Chicago Sun-Times

NOT- SO- APPEALING ODDS FOR BLAGO

Ex- gov continuing to fight, but chances dimmer than ever

- BY JON SEIDEL Staff Reporter Email: jseidel@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ SeidelCont­ent

Former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h vowed last year to “fight on.”

So it was no surprise when the disgraced politician triggered a new appeal Tuesday, two weeks after a federal judge reinstated his 14- year prison sentence and left Blagojevic­h’s two daughters sobbing in the front row of a courtroom.

Still, Blagojevic­h’s odds are dimmer than ever. He now plans to appeal his sentence to the same 7th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals that found last year “it is not possible to call 168 months unlawfully high for Blagojevic­h’s crimes.” And beyond that waits the same U. S. Supreme Court that refused to hear Blagojevic­h’s case this year.

Former federal prosecutor Jeffrey Cramer said Blagojevic­h has simply run out of arguments to offer federal judges, even if his attorneys decide to keep filing paper.

“I think we’ve hit the end of the road,” said Cramer, now managing director of Berkeley Research Group.

Leonard Goodman, Blagojevic­h’s attorney, told the Chicago SunTimes there were “errors” during Blagojevic­h’s dramatic re- sentencing hearing on Aug. 9 in the courtroom of U. S. District Judge James Zagel. He declined to elaborate. Zagel paid little attention during that hearing to more than 100 letters from fellow inmates who describe Blagojevic­h as a model prisoner. However, Zagel also found Blagojevic­h accepted responsibi­lity for his crimes despite arguments from prosecutor­s to the contrary.

The feds told Zagel that Blagojevic­h remains convicted of the three schemes for which he was originally sentenced. They included his attempt to sell then- President- elect Barack Obama’s U. S. Senate seat; to shake down the CEO of Children’s Memorial Hospital for $ 25,000 in campaign contributi­ons; and to hold up a bill to benefit the racetrack industry for $ 100,000 in campaign contributi­ons. A jury also convicted Blagojevic­h of lying to the FBI.

Five of Blagojevic­h’s original 18 conviction­s were tossed last year by the appellate court, triggering the re- sentencing hearing. Blagojevic­h, 59, appeared at that hearing through a government video link.

“I made mistakes,” Blagojevic­h said. “I regret those mistakes and those judgments. And I’m sorry, your honor. I wish I could find a way to turn the clock back and make different choices.”

When Zagel dashed his hopes of an early release from prison, Blagojevic­h simply shook his head. His daughters wept. And his wife, Patti Blagojevic­h, later called the sentence “unusually cruel.”

Years of appeals had led to that moment, only to end with the same result.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h
GETTY IMAGES FILES Former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h

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