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READER COMMENTS CLOSED FOR THE WEEKEND

Friday, Apr 21, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Talk at you Monday.

UPDATE: Sun-Times has the juror transcripts.

  Comments Off      


Afternoon politics open thread

Friday, Apr 21, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

UPDATE: AP:

One of the jurors at former Gov. George Ryan’s racketeering and fraud trial appealed to the judge to protect her from “shouting profanity and personal attacks'’ within the jury room, according to transcripts of meetings among lawyers that were unsealed Friday.

The complaint came in a March 20 note to Judge Rebecca R. Pallmeyer from juror Evelyn Ezell of Chicago who was later dismissed and replaced with an alternate juror for an unrelated reason.

“Do I have to accept being called derogatory names, shouting profanity and personal attacks?'’ Ezell said. “Can you please address this issue because this has been going on for the last couple of days.'’

Pallmeyer sent jurors a note directing them to “treat one another with dignity and respect'’ but one day later rejected a motion for a mistrial from Ryan’s attorneys, who said the note showed that Ezell was being coerced or intimidated into reaching a verdict.

Pallmeyer said there was no sign that Ezell would be intimidated.

The judge later dismissed Ezell from the jury after finding she had checked “no'’ on a jury questionnaire when asked if she had ever been involved in criminal proceedings. Court records showed she had brushes with the law although she had never been convicted.

· Here’s that Keith Olbermann bit I told you about this morning. (Video is here and Larry has more)

The reason prosecutors describe an official as an official A is when there‘s pejorative information about that person, and the person has not yet been indicted and had a chance to defend themselves. But we‘ve looked at prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald‘s record as far as designating people as official A or official B, and in every single case we have found, Keith, that prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald, when he designates somebody as official A in an indictment, that person eventually does get indicted themselves.

· RRS: Topinka blames gov for ‘dysfunctional’ state

· Tribune: Guv’s `Straight Talk’ ad not quite straight

· Mike Lawrence: What lesson was George Ryan to draw when editorial writers and lawmakers of both parties applauded him for engineering a major infrastructure program predicated on revenue increases he pooh-poohed while campaigning?

· Whig: Questions about how to proceed with selecting a replacement for U.S. Rep. Lane Evans have been sent to the Illinois State Board of Elections and probably will be forwarded to the Illinois attorney general.

· Kadner: Daley wins as suburbs continue to squabble

· Mixing drinks — and history

· Beachwood Reporter: You get the feeling that the Chicago Tribune, which got the ball rolling when it discovered criminal cases in the backgrounds of two jurors in the George Ryan trial who were then dismissed, would now just like to see the whole mess go away.

· BGA react to Ryan verdict

· God Bless the Patriot Guard Riders

· Rep. Yarbrough introduces impeachment resolution

· Illinois’ Dirty Little Secret

UPDATES:

· AP: Walter Jacobson, a Chicago television news anchor, reporter and commentator for nearly 40 years, is leaving WFLD-TV, the station announced Friday. The 68-year-old Jacobson was the lead anchor at the Fox-owned station’s “Fox News at 9″ from 1993 until he was replaced in 2004 by Mark Suppelsa. Since then he has hosted a Sunday morning news and analysis program and has given commentaries on the 9 p.m. news show.

· Smashing Pumpkins back in studio

TIME-KILLER UPDATES:

· Bluetooth laser virtual keyboard. Wow.

· Perfect for old press releases (or new ones, for that matter).

· Beatles Catalog to be Offered on iTunes

· Todd? Is that you?

  22 Comments      


Question of the day

Friday, Apr 21, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Blogging may be light today, but, for now, here’s the question:

What do you think of political patronage? Should political hiring for government jobs be curtailed even more? Should the current rules be relaxed, abolished or changed? Explain.

UPDATE: The debate in comments, which was quite good, got us a mention in Governing Magazine’s blog.

  61 Comments      


Delayed & BS

Friday, Apr 21, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Ryan trial judge wants more time before she releases transcripts that are sure to create yet another uproar.

The release of 1,200 pages of Ryan trial transcripts has been delayed after court officials asked for more time to review the document.

Court officials say Judge Pallmeyer wants to take a look at the documents to ensure nothing that should remain secret is released.

Among the things that may be in the 1,200 pages of transcripts are explanations of Judge Pallmeyer’s rulings in her own words.

The court also wants to be sure it gets the billing right for everyone has ordered a copy of the 1,200 page document. The price for one copy is $1,064.89.

Releasing the transcripts on a Friday could help bury the resulting story, of course.

And then there’s this sappy article from the Tribune.

