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"What I put my focus on mostly is the girls," she told the paper. "Once you put your focus there, the rest falls into place." But even before that story ran, Patti Blagojevich was in the middle of a public feud between her husband and her father that largely stemmed from the governor's shutting down of a landfill run by a distant relative of her mother. Mell was incensed, saying his son-in-law was willing to "throw anyone under the bus." He also told reporters that his daughter had "blinders on" when it came to the governor and that she would "wake up one day" to understand what her husband was really like. There were whispers that Mell was not allowed to see the family as much as he liked, something Mell seemed to give credence to with a tearful announcement that he wanted to end his battle with Blagojevich. "I've got a granddaughter who loves to fish, and she hasn't been up to Lake Geneva for two years like she used to come," he said. Until Tuesday, the most recent news stories about Patti Blagojevich have been those that raised questions about her business dealings. In 2005, for example, a published report said she received nearly $50,000 from a real estate deal three years earlier involving Antoin "Tony" Rezko. In June, Rezko was convicted of using clout with the Blagojevich administration to help launch a multimillion-dollar kickback scheme. As for Patti Blagojevich's father, Richard Mell declined to comment for this story. On Tuesday he told reporters: "My main concern now is for my daughter and my grandchildren."
[Associated
Press;
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