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Rod Blagojevich Trial: Judge Chides Ex-Governor But Won't Gag Him

MIKE ROBINSON and MICHAEL TARM   06/16/10 09:05 PM ET   AP

Blagojevich Gag Order

CHICAGO — Rod Blagojevich's trial judge accused the talkative former governor on Wednesday of making a "backhanded play for sympathy" in comments about a witness' testimony, but stopped short of imposing the gag order federal prosecutors requested.

Judge James B. Zagel made it plain that he was unhappy with what Blagojevich said to reporters a day earlier after his longtime friend and former chief of staff, Alonzo Monk, left the stand. Blagojevich claimed Monk said "things that he knew weren't true" and mentioned "the shame his father probably feels."

"It think it's essentially a kind of backhanded play for sympathy plus an argument and characterization of the witness entirely without details," Zagel said.

The judge said he wants statements made by the lawyers and defendants to be accurate, but that a gag order muzzling Blagojevich and his attorneys would be a last resort.

Blagojevich, who often appears eager to talk, left court without comment Wednesday but did pose for photos outside – smiling broadly with his arm around the shoulders of some passers-by while others snapped pictures with their cell phones.

"We have a great deal of respect for the judge, so we'll show a little restraint," defense attorney Sam Adam Sr. said.

Blagojevich, 53, has pleaded not guilty to trying to get a payoff such as a high-paying job or a big campaign contribution in return for the appointment to the U.S. Senate seat Barack Obama gave up after his election as president. He has also pleaded not guilty to plotting to use the powers of the governor's office to launch a racketeering scheme.

On Wednesday, a federal investigator testified that she traced a trail of money from a lobbyist who made a huge commission off the June 2003 sale of $10 billion in state bonds through another businessman to Blagojevich's two key fundraisers and advisers.

Internal Revenue Service investigator Shari Schindler took the stand as prosecutors focused on $600,000 that businessman Joseph Aramanda, a longtime friend of Blagojevich fundraiser Tony Rezko, received from prominent Springfield lobbyist Robert Kjellander.

Kjellander received an $809,000 commission when Blagojevich and members of his inner circle picked the company he represented, Bear Stearns, as lead underwriter in the bond sale.

But Schindler said that in October 2003, about three months after the sale, Kjellander transferred $600,000 to Aramanda. Prosecutors say the transfer was one element in a kickback scheme.

Kjellander, however, has been accused of no wrongdoing in the case.

Aramanda testified earlier in the trial that the money was a loan arranged by Rezko to help prop up his ailing pizza restaurants. But he acknowledged that on Rezko's orders he immediately sent most of the money to a group of Rezko associates.

Schindler testified that two of those associates then sent large amounts to companies operated by Rezko and some money then flowed to fundraiser Christopher Kelly.

She said no money was traced directly to Blagojevich but that his wife, Patti, got the first of several $12,000 checks from Rezko's real estate business soon after Armanda got his money.

In the courtroom, prosecutors tried to literally chart the trail of money for less-than-riveted jurors. A chart with red boxes and arrows was projected on a large screen showing how funds allegedly flowed from the bond deal through Bear Stearns, Aramanda, Rezko and others.

Blagojevich studied the chart, his hand on his chin.

Rezko is now awaiting sentencing after being convicted of launching a $7 million kickback scheme. Aramanda had testified under immunity from prosecution.

If convicted, Blagojevich could face up to $6 million in fines and a sentence of 415 years in prison, although he is certain to get much less under federal guidelines.

The former governor's brother, businessman Robert Blagojevich, 54, of Nashville, Tenn., has pleaded not guilty to taking part in the alleged scheme to sell the Senate seat and scheming to squeeze a racetrack owner for a $100,000 campaign contribution.

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CHICAGO — Rod Blagojevich's trial judge accused the talkative former governor on Wednesday of making a "backhanded play for sympathy" in comments about a witness' testimony, but stopped short of...
CHICAGO — Rod Blagojevich's trial judge accused the talkative former governor on Wednesday of making a "backhanded play for sympathy" in comments about a witness' testimony, but stopped short of...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
M Miles
12:47 PM on 06/21/2010
Judge chides . . .

Blagojevich, 53, has pleaded not guilty to trying to get a payoff such as a high-paying job or a big campaign contribution in return for the appointment to the U.S. Senate seat of Barack Obama.

"If we take Blagojevich, 53," and replace that phrase with, "The Executive Barack Obama", and now replace the phrase, "U.S. Senate seat of Barack Obama", with the
phrase of "Congressman Joe Sestak" we get nothing more than replacement phraseology.

The replacement phrases are not even similar, are they?

Anyway; thank God for free speech, freedom of the press and freedom of religion as given to us by the U.S. Constitution.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R U Sirius
Retired educator, trainer; writer/editor
08:32 AM on 06/18/2010
Why gag him? His big mouth is the best witness against him!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joe Friday
10:40 PM on 06/17/2010
This trial isn't on local daytime TV! Darn! Do you think it's televised in the WH? Darn!! How come he gets see it and we can't! Darn!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Madmac
08:34 PM on 06/17/2010
Why gag him. He's pure comedy gold
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lendiggy
07:14 PM on 06/17/2010
Blago knows where the bodies are buried and has the tapes to prove it. Axelrod and Emanuel are in trouble. My guess: Blago gets a heart attack, his plane crashes, or he commits "suicide"
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naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
12:21 AM on 06/18/2010
I hope you are right and that Blago has his own tapes.
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moose and squirrel
Very soon we would both be completely twisted...
04:54 AM on 06/18/2010
you are as delusional as he is!
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SirSlappy
My micro-bio is still empty.
06:17 PM on 06/17/2010
That rug is totally convincing.
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wonketteRAWKS
Hypocrisy is prevalent in BOTH parties!
05:36 PM on 06/17/2010
Wasn't there more to this testimony than reported here? Like Rove, Obama, Rezco and Blago and Aramanda and Kjellander all at Tony Rezco's house for a Obama for Senate Fundraiser.

