JOHN O’CONNOR
Associated Press

SPRINGFIELD — The Federal Election Commission has fined the campaign fund of a former Illinois congressman $43,475 for failing to refund excess contributions in a timely manner.

A letter from the FEC this month reports the fine against Republican Rodney Davis’ campaign committee, Rodney for Congress, and its treasurer, Thomas Charles Datwyler.

The violations occurred during the 2021-22 election cycle. Federal campaign finance law prohibits contributions of more than $2,900 per cycle from an individual or single-candidate political committee and $5,000 per election from a multicandidate committee. Excess contributions must be refunded or redesignated within 60 days.

In a negotiated settlement with Davis’ committee and Datwyler, the FEC found that one contribution of $3,625 and general election contributions of $479,784 were not properly redistributed within 60 days, resulting in the fine. Davis was not eligible for the larger amount because he was not on the 2022 general election ballot.

A call to a telephone number associated with Davis went unanswered. A phone message was left for Datwyler.

The FEC noted that the committee disclosed refunds of excessive contributions on quarterly and year-end reports for 2022 and in January 2024 filed paperwork disclosing the refunds that were part of the negotiated settlement.

Davis, a 54-year-old Taylorville resident, served five terms in Congress. After the 2020 congressional redistricting controlled by Democrats in the Illinois General Assembly, Davis was pushed into a district with conservative Republican Mary Miller, who beat Davis in the 2022 GOP primary with more than 57% of the vote.

Davis’ committee told the FEC it would dissolve upon resolving the matter. The fine is payable by July 18.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker addresses the subject of Illinois’ chronically underfunded pension system during an unrelated news conference April 18.


Photos: Pritzker Military Archives Center

The entryway to the Pritzker Military Archives Center will hold a museum, but the vast majority of the building will be used to store books, papers, posters, paintings and photographs. The building was designed by Helmut Jahn, a world-renowned architect.




JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL



Visitors to the Pritzker Military Archives Center walk past a future public reading room, at right, during a tour of the research and military artifact preservation facility in the village of Somers.




JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL



Susan Rifkin, CEO of philanthropic activities for the Pritzker organization, walks past vintage military-themed artwork displayed in a public gallery of the Pritzker Military Archives Center in the village of Somers. The facility is home to 65,000 books and 40,000 other artifacts.




JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL



A U.S. military journal, with inscriptions dating to 1792, is displayed at the Pritzker Military Archives Center in the village of Somers.




JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL



Visitors to the Pritzker Military Archives Center explore the grounds of the research and military artifact preservation facility in the village of Somers.




JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL



Phillip Castillo, managing director at Jahn, the architectural firm that designed the Pritzker Military Archives Center, is pictured with an early rendering of the facility during a media tour of the research and military artifact preservation facility.




JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL



Flags representing the U.S. and the country’s branches of military greet visitors to the Pritzker Military Archives Center in the village of Somers.




JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL



Jennifer N. Pritzker founded a museum and library in Chicago to hold her collections of military books and other historical artifacts. The collection has grown over the past 20 years thanks to donations, so Pritzker has constructed the Pritzker Military Archives Center in Kenosha County to store the collection.




JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL



The Pritzker Military Archives Center in the Kenosha County village of Somers stands out amid its rural surroundings. The 51,800-square-foot research and military artifact preservation facility is scheduled to open in 2024 and holds the collection of the Pritzker Military Museum & Library in downtown Chicago.




JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL



Boxes of books and papers wait to be catalogued and stored at the Pritzker Military Archives Center. The facility is scheduled to open to the public in 2024.




JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL



An 1814 first edition copy of "The Expedition," which details the explorations of  Captains Meriwether Lewis and Willam Clark is displayed at the Pritzker Military Archives Center in the village of Somers.




JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL



Jennifer Berzin, a reference and circulation manager, shows off a rare map that details the Lewis and Clark expedition to the Pacific Northwest from 1804 to 1806. The map is among the items stored at the new Pritzker Military Archives Center in Somers.




JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL



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