee term after serving on Zoning Board. He votes on projects he previously reviewed as a board member. The machine is fully operational.
Chicago Tribune Apr 16, 1969 · newspapers.com/image/376606907
1971
Rafacz Farm Annexation · Pekau Sr. Re-Elected · OPCRC Opens
Board annexes the Rafacz sod farm — future site of Orland Square Mall. Pekau wins 4-year term. Rafacz family has existing snow removal contract with village. Orland Park Christian Reformed Church opens in November: Roseland Dutch migration begins.
Southtown Star Dec 11, 1974 · newspapers.com/image/537423370
1972
"We Can Delay Anything We Want"
Village official Pressler states it publicly. The sewer and water tollbooth is documented. Every developer, every builder, at the board's mercy.
Suburbanite Economist Aug 23, 1972 · newspapers.com/image/55157524
1975
THE SCANDAL — "Government by Men, Not by Law"
December 21, 1975: Tinley Park Star/Tribune exposes two-tier justice. Orland State Bank permit ignored; Gidlund's revoked. "The situation mocks justice." Donald Pekau Sr. disappears from the board simultaneously — described as both "ex-trustee" AND "still on board" in same article.
Tinley Park Star/Tribune Dec 21, 1975, P.12 · newspapers.com/image/537451454
1976
Orland Square Mall Opens — July 28
The project that required the Rafacz annexation, six years of machine governance, and $550K in school district ransom. By 1978: $100M+ annual sales, 89% occupancy, "years ahead of predictions."
Southtown Star Aug 3, 1978 · newspapers.com/image/537924794
1983
Reform Referendum Passes — 2,415 to 2,056
Voters approve council-manager government — direct structural response to "government by men, not by law." McLaughlin elected trustee same day.
Southtown Star Apr 21, 1983 · newspapers.com/image/538031875
1985
Frederick T. Owens Defeats Doogan — 20 Years Ends
The machine's two-decade reign is over. Owens brings Lake Michigan water and professional government. Village Hall will be named for him in 1993.
2017
Keith Pekau Elected Mayor — Son of Donald Pekau Sr.
Campaigns against the $150K salary. Takes every dollar. Within two years: ethics rules repealed, village manager fired for investigating him, donor contracts flowing.
2021
Edwards Realty Deal Starts · 6–1 · Only Dodge: NO
Board gives campaign donor Edwards Realty $120,000/year consulting contract. Jim Dodge casts the sole dissenting vote.
2023
Cultural Center at Doogan Park Demolished · $33M Vote
Pekau orders the Orland Park Cultural Center — a 1970s building at Doogan Park — demolished. No independent assessment released publicly. November 6: $33M committed to campaign donor Edwards Realty. Vote taken after election. Dodge: NO.
Feb 2024
"Go to Another Country" · Owens Sign Removed · OMA Violated
Arab Americans cleared from public meeting. AG rules OMA violated. Pekau removes Owens' name from Village Hall and replaces with his own. 600+ petition signatures in four days.
Apr 2025
Jim Dodge Wins — 57% to 43%
9,500 to 6,940. Entire Pekau slate swept out. First words as mayor: "Welcome to the Frederick T. Owens Village Hall. That sign's going to be moving back soon."
Aug 2025
Court TRO · "I Will Not Be Silenced" · Pekau Moves to Colorado
Cook County court orders Pekau to stop publishing confidential village documents. He relocates to Colorado and continues attacking Dodge — and Dodge's wife Linda — from out of state.
Oct 2025
TIF Eliminated · Owens Hall Restored · $2.5M to Schools
Triangle TIF abolished. Schools receive $2.5M. Frederick T. Owens Village Hall formally rededicated. 100+ family members, friends, and residents attend.
Jan 2026
TRO Upheld · Full Debt Picture Released · This Record Published
Court upholds TRO. PMA: $90.67M current debt, $251M projected under Pekau's plan. Dodge reverses the trajectory. OrlandParkRecord.com launches.
Jim Dodge
15th Mayor of Orland Park · The Man Who Said No · Every Single Time

Through six years of watching Pekau's board approve deals that enriched campaign donors, Jim Dodge cast his vote on the record and kept going to work. Then he ran. Then he won. Then he governed like a professional.

March 15, 2021
ONLY NO vote on Edwards Realty $10K/month deal. Board: 6–1.
November 6, 2023
ONLY NO vote on $33M TIF commitment. Board: 6–1. No collateral.
April 1, 2025
Wins 9,500–6,940 (57%–43%). Entire slate wins. Entire Pekau slate loses.
First day as Mayor
"Welcome to the Frederick T. Owens Village Hall. That sign's going to be moving back soon."
October 22, 2025
Board eliminates Triangle TIF. $2.5M released to schools immediately.
October 26, 2025
Frederick T. Owens Village Hall formally rededicated. 100+ attend.
On Pekau's attacks
"We are all people who live in Orland Park. It's about attitude." — Arab News, May 2025.
On the TRO
"Sensitive legal matters should be handled responsibly, not politicized online."
"This is the first day, or the onset, to a return to dignity where we will bring back respect, transparency, and civility to Orland Park. Together, we will breathe new life into our community, ensuring that every voice is heard and valued."
Jim Dodge · Election Night, April 1, 2025 · After defeating Keith Pekau
47 Confirmed Primary Sources · All Public Record · All Links Active

The Evidence

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This research was compiled from 47 confirmed public record primary sources including 20 archived newspaper pages, court documents, and official government records. All sources linked. All claims verifiable by any member of the public.

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