Schock donor sues for reimbursement

 In this Feb. 6, 2015 file photo, U.S. Rep. Aaron Schock speaks to reporters in Peoria, Ill. Howard Foster, a Chicago lawyer who donated $500 to the former congressman's campaign, filed a lawsuit Wednesday, April 15, 2015, at U.S. District Court in Chicago seeking repayment of all contributions to Schock's campaign.
In this Feb. 6, 2015 file photo, U.S. Rep. Aaron Schock speaks to reporters in Peoria, Ill. Howard Foster, a Chicago lawyer who donated $500 to the former congressman's campaign, filed a lawsuit Wednesday, April 15, 2015, at U.S. District Court in Chicago seeking repayment of all contributions to Schock's campaign.

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — Former U.S. Rep. Aaron Schock’s legal problems expanded Wednesday as a contributor sued to force the repayment of millions of campaign dollars.

The donor says he was tricked into believing that the young lawmaker, who has since resigned as questions arose about his spending, was “a breath of fresh air” in a corruption-riddled state.

The unusual lawsuit filed by Howard Foster, a Chicago lawyer who pitched in just $500 to Schock, cites Illinois’ long history of political and financial shenanigans — from a pre-Civil War governor to former U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr.’s recent prison term for misusing campaign funds — and plants Schock among them in claiming that his fundraising arm was a corrupt racket.

Schock, a 33-year-old Republican from Peoria, resigned last month. The lawsuit targets all four of his fundraising accounts. In his main congressional fund alone, he collected nearly $11 million since 2008, according to Federal Election Commission records.

Foster anted up “because he believed Mr. Schock was ethical, a breath of fresh air in Illinois politics, and had a bright future in Congress,” the lawsuit, filed in federal court in Chicago, states. “However, the opposite was true, and while Schock may have been a new, young face in Congress, he willingly followed welltread paths of political sleaze for personal gain.”

The complaint seeks class-action status and repayment of all contributions. It counts 7,130 contributors to Schock’s main fund alone — all potential plaintiffs, although Foster is the only one thus far.

A spokesman for Schock declined to comment Wednesday.

Upcoming Events