GOP Boss + Democratic Gov. + Soon-to-be Democratic President + Convicted Influence Peddler = How Illinois Works
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05:47 PM on 06/17/2010
gag him this is more interesting than a whitehouse press conference. Please give me something other than the oil spill to read about.
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01:22 AM on 06/19/2010
was Elvis there too? get real
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Morgantheaxe
Right is wrong, and left is correct!
01:35 PM on 06/17/2010
What the heck is wrong with this prosecutor. If Monk was their case stick a fork in this prosecutor he's done.

"Mr. Monk I understand you have been taking bribes for ten years now.

Yes, yes I have.

Mr. Monk did you ever give any of the money to governor Blagojavich?

No.

Mr. Monk did you ever talk to Governor Blagojavich about the money you were taking?

Oh, no the Governor would have been unhappy about that. It would have hurt us politically."

This is what the prosecutions star witness testified to. Wow!!! What the hell is wrong in Chicago? Even the prosecutors are crooked it seems.
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06:23 PM on 06/17/2010
All our prosecutors are overzealous.

This is political grandstanding and the entire Justice department needs to get classes in empathy, logic, and restraint.
12:44 PM on 06/17/2010
What's wrong with his face?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ldcbl
facts matter
12:08 PM on 06/17/2010
as much of a clown he seems to be i am still unsure what his crime was. he seemed to do what every politician does except he got caught doing it. anyone know exactly what his crime was?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ChiGuy
Just an earthbound misfit, I
12:15 PM on 06/17/2010
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/04/02/illinois.blagojevich/index.html

That he - at least in your eyes - was just doing what supposedly "every" politician does (not actually true), doesn't give him a pass.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ldcbl
facts matter
12:50 PM on 06/17/2010
i do not want to infer that he should get a pass. i am just curious as to what the actual crime that he is being tried for. and i do not believe that just because everyone does it (and there are probably some honest politicians) he should get a free pass. just asking what the crime he supposedly committed is.
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Morgantheaxe
Right is wrong, and left is correct!
01:21 PM on 06/17/2010
Actually with what they have proven, which isn't much, yeh every politician does it. Every single one. It's ugly but it's how democracy works. In fact it's the cornerstone of it. I'll do this for you and you do that for me. The things being swapped are supposed to benefit the people you represent and it only becomes a crime when the things you swap solely benefit yourself financially. If you have ever heard the expression, "You don't wanna watch the sausage being made," you understand the process. Our political conventions are festivals of this kind of deal making. Even among the deligates they make deals to get the guys you want to go to the next convention. It's ugly I agree, but it's what keeps us civilized. Without the deal making we do what? We TAKE what we want, and that's the road to totallitarianism. Howard Fineman said it best on K.O.'s show, "People just don't want to watch this happen. It's not pretty, but it's what makes our democracy work."
12:49 PM on 06/17/2010
Well, Blagojevich was arrested on federal corruption charges. The charges involved solicitation of bribery, amongst other things. He's accused of attempting "to obtain personal gain ... through the corrupt use" of his authority to fill Barack Obama's vacated United States Senate seat.

Basically he was trying to auction Obama's Senate seat to "the highest bidder".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Winged Pegasus
01:24 PM on 06/17/2010
...solicitation, bribery, corrupt use of authority, using public trust for personal gain... Oh! Sestak & Romanoff. Someones got a lot of splainin to do.
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Morgantheaxe
Right is wrong, and left is correct!
01:25 PM on 06/17/2010
Not according to the testimony so far he wasn't. So far it looks like he was making a political deal that would end up making him more popular. That's not illegal it's democracy at work. They better have something in their back pocket or this prosecution is starting to stink of corruption itself.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ChiGuy
Just an earthbound misfit, I
12:08 PM on 06/17/2010
He won't be grinning and babbling once he's in that orange jumpsuit.

That day cannot come too soon for me.
SDindependent
SDindependent1 on twitter, old warrior and grandpa
11:54 AM on 06/17/2010
Isn't there a carnival someplace that could use this clown.
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06:24 PM on 06/17/2010
Rape is not funny.
11:52 AM on 06/17/2010
Typical Chi-town.
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11:00 AM on 06/17/2010
I know politics in Illinois is notoriously corrupt but Blago just seems like a clown
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
johnqpublik
11:00 AM on 06/17/2010
I don't know, they've been playing some more of the tapes on the radio, and there hasn't been a statement of his yet, that would qualify as the required quid pro quo.

He's no dummy, so he knew how to word everything, and work through intermediaries. He gave a lot of people the impression he would give them the senate seat if they raised money for him, but nowhere (yet) has he explicitly said it.


Plus, I believe he's got one of R. Kelly's lawyers, so who knows what will happen? I predict a mistrial.