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Blagojevich Sentence: Former Governor Begins Bleak Countdown To Prison

By MICHAEL TARM and DON BABWIN   12/ 8/11 06:06 AM ET   AP

CHICAGO -- Rod Blagojevich starts his Thursday facing a bleak countdown – 71 days before the twice-elected Illinois governor must say goodbye to his family and begin serving a 14-year sentence for corruption.

During those days, he will scramble to get his financial affairs in order and spend a final birthday and Christmas at home with his wife, Patti, and their two young daughters before heading off to prison to serve the sentence handed down Wednesday.

The next time Blagojevich gets to spend Christmas or his birthday with his children – 15-year-old Amy and 8-year-old Annie – they will likely be young adults. Blagojevich, whose 55th birthday is Saturday, won't be eligible for early release for about 12 years, when he will be around 67 years old.

"I've had a lot of clients who've had to start making preparations the day after they were sentenced," said Gal Pissetzky, a federal defense attorney based in Chicago. "But not a single one of them has been able to prepare for saying goodbye to their children."

Judge James Zagel sentenced Blagojevich on Wednesday on 18 counts of corruption, including his June convictions on charges that he tried to sell or trade an appointment to President Barack Obama's U.S. Senate seat for campaign cash or a top job. The impeached governor must report to prison on Feb. 16.

The Blagojeviches, who say his legal troubles also devastated them financially, put their home up for sale after he was convicted in June, and he would likely want to find a buyer before he heads off to prison. They initially listed it for $1.07 million but reportedly lowered the price recently by several thousand dollars.

To make sure his wife can make those and other financial transactions on her own, Blagojevich will also want to make sure he signs necessary papers to give her power of attorney, Pissetzky said.

There's also the issue of an appeal, something Blagojevich and his attorneys can finally focus on now that the judge has pronounced the sentence.

Federal authorities must still make a final decision about where Blagojevich will serve his time. Wherever it is, Blagojevich will be largely cut off from the outside world. He will have to share a cell with other inmates and work a menial job, possibly scrubbing toilets or mopping floors, at just 12 cents an hour.

On Wednesday, the Rod Blagojevich who once challenged a prosecutor to face him like a man, the glad-handing politician who took to celebrity TV shows to profess his innocence, was nowhere to be found. Frowning and pulling nervously at his tie, the disgraced former governor did his best to display humility in hopes of convincing Judge Zagel to hand him a lesser sentence.

He licked his lips nervously as he stepped up to address the judge – mouthing the words, "I love you," to his wife. Leaning into a hefty oak podium, gripping its sides, the normally fast-talking Blagojevich spoke slowly, sometimes pausing to search for the right word.

"My life is ruined," he told Zagel. Accentuating each word, he added, "I have nobody to blame but myself. ... I am just so incredibly sorry."

The two-term Democrat offered more than half a dozen apologies, including to his former constituents across Illinois. But he stopped, seemingly to gather his composure, when he said he also owed an apology to his family.

"I have ruined their innocence," he said quietly.

It was not enough for Zagel, who proceeded to give Blagojevich close to the 15 to 20 years prosecutors had sought.

"When it is the governor who goes bad," Zagel said, "the fabric of Illinois is torn and disfigured and not easily repaired."

Blagojevich slumped forward in his chair, momentarily frozen as the judge pronounced the sentence. Moments later, his wife, Patti, fell into his arms; when he pulled back from their embrace, he brushed tears from her cheek.

It took two trials for prosecutors to snare Blagojevich. His first ended deadlocked with jurors agreeing on just one of 24 counts – that Blagojevich lied to the FBI. Jurors at his retrial convicted him on 17 of 20 counts, including bribery and attempted extortion.

Blagojevich responded to his Dec. 9, 2008, arrest with defiance, proclaiming his innocence with a media blitz. He pursued the spotlight after he was removed from office, appearing in reality TV shows such as "Celebrity Apprentice."

But Blagojevich clearly dreaded the idea of prison time. Asked in an interview before his retrial about whether he dwelled on that prospect, he answered: "No. I don't let myself go there."

