From the Mayor’s Office to the Courtroom: Is Henyard Headed for a Timeout? Tiffany Henyard, once dubbed “Super Mayor,” now seems more like a super magnet for subpoenas. After losing her mayoral seat in Dolton and being booted from her township supervisor role, Henyard didn’t exactly go quietly. Instead, she’s become a headline-hungry figure in Illinois politics—this time, for the wrong reasons.
In May 2025, Henyard was *held in civil contempt* for failing to comply with a FOIA lawsuit requesting public financial records. The judge ordered her to show up in person by May 30—or pay *\$1,000 per day* until she turned over the documents. Her initial response? Show up *virtually**, blaming Wi-Fi or perhaps a mysterious mayoral exemption from court appearances. The judge wasn’t amused. Henyard was told in no uncertain terms: **June 6 means in person, or else.*
She also previously faced *direct criminal contempt* for refusing to sign approved liquor licenses earlier in the year—only signing under pressure once fines and jail time loomed.
Despite the mounting legal heat, Henyard continues her Trump-like defiance. As one court demanded documents, she metaphorically asked, “What documents?” And much like the 45th president, she plays the victim, labeling it all political persecution—minus the Secret Service detail.
Though *not yet indicted**, she remains the target of a growing federal investigation into public spending and a property deal linked to her boyfriend. The government has subpoenaed her emails, her boardroom buddies, and likely her notebook doodles. With nearly **48 lawsuits* against the village during her time in office, many residents believe it’s not “if” but “when” the cuffs click.
Meanwhile, Dolton and Thornton Township are healing. Jason House, now mayor, is pushing transparency, audits, and economic rebirth. Napoleon Harris III leads Thornton Township with focus and unity. The communities feel lighter, their new leadership ditching the drama and bringing receipts—real ones, not ones printed on Monopoly money.
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*PART 2: Valerie Stubbs Pays Officer Lacey Back in Karma*
If anyone deserves a standing ovation in the political saga of Dolton, it’s **Valeria Stubbs**—the former sheriff’s deputy, local activist, and human embodiment of “I said what I said.” Stubbs, once repeatedly removed from town meetings by Dolton Deputy Chief Lewis Lacey, is now in power herself—and karma came with her.
During the Henyard administration, Stubbs was a familiar face at board meetings—**and a frequent target.** Whenever she challenged Mayor Henyard’s decisions or demanded financial answers, Officer Lacey was right there, enforcing her removal. But instead of being silenced, Stubbs got louder—**and she ran for office.**
In April 2025, Valerie Stubbs was elected **Trustee of Thornton Township**, part of Napoleon Harris III’s reform slate. Today, she sits at the very table she was once dragged away from. Meanwhile, Lacey—the same man who showed her the door—is now facing **federal charges for bankruptcy fraud**.
Yes, the man who once enforced silence is now fighting to stay out of prison, while Stubbs holds a microphone and a voting seat.
Stubbs is the full-circle moment Dolton and Thornton needed: the whistleblower who wouldn’t back down, who now helps decide policy, budget allocations, and township direction. Her victory isn’t just political—it’s spiritual. For every voice hushed at a meeting, for every resident dragged out or ignored, Stubbs now stands as a symbol: they tried to mute her, and she turned up the volume instead.
As Dolton and Thornton rebuild, her presence on the board signals more than revenge—it marks renewal. A new day where those who demanded justice no longer bang on locked doors. They hold the keys.
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👀 Will Tiffany Henyard’s next public appearance be at a ribbon-cutting—or in court?
✨ And will Officer Lacey need a ride to his sentencing? Stay tuned.
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