Jurors in the corruption trial of former Gov. George Ryan were told last fall that they should expect to sacrifice at least four months of their lives in the name of good citizenship. They never expected that episodes from their own pasts would be scrutinized by lawyers and laid out for the world to see.

Juror Denise Peterson, a substitute teacher from Hawthorn Woods, was furious Thursday that Ryan’s lawyers are questioning the credentials of three jurors who failed to disclose arrests from more than 20 years ago.

“I’m waiting for them to go after me for the three library books I forgot to return,” said Peterson, 44. “We laugh about it now, but it’s the little things that are coming out. I mean, how many people have gotten into fights with their siblings? I’m sure they’re trying to call my sister to see how many times I hit her.”

Boo freaking hoo.

The point here isn’t about if a juror did something wrong in the past. Or if they got in a fight with their sibling. The point is whether jurors did not tell the truth on their questionnaires about their contact with the legal justice system in Illinois. And, to be clear, the juror who allegedly got in a fight with his sibling allegedly hit his pregnant sister and the coppers took him away.

George Ryan said he did a lot of good things for Illinois and shouldn’t be convicted, but that’s not the way this system works. And if a juror perjured himself or herself, then I don’t care how much he or she “sacrificed” in the last seven months. If they couldn’t tell the truth on a simple form, then they shouldn’t be allowed to sit in judgment on somebody else. Period.

And if they had spent half as much energy on telling the truth several months ago as they have concocting post-trial spin this week, these jurors wouldn’t be in such trouble now.

It’s enough to drive me to drink. They truly disgust me.

UPDATE: Krol wonders whether Ryan will ever serve a day in prison because of these moronic, dishonest, disingenuous jurors. (My interpretation, not his.)

UPDATE 2: Beachwood Reporter:

As Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer said in a closed hearing last month, if a juror does not disclose their past “in order to be chosen for a particular jury, then one wonders whether the motivation might have been to achieve a particular outcome in the case.”

  32 Comments      


“Public Official A”

Friday, Apr 21, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Apparently, an analysis on Keith Olbermann’s Countdown last night concluded that everyone labeled “Public Official A” by Patrick Fitzgerald has ended up being indicted. Although I should point out right now that just because a Fitzgerald semantics pattern has existed so far, it doesn’t mean it will continue.

Archpundit and Austin Mayor have more here. Atrios has a tiny bit here.

The transcript isn’t up yet, but that will be posted here sometime today.

Governor Blagojevich, of course, has been referred to as “Public Official A.”

UPDATE: From the NW Times:

But legal observers said Tuesday that the former governor’s conviction could spell trouble for Daley as well as for Gov. Rod Blagojevich. They said Daley and Blagojevich had ample cause for concern because Ryan was found to have intentionally ignored the corrupt activities of his employees while he was secretary of state.

“I think (Daley’s and Blagojevich’s) concept of insulation has just deteriorated very, very rapidly,” said Dan Sprehe, chief investigator for the Better Government Association. “The idea that the person at the top would never be put on trial — that whole fallacy is gone.” […]

Stuart Levine, a Highland Park lawyer, has been charged in connection with a kickback scheme that sought to direct state pension fund business to politically-connected consultants who were chosen by a high ranking government figure known as “Public Official A” in court documents.

Though Blagojevich is not named in any court filings, he is widely suspected to be “Public Official A,” and prosecutors have done little to quash that speculation.

“I’d be nervous,” said Kent Redfield, a professor of political studies and interim director of the Institute for Legislative Studies at the University of Illinois at Springfield. “I don’t know about his culpability or his lack of culpability … but obviously you have an allegation of influence peddling.

“Even if it doesn’t involve the governor directly, it certainly will be an issue in the fall (election).”

  13 Comments      


New Numbers

Friday, Apr 21, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

SurveyUSA’s new Senate approval trackers are out.

Obama. Durbin. Both doing well.

Discuss.

  8 Comments      


Good move

Friday, Apr 21, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

I called the Department of Corrections about this issue on Wednesday and asked them what the heck they were thinking. Why force this requirement on soldiers who have been away from home for a month? I then followed up again yesterday. I would have had something in today’s Capitol Fax but there was no Capitol Fax today. Here’s the AP story.

State prison workers returning from the Iraq war will no longer have to leave their families for more than a week of weapons training in Springfield, officials announced Thursday.

Veterans returning from the battlefield are required to go through the same 56-hour training course they took when they were new employees. The Corrections Department rule applies to any gun-carrying employee returning to work after a leave of at least two years.

