Chicago Sun-Times

Blago lawyers wanted to play Pritzker tape at trials

- BY ANDY GRIMM Staff Reporter Email: agrimm@suntimes.com Twitter: @agrimm34

Wiretapped conversati­ons between current gubernator­ial candidate J. B. Pritzker and Rod Blagojevic­h have provided plenty of ammunition for the billionair­e Democrat’s political rivals, but Blagojevic­h’s lawyers thought the former governor came off pretty well on tape.

In fact, they had wanted to play Pritzker and Blagojevic­h chatting about the various options for the then- governor to appoint to the U. S. Senate seat that came open in 2008, when Barack Obama left the post to take office as president, said Sheldon Sorosky, who was part of Blagojevic­h’s defense team for both the former governor’s trials.

The tapes, first published by the Chicago Tribune last week, capture Pritzker on the phone with Blagojevic­h in late 2008, as the then- governor weighed options for Obama’s seat. Blagojevic­h offered the slot to the billionair­e, but Pritzker demurred, suggesting he would be more interested in the post of state treasurer if it were open. Pritzker also suggested to the governor that his prior campaign contributi­ons might have made it look bad if Blagojevic­h were to tab him for any post.

“[ The conversati­on] was absolutely legal,” Sorosky said this week while walking the hallways of the Cook County Criminal Courthouse. “That’s why we wanted to play them.

“An argument could have been made that, if Blagojevic­h was interested in money, and he was interested in someone taking the Senate seat, why not Pritzker? He’s a billionair­e,” he said. “He had more money than anybody.”

U. S. District Judge James Zagel wouldn’t allow the tapes of the Pritzker- Blagojevic­h conversati­ons into evidence, Sorosky recalls, ruling that they had nothing to do with the charges that Blagojevic­h was shopping the seat for his personal financial gain. After two trials, neither of which featured the Pritzker tapes, Blagojevic­h was convicted of wide- ranging political corruption, including trying to sell off the Senate seat for a campaign donation or a cushy job once he left office. The former governor is serving a 14- year sentence in federal prison in Colorado.

Sorosky noted that Pritzker never made the $ 50,000 contributi­on Blagojevic­h solicited during the wiretapped call. The lawyer wasn’t sure that fact made for a compelling argument, but “it might have had a little appeal to the jury.”

It certainly has appealed to Pritzker’s rivals. His personal fortune— estimated at more than $ 3 billion — has made him a frontrunne­r for the Democratic nomination, and since the story broke the state Republican party has sent out almost daily attacks based on the apparent backroom dealmaking.

On Tuesday, in an email blast to the press, GOP spokesman Steve Yaffe cited the wiretaps in a missive decrying Pritzker’s looming endorsemen­t by a labor group as another insider deal.

“After all, J. B. Pritzker is already on tape showing his corrupt colors,” Yaffe wrote as the closing line to the press release.

Democratic contender Chris Kennedy also has hammered Pritzker over the cozy conversati­ons with the convicted former governor, though the other primary candidates, including state Sen. Daniel Biss and Chicago Ald. Ameya Pawar ( 47th), have stayed largely above the fray.

Sorosky said he’d forgotten about the conversati­ons until they started making headlines last week.

“I did not give out [ the tapes],” he said. “I don’t knowif I still have them. I think we had to give them back to the government after the trial.”

 ?? CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/ AP FILE ?? Rod Blagojevic­h
CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/ AP FILE Rod Blagojevic­h
 ??  ?? J. B. Pritzker
J. B. Pritzker

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