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The strategy of claiming to be naive
-- but not corrupt -- has worked with some juries, experts say. But criminal defense attorney Robert W. Clarke warns that Blagojevich's defense team had better watch out for "the ostrich instruction," which may be among the guidelines the judge gives jurors before they start deliberations. "It tells the jury, look, you can't say you stuck your head in the sand when all this was going on around you in obvious fashion," says Clarke. "If they try that, the prosecutors may seek that instruction. The defense had better be sure that they're not inviting it." The image of Blagojevich as unwitting dupe may actually have been reinforced on Thursday while Monk
-- a prosecution witness -- was testifying. Monk admitted that Rezko slipped him envelopes that usually contained $10,000 in cash seven to nine times while he was chief of staff. Assistant U.S. Attorney Chris Niewoehner asked if he had told Blagojevich. He said he had not
-- because the governor wouldn't have approved.
"This is gold for the defense," Cavise said. "Rod gets to sit back and say,
'Gee, these guys were really crooks -- I had no idea." Monk, a sports agent when Blagojevich brought him into his group of close advisers, had no experience in politics or government but soon ended up as chief of staff to the governor. "The governor had horrible judgment," he told jurors. Longtime Chicago defense attorney John Beal says there is another danger in trying to play dumb. If the government's evidence over the whole trial reveals Blagojevich as street smart after all, he says, it will clash with the defense claim that he didn't know what was going on. Making him look insincere like that could be off-putting to jurors. FBI wiretap tapes of Blagojevich -- the first of which were played for jurors Thursday
-- could be that kind of hindrance. He was heard in a nasty, crabby tone ordering members of his inner circle to get more and more campaign money. But Beal says the 18 months Blagojevich spent making television appearances such as on "Celebrity Apprentice" may have created an image that would reinforce his professed naivete. "If they can portray him as something of a nut, then this delusional aspect might work," says Beal. "Kind of a goof rather than a scheming, calculating, smart crook."
[Associated
Press;
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