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Wednesday's motion claims defense attorneys have gone almost nine months without pay and that the dearth of available funds undermines their ability to conduct investigations or seek expert opinions. As a result, it says the defense won't be fully prepared to go to trial on April 20. "The financial hardship ... has created a vast inequity," the motion says. "The government continues to have every resource at its disposal. Yet, the defense is stymied in its ability to prepare for trial." A nearly $3 million fund that Blagojevich drew on at his first trial to pay his team of around a dozen attorneys ran dry as the initial trial finished. Months later, presiding Judge James Zagel ruled that Blagojevich would only be allowed to retain two lawyers and a paralegal on the taxpayer's dime.
[Associated
Press;
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