Chicago Sun-Times

IT’S GRAY TOSEE YOU, BLAGO!

In his first interviews since going to prison, Rod Blagojevic­h tells NBC5 and Chicago magazine about life behind bars

- BY TINAS FONDELES Political Reporter Email: tsfondeles@suntimes.com Twitter:@ TinaSfon

Rod Blagojevic­h spends his time in prison mopping floors for $ 8 a month, working on his Elvis Presley impersonat­ion with the “Jailhouse Rockers” — and helping inmates prepare for job interviews.

The former governor says his heart was broken when the prison gates swung closed behind him five years ago, and he couldn’t see even “the flicker of a light at the end of a tunnel.”

Showing little sign of remorse, Blagojevic­h insists he does not hate “the people who have done this to me.”

“Do you realize I have twice been given a longer prison sentence than Al Capone?” Blagojevic­h asked NBC5’ s Phil Rogers. “I’ve been given a prison sentence by the same judge who gave a mafia hit man . . . He acknowledg­ed under oath [ he was] a contract killer. . . . My judge gave me a longer sentence than him.”

The disgraced Democrat spoke with Rogers by telephone. Blagojevic­h also gave an interview to Chicago magazine. Both media outlets made their interviews public Monday night.

Blagojevic­h, who is serving a 14year sentence on corruption charges in a Colorado prison, said he isn’t conducting interviews to try to get a pardon from President Donald Trump, whom he met on “The Apprentice.” President Barack Obama chose not to grant Blagojevic­h an early release before leaving office.

“He insists that that’s not his primary focus right now,” Rogers told the Chicago Sun- Times. “His primary focus is the Supreme Court, because he sees this as a chance to be completely exonerated, to have the court say that he didn’t do anything wrong.”

Before Blagojevic­h’s original sentencing in 2011, Trump said Blagojevic­h’s conviction sounded like “just a lot of political stuff . . . more than pure corruption.”

Blagojevic­h— whom Rogers noted is the “same Rod Blagojevic­h that we all knew”— joked about his mop duties, saying because the prison limits how much time an inmate can spend on a job, he is subject to term limits. He also joked about his $ 8 monthly salary — for a law school graduate and former governor— calling it a reversal of the “American Dream.”

“My jurisdicti­on has shrunk from the fifth biggest state in America to these two floors, but I don’t care what anybody says, Phil. I believe in clean government, and clean floors,” Blagojevic­h told Rogers.

Blagojevic­h also told Rogers that his prison band was originally called “G- Rod and the Jailhouse Rockers,” but he said “that sounded too gang-bangerish, and so the powers that be said just call it ‘ Jailhouse Rockers.’”

Jokes aside, Blagojevic­h said his goal is to “take one day at a time.” He said he reads the Bible daily, and his faith has taught him that “forgivenes­s is mandatory,” and that it’s “liberating to not hold grudges.”

Rogers told the Sun- Times Blagojevic­h was “happy” to talk about life in prison but also wanted to talk about his case: “He still insists that he is innocent and he still says that he will prove it.”

The Federal Bureau of Prisons would not allow an interview of the former governor inside the prison. The interviews were conducted on the phone in two separate one- hour calls, Rogers noted. The former first lady Patti Blagojevic­h was also interviewe­d in her Chicago home.

Patti Blagojevic­h said she believes her husband lives for the 10- minute phone calls home every day. She said visits are especially difficult on the couple’s daughters.

“There’s always that post- visit depression,” Patti Blagojevic­h told Rogers. “My little one . . . the minute we say goodbye to him on that Sunday nigh twhen we’re leaving, she cries all theway to the airport.”

The first part of the NBC interview aired Monday, with additional segments on Tuesday and Wednesday nights at 10 p. m., and a half- hour special airing at 6: 30 p. m. on Friday.

Chicago magazine will publish its interview in the October issue but posted it online Monday night.

Upon his arrival in prison, guards recommende­d to Blagojevic­h that he seek out protection from other white inmates, David Bernstein wrote in Chicago magazine.

“Initially, to be respectful to the officers, and on their recommenda­tion, I sought those guys out. It was then that I realized they were white supremacis­ts and politely declined their offer of protection,” Blagojevic­h told Bernstein.

Blagojevic­h is not due to get out of prison until May 2024.

“MY JURISDICTI­ON HAS SHRUNK FROM THE FIFTH BIGGEST STATE IN AMERICA TO THESE TWO FLOORS, BUT I DON’T CARE WHAT ANYBODY SAYS, PHIL. I BELIEVE IN CLEANGOVER­NMENT, AND CLEAN FLOORS.” FORMER GOV. ROD BLAGOJEVIC­H, to NBC5 Chicago’s Phil Rogers

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PHOTO: Inmate No. 40892- 424 at the Federal Correction­al Institutio­n in Englewood, Colorado.
NBC5CHICAG­O PHOTO: Inmate No. 40892- 424 at the Federal Correction­al Institutio­n in Englewood, Colorado.
 ?? | NBC5 CHICAGO/ CHICAGO MAGAZINE ?? Former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h is seen behind prison walls at the Federal Correction­al Institutio­n in Englewood, Colorado.
| NBC5 CHICAGO/ CHICAGO MAGAZINE Former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h is seen behind prison walls at the Federal Correction­al Institutio­n in Englewood, Colorado.
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