Ex-U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert recovering from stroke

FILE - In this June 9, 2015 file photo, former House Speaker Dennis Hastert arrives at the federal courthouse in Chicago. Hastert is scheduled to step before a federal judge Wednesday Oct. 28, 2015 to change his plea to guilty in a hush-money case that alleges he agreed to pay someone $3.5 million to hide claims of past misconduct by the Illinois Republican. The hearing in Chicago will be Hastert’s first court appearance since June, when he pleaded not guilty to violating banking law and lying to FBI investigators. His change of plea is part of a deal with prosecutors. (AP Photo/Paul Beaty, File)
FILE - In this June 9, 2015 file photo, former House Speaker Dennis Hastert arrives at the federal courthouse in Chicago. Hastert is scheduled to step before a federal judge Wednesday Oct. 28, 2015 to change his plea to guilty in a hush-money case that alleges he agreed to pay someone $3.5 million to hide claims of past misconduct by the Illinois Republican. The hearing in Chicago will be Hastert’s first court appearance since June, when he pleaded not guilty to violating banking law and lying to FBI investigators. His change of plea is part of a deal with prosecutors. (AP Photo/Paul Beaty, File)

CHICAGO — Former U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert, awaiting sentencing in a hush-money case, had a stroke during the first week of November and has been hospitalized since then, his attorney said Thursday in a statement.

Attorney Tom Green said in a statement that Hastert had a stroke, has been treated for sepsis, which is a complication from an infection, and had two back surgeries while in the hospital.

Hastert was accused in May of evading banking regulations as part of a plan to pay hush money to conceal his "prior misconduct." Anonymous sources told The Associated Press and other media outlets that Hastert wanted to hide claims that he sexually molested someone decades earlier.

The 73-year-old pleaded guilty Oct. 28 to a felony count of evading bank reporting laws in a hush-money scheme. In the written plea agreement, the Illinois Republican directly acknowledged for the first time that he sought to pay someone $3.5 million to hide misconduct by Hastert against that person dating back several decades — about the time the longtime GOP leader was a high school wrestling coach.

In all, Hastert allegedly paid more than $1.7 million to the person, sometimes in lump sums of $100,000 cash. The indictment said the payments stopped after FBI agents first questioned Hastert in December 2014.

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