Thursday, July 01, 2010
 
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Angry Blagojevich heard on tapes

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[July 01, 2010]  CHICAGO -- In wiretaps recorded by the FBI immediately following the 2008 election, former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich decried the arrogance of the Obama administration, all the while oscillating between bitter rage and self-pity.

Insurance"The arrogance of these f------ people," Blagojevich said on Nov. 10, apparently exasperated by his inability to allegedly get a deal out of President Barack Obama for appointing his friend Valerie Jarrett to the U.S. Senate seat formerly held by Obama.

On Wednesday the prosecution and former Deputy Gov. Doug Scofield painted a picture of a bitter and jealous egomaniac during the 2008 election. Scofield has walked the jury through some of the most damaging tapes of the former governor's federal corruption trial, including Blagojevich's most famous sound bite.

"I got this thing and it's f------ golden and I'm not just giving it up for f------ nothing," the jury heard late Tuesday.

But the context Scofield has provided for the tapes could be as troublesome for defense attorneys as the governor's own mouth.

"He was frustrated by Sen. Obama (and his success)," Scofield testified. "He was a rival. … There was some jealousy."

Despite his envy of the fast-rising Illinois senator, Blagojevich still managed to keep some perspective on the presidential election -- at least in terms of his own future.

"I'm better off with this guy (Obama) than McCain," he said.

The tapes show Blagojevich as a man obsessed with making his way out of Illinois, fearing he would be left behind as Obama put distance between himself and Chicago politics.

When Blagojevich saw his chances of a Cabinet post slipping, he searched for excuses to appoint himself, at one point discussing criteria he would set for potential appointees surrounding health care policy. The standards would point back to him as the person best suited to take the job.

In a conversation with Scofield on Nov. 13, Blagojevich predicted such a move would irk Obama.

"The (last) thing Obama wants is me (in the Senate)," he said.

Scofield said if Blagojevich could not get a Cabinet position or other prominent post from Obama, he considered lobbying Jarrett directly.

"How bad do you want what I've got?" Blagojevich rehearsed on a wiretap.

His defense team reacted to some of the most damaging tapes with a refrain heard often thus far in the trial. Blagojevich attorney Aaron Goldstein asked Scofield why he never objected to Blagojevich's proposals or warned him of the potential illegality of the alleged deal-making. He used Scofield's contributions to the wiretaps for added effect.

Water

"You said, 'You've got something important and valuable. ... The president has a horse in the race and an interest in that horse to win,'" Goldstein began. "Did you believe it?"

"No," Scofield said, pausing.

The public relations entrepreneur stumbled for words for the first time in his testimony.

"I made the decision that I wasn't gonna argue with him."

"So you encouraged him?" Goldstein followed up.

"At times it could be seen as encouragement," Scofield said.

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Scofield's banter with Blagojevich carried much the same alpha-male tone as the governor's on the tapes.

"Gimme a f------ break," he said to Blagojevich on Nov. 10. "(The Obama people) could step up to the plate ... (and) help with something."

But Scofield said he was misrepresenting his true feelings about Blagojevich's alleged scheming. He said he was appeasing the governor throughout their conversations.

"I was just agreeing with what (Blagojevich) said previously," he said of his statements on the phone.

The defense has asked many of the governor's former advisers, including Lon Monk, John Harris and Tom Balanoff, why they never objected to the alleged conspiracy. Often, these witnesses have testified they humored the governor in taped conversations of alleged conspiracy.

Scofield offered a slightly different story when the prosecution asked him about the subject. He said he did not want to end up on Blagojevich's bad side.

"I had to pick my fights with him," he said. "He had an in-and-out view of the world. ... I had seen it before."

And he shared some of those anecdotes with the jury.

Blagojevich dismissed the naysaying of Bill Knapp, a consultant who allegedly advised the governor to settle for good will in a Jarrett appointment. Blagojevich labeled Knapp a "quisling," or traitor, and worried that someone from the Obama campaign had "gotten to him." Scofield, however, also admitted that Knapp and Blagojevich remained close through 2008, despite their differences.

The former governor’s apparent vindictive streak extended to bystanders, as well. Blagojevich told Scofield on Nov. 13 that Iraqi war veteran and former congressional candidate Tammy Duckworth had no chance at the Senate seat. It wasn't an issue of merit -- she was just backed by the wrong people, including Illinois senior U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin.

"Why the f--- would I make Durbin's candidate or Rahm's candidate (senator)?" he said.

Blagojevich faces more than 20 counts of corruption and 415 years in prison if convicted.

The potential prison sentence could get five years lighter very soon because of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling last week that narrowed the scope of the Honest Services Act. Federal Judge James Zagel may throw out a charge of making false statements to federal investigators concerning an alleged shakedown of the Chicago Tribune.

Scofield will be back on the stand on Thursday.

[Illinois Statehouse News; By BILL McMORRIS]

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