“It’s going to be a good day” when former House Speaker Dennis Hastert faces sentencing Wednesday in his hush money case, the sister of one of his alleged sexual assault victims told NBC News on Tuesday.
Jolene Burdge, who says her older brother, Steve Reinboldt, was among those molested by the man who was once No. 2 in line to the presidency, believes Hastert’s sentencing in a Chicago federal courtroom will give her and her family “just what we were hoping for.”
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In a lengthy interview with NBC News, Burdge said she confronted Hastert after she was “stunned” to see him at a memorial service for her brother, who had AIDS and died in August of 1995.
“I just knew that if that opportunity arose, there wasn’t any question that I was going to go out and talk to him,” Burdge said. “I proceeded to say that I wanted him to know that his secret didn’t die with Steve.”
Hastert remained stone-faced and silent, Burdge said, and “that was my confirmation.”
Hastert, 74, pleaded guilty last year to making illegal financial transactions to cover up payments totaling $3.5 million to another victim, identified in court documents only as “Individual A.”
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