But lawyers for the disgraced former Illinois governor face long
odds in chipping away at the time he must serve for attempting to
auction off an appointment to President Barack Obama's old Senate
seat and for other crimes, legal experts said Thursday. Attorneys
will have the daunting task of demonstrating that the respected,
25-year veteran Judge James Zagel who oversaw Blagojevich's two
trials made major errors at trial and in calculating a sentence for
the 18 convictions, said Lance Northcutt, an adjunct professor
Chicago's John Marshall Law School.
"Zagel is careful to rule in a way to avoid having his decisions
overturned, and his reasoning for this sentence on Wednesday was
detailed," he said. "A higher court is loath to second-guess the
trial court -- and they rarely do."
Northcutt was in the crowded Chicago courtroom Wednesday
observing as Zagel scolded a visibly anxious Blagojevich -- in a
tone befitting a school principal -- for harming public confidence
in government.
Blagojevich's attorney Sheldon Sorosky told The Associated Press
on Thursday that the defense would ask for the convictions to be
overturned and for the sentence to be reduced.
"We intend to appeal everything," he said.
Potential issues on appeal, he said, included whether Zagel
placed so much emphasis on sending a message to other would-be
political schemers that he unduly inflated the sentence of the
twice-elected Democrat.
"He absolutely did," said Sorosky, noting that Zagel several
times mentioned Blagojevich's predecessor, Republican George Ryan,
who was convicted in 2006 and is serving a 6 1/2-year sentence for
corruption.
"He said Ryan got 6 1/2 and so I have to give you way more,"
Sorosky said. "He was giving Blagojevich the sentence not to punish
Blagojevich for what he did, but to stop other governors. That's not
right."
An appeal could drag on for years, and experts add that there is
virtually no chance Blagojevich would be able to put off reporting
to prison as scheduled on Feb. 16.
Blagojevich has started a bleak countdown toward that date. In
the meantime, he will spend a Christmas at home with his wife,
Patti, and their daughters -- Amy, 15, and Annie, 8. Once behind
bars, Blagojevich will be cut off from the outside world, with
visits from his family strictly limited. He'll share a cell and
perform a menial job.
As it stands, he won't be eligible for early release until 2024,
when he's 67.
Only felons deemed likely to prevail on appeal can stay out of
prison in the interim, and that doesn't seem to apply to
Blagojevich. Zagel will make that determination.
The chance that Zagel will let Blagojevich remain free pending
appeal?
"Slim to none," said Gal Pissetzky, a Chicago-based attorney who
practices in federal court.
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Zagel's comments at the sentencing weren't devoid of
conciliation. He told Blagojevich he accepted that he did some good
as governor, such as on children's health issues, and said it was "a
mitigating factor" for the sentence.
He also cited the former governor's direct appeal for mercy, in
which an untypically contrite Blagojevich repeatedly apologized and
said, "I have nobody to blame but myself. ... I am just so
incredibly sorry."
Zagel's acceptance of Blagojevich's apologies, Northcutt said,
likely kept the former governor from getting an even longer term.
Blagojevich's attorneys will thus likely focus their appeal on trial
errors and not on asserting that he did not commit the crimes,
Northcutt said.
If the higher court determines Zagel didn't give Blagojevich a
fair trial -- even if he admitted the crimes during sentencing --
they could toss out the convictions and order a new trial.
In defense motions filed during Blagojevich's retrial, the
defense accused Zagel of bias, pointing to how he almost invariably
sided with prosecutors when there were objections during testimony.
They could make similar claims in any appeal.
Blagojevich's lawyers also have complained that Zagel had
repeatedly rejected their requests to play FBI wiretap evidence that
they claimed would help their defense.
Chicago attorney Michael Ettinger, who represented Blagojevich's
brother and co-defendant, Robert Blagojevich, at a first trial, said
the tapes may be good grounds for appeal.
"I've heard those tapes, and what Rod says in one hour, he says
something the opposite the next hour," he said Thursday.
During the sentencing hearing, Zagel rejected the notion -- made
often by Blagojevich's own attorneys at trial -- that the recordings
showed Blagojevich was merely a big talker who brainstormed wildly
as a way to weed out good ideas from bad ones.
"Musings are talks without purpose, not the material of arranged
meetings and repeated phone calls" to commit crimes, Zagel said.
"The jury and I do not believe these were musings."
[Associated Press]
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