State Rep. Carol Ammons indicted in scheme to receive kickbacks,
misusing campaign funds
[July 09, 2026]
By Hannah Meisel
CHICAGO — State Rep. Carol Ammons, D-Urbana, an 11-year veteran of the
Illinois House, has been charged with orchestrating an alleged scheme to
receive illegal cash kickbacks from her own campaign account and from
local nonprofits for which she helped secure state grant funding.
The indictment, brought by a federal grand jury late Tuesday, outline an
alleged conspiracy involving both Ammons’ husband, Champaign County
Clerk Aaron Ammons, and her daughter, who last month was indicted on
separate federal charges alleging she fraudulently collected expanded
COVID-era unemployment benefits.
While the daughter, Titianna Ammons, was not charged in Tuesday’s
indictment, prosecutors allege she was the conduit for some of the
kickbacks, including overpayments from her mother’s “Friends of Carol
Ammons” campaign account for work she didn’t do.
The indictment also alleges the lawmaker used her official position to
direct state grant money to three separate nonprofits that paid her
daughter, one of which made Titianna Ammons a program director after the
state representative helped draft her employment contract.
In all, prosecutors allege Ammons and her daughter “received financial
benefits in excess of $100,000” beginning in 2017 through roughly 2023.
But Ammons’ legal issues deepened in May 2024 when she allegedly lied to
an FBI agent about her daughter being paid out of state grant funds
through one of the nonprofits Titianna Ammons was affiliated with.
In the year after the FBI approached the lawmaker, prosecutors allege
that she and her husband engaged in obstruction of justice with at least
one “potential witness.” According to the indictment, Aaron Ammons took
the lead on buffering his family from the ongoing federal investigation,
including instructing one potential witness to “muddy the waters” with
the FBI “to obstruct its ability to trace the illegal cash payments to
Carol Ammons.”

On Wednesday, Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch stopped short
of calling on Ammons to resign from her seat but said he is temporarily
removing her from “any and all House Democratic Caucus meetings, from
all House committees, and from accessing Speaker’s Office staff and
resources.” Welch also said he’s directed staff to “review the budget to
determine whether any funds need to be paused or reconsidered.”
“The allegations in this indictment are extremely serious,” Welch said
in a statement. “Every person under our system of justice is entitled to
the presumption of innocence and due process. The U.S. Attorney will lay
out evidence in court, where Representative Ammons will have the chance
to defend herself against the allegations.”
House Minority Leader Tony McCombie, R-Savanna, however, called on
Ammons to “resign immediately” and criticized Welch for not doing the
same.
“Leadership means holding your own members accountable, not waiting
until political pressure becomes unavoidable,” she said in a statement.
The Ammons indictment follows last week’s pressure campaign on
now-former State Rep. Harry Benton, D-Plainfield, to resign after an
internal ethics investigation into undisclosed behavior. Benton resigned
late Friday.
Cash kickbacks
In three separate occasions in 2025, Aaron Ammons allegedly attempted to
influence at least one potential witness in the investigation, beginning
with a paper note saying there was “‘nothing illegal’ about friends
giving friends money regarding illegal cash kickbacks paid to Carol
Ammons from the Friends of Carol Ammons political committee.”
According to the indictment, which pegged the interaction to February
2025, Aaron Ammons showed the note to the potential witness and then
destroyed it.
Two months later, with his wife present, Aaron Ammons allegedly advised
a potential witness “that they should communicate in code words about
the ongoing federal investigation” and said he would “look into” the
cash deposits the lawmaker made to her account around the dates she
received illegal cash kickbacks.
And then in June 2025, again with his wife present, Aaron Ammons
allegedly asked a potential witness about cash payments to the lawmaker
before directing the person to “muddy the waters” with the FBI.
Those interactions form the basis of the obstruction of justice charges
against the couple.

The indictment mentions other “individuals” who paid cash kickbacks to
Ammons, but only identifies her daughter as one of the conduits.
According to prosecutors, the Friends of Carol Ammons campaign fund paid
her daughter “approximately $600 per month … totaling approximately
$15,585, not in proportion with services actually rendered.”
An unknown number of other individuals were paid through checks “in
excess of the amount for services actually rendered,” including to
family members, including over $25,000 between January 2019 and November
of 2020 — none of which were disclosed as required in state campaign
finance records. According to the indictment, some of that money was
paid back to Ammons in cash kickbacks.
Additionally, between March 2021 and August 2022, prosecutors allege
campaign finance records falsely reported paying more than $15,000 to a
consulting firm “when in fact, they were paid to an individual who paid
a portion back to Ammons in cash.”
Ammons also allegedly “falsely classified certain expenditures as
mileage reimbursements” that she also later recouped in cash.
Conflict of interest
Democrats who lead the General Assembly have empowered their members to
wield wide authority over state grant money to be spent in their
districts. As part of her legislative duties, Ammons directed state
funding to three separate nonprofits based in the Champaign-Urbana area,
beginning in the fiscal year that began July 1, 2019.
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State Rep. Carol Ammons, D-Champaign, on the floor of the Illinois
House in May 2025. She and her husband, Champaign County Clerk Aaron
Ammons, were indicted July 7, 2026, on eight counts of wire fraud,
count of making a false statement and two obstruction of justice
counts for lying to an FBI agent. (Capitol News Illinois photo by
Jerry Nowicki)

