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The other three charges

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* My weekly syndicated newspaper column is about the three felony counts that didn’t stick to Rod Blagojevich

While Rod Blagojevich’s jury found him guilty on 17 felony counts last week, jurors found him not guilty on one count and deadlocked on two others. Not much has been written about those other counts, so let’s take a look.

The paucity of electronic surveillance evidence related to those verdicts, the lack of credible witnesses for the prosecution and absence of actual harm appeared to hurt the federal government’s case.

Jurors deadlocked on whether Blagojevich actually attempted to hit up Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s brother for a big campaign contribution in exchange for releasing funds to a school in Emanuel’s old congressional district. But this allegedly happened in 2006, long before the feds began bugging Blagojevich, so there were no tapes. And Mayor Emanuel testified at trial that he’d never been told the grant would be made if his brother held a fundraiser. His testimony undermined the feds’ case and jurors deadlocked.

There was some surveillance involving the other two counts, which centered around whether Blagojevich tried to shake down a road builder in exchange for giving him tollway contracts. But nothing concrete could be promised to the builder since a $6 billion tollway construction plan that was constantly mentioned on tape was just a dream in Blagojevich’s head at the time.

Blagojevich, in other words, was just dangling the possibility of government work in exchange for money from the road builder. But demanding a contribution from someone who does business with the government is not illegal under federal law.

The targeted road builder testified that he felt pressured to contribute, but he initially told the FBI that there was no pressure. And the builder’s bosses testified that Blagojevich never directly connected campaign contributions to contracts. Blagojevich was declared not guilty on one count and the jury deadlocked on the other

“No harm, no foul,” may be a good way of summing this up. Emanuel’s school got the cash and no fundraiser was held. The road builder was never promised or given anything specific and no money was contributed.

Blagojevich was convicted of two other similar shakedown attempts. He was recorded being told that for every day he didn’t sign a horse racing industry bailout bill that track owner John Johnston would lose $9,000. Real harm was being done. Blagojevich was also caught on tape instructing his aide how to approach Johnston and appeared to admit that he was holding off signing the bill until he got his money. He didn’t sign the bill until after his arrest. There was nothing hypothetical about that charge and harm was done, and the former governor was found guilty.

The same reasoning goes for the shakedown of a Children’s Memorial Hospital executive. Blagojevich was repeatedly caught on tape plotting to hit the exec up for a large contribution in exchange for releasing funding for the hospital. Blagojevich was also busted checking out whether he could hold up the money. And the exec credibly testified that he believed he was being shaken down. The state cash wasn’t released until after Blagojevich was removed from office. Once again, real harm was done and there was plenty of recorded evidence and credible testimony to back up the government.

But if hypothetical situations and lack of actual harm undermined the government’s case on three counts, why then did the jurors decide to back the prosecution’s case all the way on the attempted sale of Barack Obama’s US Senate seat? After all, none of the schemes were ever followed that far. Nobody was really harmed by the delay, and much of what Blagojevich was caught on tape saying was obviously crazy talk.

Besides the audacity of Blagojevich’s crassness, the answer may have been the huge amount of electronic surveillance. The jury was obviously impressed with the vast number of recordings involving the Senate scheme. “There was so much more evidence to go on,” said one juror after the verdicts were issued.

And, unlike his last jury, which deadlocked on all but one charge, these jurors seemed to comprehend the fact that this wasn’t about whether Blagojevich followed all the way through on his Senate schemes. “He was being tried on attempting, not committing a crime,” a juror correctly explained to reporters.

Prosecutors also did a better job of explaining a much more streamlined case this time. The last jury got lost in a jumbled maze. But the feds used a PowerPoint presentation during summation which so impressed one juror that she said she wished the jury could’ve had it during deliberations.

* Related…

* Blagojevich appeal complicated by testimony?: So even if the appeals court finds Judge Zagel made an error, they’re unlikely to grant an appeal. They’d consider most judicial errors unimportant compared to the role Blagojevich’s testimony played in the jury’s decision.

* Prison terms for political corruption affect families

* WLS: Former Blago Lawyer says suppressed tapes could clear Blago

posted by Rich Miller
Tuesday, Jul 5, 11 @ 10:33 am

Comments

  1. We were hoping your column might reflect on the known Blagoof offenses that were lost becuase the USA big footed the IL AG
    Or perhaps lets get a list of all the tapes (at least the names of the parties) And while your at it a list of all the Stooie Levine chats
    Both would be some goooood listening.

    Comment by CircularFiringSquad Tuesday, Jul 5, 11 @ 10:52 am

  2. Since he put it out there, Fitz owes the people of the SOI an explanation as to why there were no charges related to the “endemic hiring fraud” he wrote about years ago.

    Comment by wordslinger Tuesday, Jul 5, 11 @ 11:27 am

  3. “the feds used a PowerPoint presentation”

    Haha, glad to see PowerPoint making an appearance. Probably helped streamline their case.

    Comment by JBilla Tuesday, Jul 5, 11 @ 11:35 am

  4. It’s not just the governments streamlining of the case. The difference this time was Blagojevich testifying, which also had an effect on the outcome. The jury had something to contrast the government’s case with, Blago went overboard with his obviously fictional account.

    Comment by Wensicia Tuesday, Jul 5, 11 @ 1:31 pm

  5. Sam Adams Sr is full of hot air. If there were LEGALLY “exculpatory” evidence on the unreleased tapes, defense counsel could have sought to introduce the evidence at trial. The judge would have determined its admissibility. Either they didn’t, or the judge ruled against them. Which makes me think it’s not exculpatory in a legal sense, but rather the kind of “bs” that Adams and other counsel would have tried to pitch to a gullible public to taint the jury with mumbo jumbo non-legal arguments.

    Comment by Anonymous Tuesday, Jul 5, 11 @ 6:48 pm

  6. The thing Rich Bradley mentioned last week, and I too wonder about, is what happened to all the open and shut highly eggregious cases of endemic hiring fraud perpetrated under Blago. We all thought for sure he’d get fifteen years for all of that and not a peep of that has come up for a trial. The senate seat and other scams were way more sexy, but the hiring fraud was a slam-dunk, with easy paper trails to follow. Heck, the Sun-Times, Trib and SJ-R practically collated the entire case FOR the feds, through their ongoing reportage. I’m a little sad that those people hurt by the hiring fraud have not gotten their own cases addressed, and now probably never will. Quinn and the Ethics board show zero interest in pursuit of those crimes.

    Comment by Newsclown Tuesday, Jul 5, 11 @ 11:01 pm

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