Thread drift
A couple of weeks ago I posted about how I thought because Blagojevich didnt kiss the butts of right people and publicly ridiculed the judge, the courts, and the prosecutors between his trials, he got 14 years in retaliation for his arrogance. I also commented I thought his sentence of 14 years was probably more than most other corrupt politicians would get for the same pay to play behavior.
As said before, Blago was incompetent, in way over his head and was in the right place at the right time to even get elected . He ran against Jim Ryan who had the same last name as George Ryan, the former Illinois governor serving time for corruption. Many say Ryans last name may have cost him the election.
Since it appears the Blagojevich commutation may be off the table, the following article by Scott Reader, veteran State of Illinois journalist appeared in the local paper. I must admit, after reading this I have even less sympathy for the SOB.
SPRINGFIELD Imagine the disappointment of getting ready to put on civilian clothes and walk out the prison gate and then being told, Oh, never mind.Thats what reportedly happened to former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich last week, when President Donald Trump waffled on whether to commute his sentence.
I almost felt sorry for Blagojevich. Almost.
But then I remembered Blagojevich also governed with a wetted finger in the air trying to figure out which way the political breeze was blowing any particular day. He changed his mind often.So far, he has served a little over half of his 14-year sentence. But Trump said, I think he was treated very, very unfairly. His name is Rod Blagojevich and Im thinking about commuting his sentence. The statement hacked off Illinois Republican members of Congress who wrote a letter to Trump telling him to keep Blago in the clink.
Later, the president tweeted about Blagojevichs sentence, saying White House is continuing review of this matter. According to Fox News, a member of the presidents administration halted the commutation because the person was concerned from the public push back Imagine what it must have been like to find out by tweet that you will remain separated from your wife, two daughters and hair dye for maybe another seven years.
I wanted to feel bad for Blagojevich, but then I remembered Lynn Raney. You probably have never heard of Raney. He was an ordinary fellow who worked for the state of Illinois organizing ceremonies and events. He taught art in schools and volunteered for the Boy Scouts. He was a nice guy all the way around. On Blagojevichs first day in office, Raney organized a news conference for the governor. I was standing next to Raney, notebook in hand, when Blagojevichs press aides handed out a news release announcing the people the governor was firing. I heard Raney gasp as he read the release and saw his own name on the list.
Imagine being asked to organize the news conference where they would announce your firing. Does it get any lower than that?
Well, maybe finding out by Tweet that youre not going to be released from prison after all comes close. But still ... The same week that Raney learned of his firing at the news conference he organized, Blagojevich hosted another media event. This time it was to condemn people who were being paid for unused vacation time at the end of their careers with the state. Blagojevich issued a press release listing names of the worst offenders. One of the people on the list was Kim Knauer, a hard worker who was spokesperson for the Illinois Board of Education for 20 years. Even during her seven-year battle with breast cancer, she worked long hours. She died two weeks before Blagojevich took office. At the end of the news conference, several reporters approached the governor and asked if he was aware one of the people on the list had just died. The governor responded by saying if she had taken more vacation time she might still be alive.
Try as I might, I just cant feel sorry for Blagojevich. I do have sympathy for his wife and two daughters though. Like 2.3 million other American families, they know the pain of being separated from a loved one who is incarcerated. But should they get special treatment because the criminal in their family knows the president?
Lets not forget Blagojevich is in prison for attempting to trade an appointment to Barack Obamas U.S. Senate seat for personal gain as well as for trying to shake down executives from a childrens hospital and the horse-racing industry for campaign contributions. Corruption of this severity warrants a lengthy prison sentence. My thoughts when he was sentenced were that 14 years wasnt nearly enough.
There are many people in prison serving lengthy sentences who deserve to have their time behind bars shortened. But Blagojevich isnt one of them.
Outstanding post! Thank you.
I learned a LOT!
yet i keep remembering that:
- Blago was overcharged and was originally convicted on 1 count and the jury hung\mistrialed on the rest .
- He was retried (after a publicity blitz) and they hung his brother out to dry...(among other things) to get at him.
- His charges had sub-charges. If he was found guilty on one sub-charge and innocent on the other, he was found
They wanted him entombed.
good post -
One thing DJT’s vacillation over Blago brought to the forefront:
Those who play have to pay. Another 100 million paid attention to crimes and punishment..
Thank you so much for the great information and perspective on Blagojevich. I grabbed that for a file I made up just for your post! I thought I saved your previous post, but I can’t find it. Would you be willing to send me the link or copy to that one, whichever is more convenient for you, so I can have the full set? Thanks again!