But the corrections officers’ union — the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees — has argued it was pointless for soldiers who toted weapons around the clock on the battlefield to go through retraining at Corrections headquarters in Springfield. That arrangement meant more than a week away from home for veterans who had just been reunited with their families.

The Corrections Department said it now will let returning veterans undergo weapons training near their homes, so that they can spend the nights with family.

  1 Comment      


Blagojevich campaign explains new TV ads

Thursday, Apr 20, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

A new press release [edited for space because the thing is too darned long]:

Highlighting two key policy differences with Judy Baar Topinka, Governor Rod Blagojevich began running commercials today in which she details her opposition to a ban on assault weapons and raising the minimum wage. In the ads, Governor Blagojevich reiterates his record of raising the minimum wage to help Illinois workers, his support for an additional increase and his work to ban assault weapons. […]

The issue-oriented ads are a sharp contrast from the personal attacks that have characterized Judy Baar Topinka’s campaign. […]

The Blagojevich campaign began airing a series of 15-second commercials today in which Topinka states that one of the reasons she is opposed to an assault weapons ban is because a “rolling pin” could be considered an assault weapon, an extreme type of argument that has been used by the National Rifle Association to oppose sensible gun safety legislation.

The commercials also note the contrast between Topinka’s support for President Bush’s tax cut that benefits millionaires and wealthy Americans and her opposition to raising the minimum wage. Topinka called raising the minimum wage “a giveaway program,” while praising the Bush tax cut by saying “I think it’s great.”

“In these commercials, we let Judy Baar Topinka speak for herself. On raising the minimum wage and banning assault weapons, Judy Baar Topinka sides with President Bush and opposes important initiatives that would help Illinois families,” Nix said. […]

The Blagojevich campaign was joined at the event by supporters of an assault weapons ban and a minimum wage increase. The ads began today and will run in all markets statewide.

UPDATE: SurveyUSA’s new results for President Bush’s job performance ratings is out, and it’s very bad news for the prez and Topinka. Tying JBT to W is a sound idea. Doing it this early? I just don’t know.

UPDATE: I was looking for something else and stumbled across this site that I hadn’t seen in a while.

Apparently, when Blagojevich was in Congress he voted against a bill that would have stopped Washington, DC from implementing a needle exchange program and forbidden the District from holding a referendum on medical marijuana. But, lately, he’s said he’s opposed to medical marijuana. I’m sure there’s more to this possible flip-flop, but there’s more to every political hit.

Just an example of how anything can be twisted in this business. Now, it’s back to finding what I started looking for in the first place.

UPDATE: Some people in comments have been talking about Bill Clinton’s early attacks on Bob Dole being very effective and a model for Blagojevich, so I pulled up this story, edited out the stuff that doesn’t apply here, and present it for your consideration.

“The fact that we’ve been able to finance this long-running constant television campaign,” [Clinton] told well-heeled donors at a May 21, 1996, White House lunch, “has been central to the position I now enjoy in the polls.” […]

Mr. Clinton’s words confirm the case already laid out by his own campaign Rasputin, Dick Morris, both in his candid book and in his Senate deposition. “In my opinion, the key to Clinton’s victory was his early television advertising,” writes Mr. Morris in “Behind the Oval Office.” “There has never been anything even remotely like it in the history of presidential elections.”

That’s for sure. Mr. Morris describes a blitzkrieg that began in July of 1995, ran mainly in swing-voter states where Mr. Clinton was unpopular, and showed every TV viewer from “150 to 180 airings” or “about one every three days for a year and a half.”

UPDATE: TopinkaWatch.com is up and running, but without the purloined photo. You can also read the text for two of the new TV ads here. [Hat tip: ArchPundit]

  40 Comments      


I wonder what he has planned?

Thursday, Apr 20, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Actually, I think I know, but I don’t think I can say yet.

Remember yesterday when I pointed out to you that Governor Blagojevich’s campaign lifted a photograph from Jake Parrillo’s site?

I wondered if there might be some copyright issues. From Jake’s blog today:

I’ve consulted with some folks and after some discussion, we’ll be pursuing this a bit.

Should be fun to watch.

UPDATE: TopinkaWatch.com is up and running, but without the purloined photo. You can also read the text for two of the new TV ads here. [Hat tip: ArchPundit]

  17 Comments      


And still another Lane Evans open thread

Thursday, Apr 20, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Dems are finally seeking advkce from the Board of Elections.

Democratic partisans are looking for guidance on interpreting Illinois election law regarding the replacement of U.S. Rep. Lane Evans on the November ballot.