The first nonprofit that benefitted from Ammons’ grant funding prowess
was the Hood Vote Neighborhood Transformation, a nonprofit focused on
prison reform and services for those reentering the community after
serving time in the correctional system. According to the indictment,
Ammons diverted funding from the Urbana Neighborhood Connections Center,
which served children from impoverished areas, to Hood Vote, which
received a $605,431 in state grant money.
Titianna Ammons was already associated with Hood Vote, and eventually
became program director at the nonprofit. According to the indictment,
Titianna Ammons’ April 2, 2021, paycheck for $3,326 was paid out of the
state grant appropriation, which prompted state officials to inform both
Ammons and Hood vote that paying her daughter out of state funds “was an
impermissible conflict of interest” and violated state law. Prosecutors
cite statute prohibiting state officials from benefitting financially
“from a decision she could make in her official capacity, including
through indirect benefits to family members.”
After Hood Vote stopped paying Titianna Ammons a salary, Ammons didn’t
assist the nonprofit in renewing its state grant for the next fiscal
year, according to the indictment. Instead, for the fiscal year that
began on July 1, 2020, Ammons helped the Bridgewater Sullivan Community
Life Center, a community development and community organizing nonprofit
associated with Bethel AME Church in Champaign, obtain a $612,000 state
grant.
Ammons then “recommended individuals for employment with Bridgewater,”
including her daughter. She allegedly assisted the nonprofit with
“drafting her daughter’s employment contract,” which netted Titianna
Ammons more than $60,000 annually as program director between August
2021 and May 2023. That salary was also paid out of the state grant,
even though Ammons “knew full well it was a conflict of interest for her
daughter to be paid out of state grants that she had initiated and
facilitated,” according to the indictment.
That language was echoed in the false statement charge against Ammons
outlined in the indictment. When the FBI approached Ammons in May 2024,
the lawmaker allegedly lied to the agent, claiming she had no knowledge
regarding the conflict of interest stemming from Hood Vote paying her
daughter from state grant funding, despite Ammons knowing “full well
that individuals from the State of Illinois and Hood Vote Neighborhood
Transition had previously discussed the conflict of interest” with her.

Code word ‘gift’
In an effort to “avoid detection” of payments to herself, prosecutors
allege Ammons required “an individual” associated with Bridgewater “to
provide cash kickbacks” to her — which were sometimes referred to as
“gifts” — all paid out of the state grant to Bridgewater.
The indictment cites three text messages from Ammons to the
Bridgewater-associated individual that allegedly correspond to direct
deposits made to that person’s credit union account, “from which a
portion was withdrawn in cash and transferred to Ammons.”
For example, on June 18, 2022, Ammons sent a text asking simply, “What’s
up? Gift” — allegedly a signal for the individual to drop off some of
the $500 that had been deposited into their credit union account the
previous day. On Oct. 20, 2022, $700 was deposited in the credit union
account, and Ammons directed the individual that she could catch up
before that evening’s Champaign County Board meeting “to grab the gift.”
On Dec. 2, 2022, the same day another $500 deposit hit the credit union
account, Ammons was more blunt:
“Hey you dropping my gift off today?”
Both the text messages and money transfers serve as the basis of some of
the wire fraud counts against the lawmaker.
The indictment names one final nonprofit that benefited from Ammons’
help directing state grant funding. The Urbana-Champaign Independent
Media Center, which happened to employ Ammons before she was elected to
the Illinois House, received more than $1 million in state grants in
2021 and 2022, “including a $700,000 member initiative funded by the
federal American Rescue Plan Act,” according to the charging document.
Titianna Ammons again received payments directly funded by the state
grant facilitated by her mother — this time as a “digital marketing
coordinator” for the IMC. From July to October 2022, while she was also
working full-time at Bridgewater and as an “intermittent public service
representative” with the Illinois Secretary of State’s office, the IMC
paid Titianna Ammons approximately $9,990.
The state budget for the fiscal that began last week includes a $750,000
reappropriation to the IMC for violence prevention programs and
operational expenses, which may be flagged in the review Welch ordered
for the state budget after Ammons’ indictment Wednesday.

Ammons has previously faced legal trouble in early 2020 after her
alleged theft of a Coach purse at a secondhand store, though a special
prosecutor ultimately declined to press charges against her. In 2015,
Aaron Ammons was granted a pardon from departing Gov. Pat Quinn for a
1990s-era drug-related conviction, clearing the way for him to run for
office. One of the couple’s sons also lobbies for the education-focused
nonprofit Advance Illinois.
Additional reporting by Ben Szalinski.
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