___

Associated Press writer Deanna Bellandi contributed to this report.

___

The Blagojevich Trial
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Former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich looks back at the crowd as he returns home with his wife Patti in Chicago, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2011, after he was sentenced by Judge James Zagel to 14 years in prison for his convictions on 18 corruption counts, including trying to to auction off President Barack Obama's old Senate seat. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
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CHICAGO -- Rod Blagojevich starts his Thursday facing a bleak countdown – 71 days before the twice-elected Illinois governor must say goodbye to his family and begin serving a 14-year sentence f...
CHICAGO -- Rod Blagojevich starts his Thursday facing a bleak countdown – 71 days before the twice-elected Illinois governor must say goodbye to his family and begin serving a 14-year sentence f...
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09:40 PM on 12/10/2011
How come this moron was not taken in custody on the spot like everybody else ? What a world !
11:22 PM on 12/09/2011
Really, not fair. The head lines yesterday told us 2and 1/2 billion disappeared and the corporate leaders don't know where the money disappeared to. When this all comes out in the wash, no one will serve time. This is real big time crime. This poor guy never got a dime just shot his mouth off?
10:40 PM on 12/09/2011
boy, when he comes out, he'll have a new boyfriend and will be wearing lipstickes and painted toenails, he'll be more happy and will marry his big black boyfriend in a gay wedding
09:41 PM on 12/10/2011
Rupaul ..blackevich
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Mulebone
You're heavy, and I'm not your Brother
07:04 PM on 12/09/2011
What was this man convicted of besides having a big mouth?

Where's the bribery? Corruption? Theft of Services? Suborning Witnesses? Video of him stuffing money in his pants? Bank accounts in Switzerland?

None of that is here.

The most serious crime this guy was convicted of is his boast that he wants to benefit from Obama's Senate seat.

But he never got further than that.

Just the boast!!!

This is crazy.

This is Orwell's 1984.

This is prosecutors so obsessed with making the headlines they don't even wait for a crime to actually happen. Now -- thanks electronics -- they get your for boasting about what you want to do. Maybe they're afraid you won't follow through on your boast that explains why they arrest and charge you before you actually do anything.

Wire fraud?

Blago used the phone during his boasting; that's your wire fraud.

And then we get this insane sentence straight out of "The Gulag Archipelago": 14 years!

How do we remove a man from his family for 14 years because he has a big mouth?

When did having a big mouth warrant that kind of punishment?
09:35 PM on 12/09/2011
Oh c'mon, he was selling favors---basically selling his office---from the day he took the oath of office as Illinois' new governor. And trying to, or even just planning to, sell an appointment to the United States Senate is a serious bit of corruption in itself. It doesn't matter if he didn't get a chance to do it. If you plan to set off a bomb in a public building you can still be sent to prison regardless of whether you actually did it or not. Ditto for being a crooked politician looking to sell a Senatorial appointment. And as for hiding behind his wife and kids as a means of escaping prison, that's been tried before and it doesn't---and shouldn't---work. Bye bye, Blago, I hope you like prison chow.
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Mulebone
You're heavy, and I'm not your Brother
10:07 PM on 12/09/2011
Great, then bust him!

You've got the electronics. Catch him in the act. Video him stuffing the money into his trousers. Run a sting operation on him. Do it the right way.

But don't take short cuts.

Don't come to court with a tape of the guy saying "Wow! I can sell Obama's seat for a million!" and tell us that's enough to lock him up and throw away the key.

And this may come as a shock to you but what Blago did is how politics is done all across America. It's a corrupt system. Sure, it's great we now have the electronic tools to stop it, but there was no need for a 14 year sentence.

The guy's a first time offender.

This prosecutor and judge are asking for and handing out a sentence that has no relation to the context of the crime. It's barbaric. It's a crime itself for removing a man from his family for playing Chicago/Illinois politics the way he was taught to play it.
09:09 AM on 12/09/2011
I believe that while 14 years may be an excessive sentence this is an attempt by the justice system to get the attention of politicians in Illinois and send a clear message that corruption will not be tolerated.

