Chicago Sun-Times

ROD’S FREE- ME PLEA

Blago formally asks Trump for clemency

- BY JON SEIDEL AND LYNN SWEET Staff Reporters

Rod Blagojevic­h is crossing every item off his get- out- of- prison to- do list.

That’s especially true after President Donald Trump blurted out last week that he is mulling a commutatio­n for the former Illinois governor six years into a 14- year prison sentence.

So on Tuesday, Blagojevic­h filed paperwork asking — again — for a presidenti­al commutatio­n. For roughly a year now, Blagojevic­h has had no formal request on file with the Office of the Pardon Attorney because he had not exhausted his appeals.

However, as former Illinois first lady Patti Blagojevic­h has pointed out, Trump can do “anything he wants, whenever he wants” when it comes to clemency. And a White House official told the Sun- Times the work of the Pardon Attorney is “a procedural process.”

The cases Trump is interested in “will be routed throughWhi­te House counsel,” the official said.

Leonard Goodman, Blagojevic­h’s attorney, said the document filed Tuesday afternoon totals 53 pages with exhibits. If granted, the commutatio­n would not erase Blagojevic­h’s conviction­s, but if Trump shortened his sentence to time served, Blagojevic­h could walk free in a matter of days.

“Blagojevic­h has served almost 7 years of a 14- year sentence, which is twice as long as other state governors who, unlike Blagojevic­h, lined their own pockets,” Goodman wrote in an email to the Sun- Times. “His wife and two daughters need him to come back home.”

Blagojevic­h sought this relief once before, filing commutatio­n paperwork in the waning days of the Obama administra­tion. That petition was inherited by Trump when he took office in January 2017. However, a Justice Department spokeswoma­n said Blagojevic­h’s file was administra­tively closed in May 2017.

Patti Blagojevic­h has said that’s because her husband had not finished his appeal in the courts. In April, the U. S. Supreme Court said it would not hear Blagojevic­h’s case, finally leaving him no other legal options.

Since then, Patti Blagojevic­h has undertaken a public campaign for clemency directed at Trump — mainly on Fox News — and it seems to be working. She has tried to tie her husband’s prosecutio­n to Special Counsel Robert Mueller and former FBI Director James Comey.

“This same cast of characters that did this to my family are out there trying to do it to the president,” Patti Blagojevic­h told the SunTimes in April.

Then, last week, the president told reporters that Blagojevic­h, 61, went to jail “for being stupid” and saying things “many other politician­s say.”

Trump also said Blagojevic­h’s prison sentence was excessive, though he mistakenly said Blagojevic­h was sentenced to 18 years behind bars. He got 14 years.

WhiteHouse Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said Tuesday that, “the president has not made a formal decision” on Blagojevic­h. She said Trump wouldn’t be paying attention to people who might criticize him for letting Blagojevic­h go free.

“The president does not base his formal decisions off of criticism of others, but on what he thinks is the right decision to make,” Sanders said.

Though an appellate court tossed five of his conviction­s in 2015, federal prosecutor­s say he remains convicted “of the same three charged shakedowns” for which he was first sentenced in 2011.

Those include 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 him of lying to the FBI.

Goodman, Blagojevic­h’s attorney, is a member of the investor group that purchased the Sun- Times and Chicago Reader in 2017.

 ??  ?? On Tuesday, former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h filed paperwork asking — again — for a presidenti­al commutatio­n. AP
On Tuesday, former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h filed paperwork asking — again — for a presidenti­al commutatio­n. AP

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