Don Johnston and Mary Boland, co-chairs of the 17th Congressional District Democratic Central Committee, sent a letter Monday to Jesse Smart, president of the Illinois State Board of Elections.

“We are asking them to have an informal conference with our attorney,” Mr. Johnston said of the letter to the board. […]

One of the key issues in dispute since Rep. Evans announced after winning the primary that he would retire at the end of his term is whether only elected committeemen will be allowed to vote. As many as half the 721 precinct committeeman positions are vacant.

Mr. Johnston says election law allows only precinct committeemen elected in the primary to vote in the nominating process. Other party leaders say appointed committeemen also should be allowed to vote.

What else have you heard out there?

  24 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Overtime; Osmond; Chairmen; Teachers; Tenhouse; Dahl (use all caps in password)

Thursday, Apr 20, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Thursday, Apr 20, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

TIME magainze just rated Dick Durbin as one of the nation’s ten best Senators. Go read the article (it’s not long) and report back with your thoughts.

  49 Comments      


Guv goes negative

Thursday, Apr 20, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

I had a little bit more detail on what these ads are about in today’s Capitol Fax, but the Tribune has a good story, too.

With more than six months until the state’s general election for governor, the incumbent, Democrat Rod Blagojevich, planned to hit the TV airwaves Thursday with a commercial critical of Republican challenger Judy Baar Topinka.

Blagojevich campaign aides declined to discuss the details of the ad Wednesday, though they called it “comparative” in nature. But Blagojevich’s move may be the earliest attempt by an Illinois candidate for governor to use television ads against a November opponent.

In each of the last three campaigns for governor, candidates waited until early June before showing up on television in an effort to sway minds and tarnish their opponents. In one of the most successful early launches, Republican Jim Edgar, who was governor at the time, spent heavily on television commercials beginning in June 1994 to portray Democratic nominee Dawn Clark Netsch as being soft on crime.

  27 Comments      


Can we call him a perennial loser now?

Thursday, Apr 20, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Krol has the story:

Sugar Grove dairy magnate Jim Oberweis lost another election Wednesday night.

The second-place finisher in last month’s Republican governor primary won’t be serving as Kane County Republican chairman or joining the Republican State Central Committee. Oberweis lost a bid for the unpaid party leadership posts to incumbent Kane party chairman Dennis Wiggins Wednesday night.

“I’m going to be around doing whatever I can to help rebuild the party in Kane County, to help rebuild the party throughout the state of Illinois,” Oberweis told nearly 130 assembled Republican precinct committeemen, before conceding defeat less than halfway through the roll call.

The loss marks the sixth major Republican post Oberweis has sought and failed to win since 2002. The list includes two runs for U.S. Senate, an attempt to be a replacement Senate candidate, state GOP chairman and governor. Oberweis was, however, elected unopposed last month as a Sugar Grove Township Republican precinct committeeman.

OneMan has more.

  14 Comments      


What a mess - UPDATED

Thursday, Apr 20, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

So, if the Chicago Tribune was really delving into the pasts of jurors on its own instead of just taking some friendly directions from prosecutors, why did they miss all of these people? From the Sun-Times:

FIVE WHO STAYED

KEVIN L. REIN
48, of unincorporated Glen Ellyn
On March 30, lawyers for Larry Warner argued unsuccessfully for a mistrial because Rein and other jurors failed to disclose arrests. Rein was arrested in 1980 for allegedly striking his pregnant 17-year-old sister in an argument over cats. The state dropped the charges because his sister wouldn’t prosecute. He bought newspapers during the trial, but the court warned jurors against media exposure, the defense said.

CHARLES P. SVYMBERSKY
42, of Westmont
Svymbersky, an alternate, served on the jury after Evelyn Ezell and Robert Pavlick were kicked off. He was listed in Warner’s March 30 mistrial motion. He failed to disclose a 1983 guilty plea for buying a stolen bike in Peoria. He bought newspapers during the trial, the defense said.

JILL DIMARTINO
55, of Itasca
She admitted her daughter, friends and co-workers questioned her about the case after the original deliberations began, according to Warner’s attorneys, who argued those discussions were prejudicial. She stayed on the jury.

SONJA CHAMBERS
38, of Bolingbrook
After the guilty verdict, lawyers for Ryan unsuccessfully sought a mistrial after learning Chambers, the foreperson, was involved in several civil court cases she failed to disclose on her jury form, including a 2004 divorce petition, filings for orders of protection and a lawsuit a furniture business brought against her in 2003. She also was divorced in 1991.

RAUL CASINO
65, of Palos Hills
On March 28, George Ryan’s defense team gave the court records showing Casino was arrested in 1962 on a charge of driving under the influence. The records did not show how the case was resolved. Casino did not disclose the arrest. He stayed on the jury.