My guess is that some, but not all, politicians will get the message and obey the law. They can't say that they haven't been put on notice.
11:12 PM on 12/08/2011
He got much more then he asked for. For going on the Trump show and Letterman they should distroy him? And don't kid yourselves when the prosecutor says his office is the long arm of the people or justice was served....they had him on the one count at the end of the first trial Blagovich should have stopped there...he'd have done five yrs tops.
11:02 PM on 12/08/2011
We have a lovely prison here in Thompson IL which would look very nice on Blago!
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tjeastrich
07:11 PM on 12/08/2011
No matter what the public thinks about the length of his sentence, it's irrelevant. The only way ii can be changed is by an appeals court. My thoughts though are for his family. He has 10 weeks to prepare for his separation from his wife and daughters. I'm sure between Alderman Mel and Rob's brother they will take care of his family. But, I hope he spends as much time as he can with his daughters and possibly arranges some psychological counseling for them. The separation is going to be very tough for them.
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johnnygoodwud
04:58 PM on 12/08/2011
one mil. for a bungalow, i don't think so. patti's daddy mel the crook will take care of her, and she will eventually sweep blago to the curb and start a new life. i don't feel sorry for either of them, but do feel sorry for the kids.
03:55 PM on 12/08/2011
Bogus sentence. Blagojevich, however corrupt he may be, doesn't even compare to many of the politicians still in office at the local, state and federal level. He was a good Governor. My only complaint is he didn't have the courage to raise taxes years ago.

My advice to him: Spend the next 71 days pull together financial resources and GET THE HELL OUT OF DODGE. South America is a lovely place to retire to.
03:24 PM on 12/08/2011
He was caught trying to SELL a Senate seat and so many people seem to think that that is not really such a big crime. And these tend to be the same people who are generally in favor of more power being given to the government. Sorry, but that just doesn't make sense to me. Enormous amount of trust is given to the people who govern us, and if they totally betray that trust and on top if it act defiant as if like they don't even understand that what they did is a big deal, as Blagojevich did, an example has to be made. As someone mentioned below, try living in a country where such government corruption is the norm and see how completely it destroys the society at all levels.
03:15 PM on 12/08/2011
14 years seems a bit much. Murders have received less time. However, aside from Congressional seats, this is the highest office in the state. I also think the fact that the former governor was sentenced to just over six years started to stick in the craw of this judge.

Obviously 6 years wasn't enough of a deterrent for Blago. Now it's 14 years. I think what's "in the air" now is; "for the new governor, go ahead and screw up like this and maybe you'll get 50 years. We're tired of it."

I also think when 14 years is handed down it's "message received" around the country for any other official who might have their hand in the cookie jar. Maybe today they choose to push that jar to the side.

But let me end with this; just based on this case and this case alone, 14 years is far too harsh of a punishment.
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tonewheel
Vote early...and often.
02:56 PM on 12/08/2011
Mixed bag.

14 years seems really excessive, in my opinion. Having said that, I'm getting really tired of this man and his defense team looking for sympathy. Blago, don't talk to me about what this will do to your children and your wife. I'm not interested in how you need to be strong for them. Don't read me letters written by your children, intended to tug at my heart strings. Those are things you should have considered very carefully before you acted the way you did. You've destroyed your family; now go away and deal with it.
09:46 PM on 12/09/2011
14 years??? Murderers are treated with more leniency!
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JustJoy7
Give your best, expect the best from others.
02:33 PM on 12/08/2011
The punishment does not fit the crime. Why don't they get some hedge fund folk, some bankers, other corporate criminals. I hate when our system of justice is unfair...which is most of the time.
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Welshish
The sadder but wiser girl for me.
06:09 PM on 12/09/2011
And, Martha Stewart did actual jail time! Pleeezze!
02:15 PM on 12/08/2011
When does Fitzgerald go to jail for illegal wire taps?