Lead defense attorney Sam Adam Jr. was cut off by the judge within
minutes of outlining his final push to prove Blagojevich's
innocence. The showman attorney told federal Judge James Zagel --
the jury was absent -- he intended to violate his orders not to talk
about convicted influence peddler Tony Rezko and other potential
witnesses who never took the stand. A relatively quiet day of
closing arguments soon exploded. "I'm prepared to go to jail for
this, your honor," Adam Jr. said after Zagel cut off his soliloquy
about Rezko.
"It doesn't do your client any good to be held in contempt,
though it may or may not be personally satisfying," the judge said.
The judge warned the defense team on Friday not to go into the
argument -- he anticipated Adam Jr.'s defiance and dismissed the
jury to review the defense's argument. He criticized the defense's
lack of preparation and said Blagojevich may be better supported
with another attorney.
Adam Jr. reaffirmed outside the courthouse that he was prepared
to serve time for his client.
"My father once did 10 days for a guy," he said. "I'd absolutely
do the same."
Adam Jr.'s battle with the judge came during the twilight of
closing statements. Marathon closing statements by the prosecution
and lawyers for Robert Blagojevich -- the former governor's older
brother and fundraiser -- have extended the trial by another day.
U.S. Attorney Christopher Niewoehner meticulously outlined the
case federal prosecutors presented to the jury for the last six
weeks, using a combination of graphs and headshots of witnesses as
visual cues.
Niewoehner began with the allegation that Blagojevich attempted
to exchange the U.S. Senate seat formerly held by President Barack
Obama for money, campaign contributions, job opportunities and other
forms of personal gain. The government attempted to convince the
jury that Blagojevich's behavior throughout his six years in office
reflected years of criminal enterprise, with Blagojevich at the
center of it all.
"The thing that connects all of these schemes is Rod
Blagojevich," he said. "If you find him guilty on one, you have to
find him guilty of the others."
The government harkened back to FBI recordings taken through
wiretaps in Blagojevich's campaign headquarters and private
telephone lines. The conversations served as the backbone of the
prosecution's case against Blagojevich. His former advisers narrated
hours of tape throughout the proceedings and described for the jury
the ex-governor's alleged criminal intentions.
"I've got this thing and it's f----n' golden," Niewoehner quoted
from a transcript of a Blagojevich wiretap. "And I'm not going to
give it away for f----n' nothing."
Niewoehner used such quotes to take the jury back to the trial's
opening day, when Adam Jr. told jurors the tapes would show
Blagojevich talking politics, rather than money. The prosecutor
seized on the opportunity to mock the defense's interpretation of
the "tangible political reforms" mentioned by Blagojevich in a
December conversation with advisers. Prosecutors said Blagojevich
was referring to an Indian community leader's pledge of $1.5 million
to his campaign in exchange for appointing U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson
Jr. to the Senate.
"Mr. Adam told you that 'tangible political support' was health
care reform endorsements," he said. "What evidence have you seen
that tangible political support is health care endorsement? Zero."
Adam Jr. had a look of disbelief on his face during Niewoehner's
summation of the defense's opening statement, as if he were being
misquoted. The prosecutor tried to hammer home to the jury that
action was not needed to convict Blagojevich.
"Those agreements and those attempts are crimes," Niewoehner
said. "You don't need to be a successful criminal to be a criminal."
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The prosecution faces some challenges in convicting Blagojevich,
despite mountains of documents and miles of tapes. The defense is
trying to argue that Blagojevich was a man who ran his mouth without
much backup to his unfiltered vulgarity -- a notion Adam Jr. said
was confirmed by the ex-governor's actions. Though Blagojevich asked
for campaign donations or sat on state actions, he never followed
through. A horse track bill was signed, a hospital received its
money and a school got its grant -- all without the requested
campaign donations.
Niewoehner tried to meet this argument head-on by reviewing each
charge -- emphasizing that Blagojevich only needed to take steps --
like arranging meetings with fundraisers and alleged targets -- to
be found guilty of conspiracy.
"Those agreements and those attempts are crimes," Niewoehner
said. "You don't need to be a successful criminal to be a criminal."
The prosecutor asked the jury to use common sense in judging the
former governor -- and used one of the trial's most important
witnesses to make the case: a Children's Memorial Hospital executive
who said he was a target of a Blagojevich shakedown for $25,000.
"Pat Magoon hadn't heard the tapes (of conspiracy), but he knew
immediately what was happening," Niewoehner said. "Now you do ...
find him guilty."
Adam Jr. was unable to rebut the prosecution's case because
Niewoehner exceeded the two-hour time limit the judge allotted him
for his closing statement. Blagojevich is depending on his celebrity
defense attorney to make his case entirely -- the ex-governor backed
down from taking the stand and his defense rested without calling
any witnesses.
Blagojevich appeared in court on Monday with wife Patti, their
two daughters and a sister-in-law, state Rep. Deb Mell, D-Chicago.
Another family member was in the courtroom -- his brother and
co-defendant Robert Blagojevich. The Tennessee businessman and
former Blagojevich fundraiser said his relationship was "strained"
as a result of the trial. His defense attorney, Mike Ettinger,
emphasized the distance between the brothers.
"He came up here for four months to improve a fractured
relationship," he said of Robert's time with his younger brother's
campaign. "Robert came up here ... to help his brother in need."
Ettinger stressed that Robert's association with the Blagojevich
campaign does not prove that he was a party to any conspiracy, nor
was he aware of the existence of any criminal activity. He was a
fundraiser cold-calling people he knew only as potential donors --
not anyone with interests in state business.
The prosecution said the elder Blagojevich "lied" on the stand
when he said he did not mix politics with fundraising.
The jury is scheduled to begin deliberations tomorrow about the
fate of the former governor, who faces 415 years in prison on
charges of attempted extortion, racketeering, wire fraud and
bribery. Robert faces four counts of corruption in connection to the
sale of the Senate seat and more than 20 years in prison, if
convicted.
The defense will make its final pitch to the jury tomorrow --
possibly without its chief orator.
[Illinois
Statehouse News; By BILL McMORRIS]
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