And then there’s this very good point at the bottom of the story:

After two more jurors were removed, Ryan’s lawyers sought a mistrial. They argued that jurors believed the feds were investigating their backgrounds and it tainted their deliberations.

“It has now been widely reported on TV and in the newspapers that the U.S. attorney could potentially prosecute jurors for perjury for lying on their questionnaires,” they wrote. Jurors would then vote in favor of the feds for fear of being prosecuted, the defense contended.

As she heard news of other jurors’ problems with the law, Ezell, tossed from the jury because she didn’t disclose her own background, wondered whether she and fellow juror Robert Pavlick, 55, of Buffalo Grove, were targeted. Pavlick, who could not be reached, was dismissed for not disclosing criminal convictions.

“That’s all I can do is wonder. Why did they do that?” said Ezell, charged but not convicted of a crime.

Indeed. [emphasis added]

UPDATE: I’ve noticed a trend in comments, so let me just intervene now. This is not about whether a juror had any run-ins with the law, it’s about whether they disclosed it on their juror forms.

UPDATE 2: Mary Mitchell:

I don’t know whether Chambers, an African-American female, would have been excluded from the jury because of her past involvement with the court system, but the judge and the lawyers had a right to know the truth.

UPDATE 3: So, let me get this straight. Forewoman Chambers didn’t disclose her repeated involvement with the legal system on her jury form, testified under oath that she didn’t talk to “Dennis the drycleaner” while it looks like she might have done so, said at a press conference that there were no pro-Ryan holdouts that she could recall, when there was at least one, now has hired a lawyer and won’t talk to the press, and yet she was still qualified to judge Ryan on perjury charges? I don’t get it.

  33 Comments      


Morning open thread

Thursday, Apr 20, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

I’ve changed the name to encourage debate on topics you choose, but here are the short bits:

· “State lawmakers and education officials said they want to free up more money for textbooks, restrict schools’ ability to mark up book prices and develop a better state monitoring system after a Tribune investigation revealed that outdated and decrepit textbooks are being used in public schools across the state.”

· Madigan Sues NJ Firm Over Cell Phone Record Sales

· State joins others, sues over tobacco money

· Local Republicans react to Ryan verdict

· Zorn: Ryan verdict should be death knell for perks

· Editorial: The new immigration politics

· Campaign steams ahead with major Blagojevich fundraiser

· Editorial: School junk food ban gets its just desserts

· SIUE professor to help plan Lincoln’s 200th. More here.

· And then there’s this, but read the whole thing:

Medicaid providers from throughout Western Illinois are writing letters to lawmakers to complain about a deadbeat that is months behind in payments — the state of Illinois.

North Adams Home Inc. Administrator Greg Sandidge said the state owes more than $600,000 in outstanding bills. North Adams received a check in February for its October billings. He has been told the next payment is likely in May, when debts incurred seven months earlier should be settled.

“Last year we got payments within 90 to 120 days. Now it’s over 150 days,” Sandidge said. […]

Officials at the LaHarpe Davier Healthcare Center is trying to collect enough donations in the next month to pay bills. WGEM-TV reports that if the home cannot raise $150,000 by Monday, it will have to file a 90-day closing notice and the 32 residents will need to find a new care facility.

UPDATES:

· An Illinois town is held captive by a still-empty prison

· Crain’s: State pipeline-safety inspectors have concluded that recent safety records submitted to state regulators by Peoples Energy Corp. can’t be relied upon as an accurate gauge of the condition of the underground natural gas pipes in Chicago.

· llinois House OKs strict limits on property seizure

· Editorial: Let voters decide stem cell issue

· I guess I can announce it here. The Sun-Times has asked for two columns a month from me instead of just the one I was writing. The next column will appear a week from tomorrow. (I actually did two columns last month because of the primary election.)

· How Ryan could lose his pension.

· After logging just a single vote, candidate contests election results

· Ray Hanania is on a Middle Eastern comedy tour. I am not making that up. Check out his blog.

· Collin Hitt: End of ‘business as usual’? Audits will tell the tale

· Another great toon from Chris Britt. (jpg file)

· Durbin says Obama shouldn’t rule out national office

· Bernie: For the fourth year in a row while in office, Gov. ROD BLAGOJEVICH didn’t file his family tax returns by the April deadline, opting to get an extension until mid-October. “He’s busy running the state,” said gubernatorial spokeswoman REBECCA RAUSCH. (Abe has more.)

· Black-owned businesses booming.

  5 Comments      


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