A former high-up federal prosecutor
whom I talked to the other day told me that in his
estimation the feds will arrive at “an Agnew” solution to
the Blagojevich problem.
Vice President Spiro Agnew was
formally charged by the feds with accepting bribes
totaling more than $100,000 while Baltimore chief
executive and Governor of Maryland, receiving some of the
money from past favors while holding the office of vice
president. After a deal with the U.S. attorney, Agnew
pleaded no contest on October 10, 1973 to a single charge
that he had failed to report $29,500 of income received
in 1967 and as part of the deal resigned as vice
president.
My source says that the Agnew solution
would be applied to both Rod and Patty Blagojevich in
this manner. There is a thick tissue of probes involving
his possible corruption…a leasing deal reached for
occupants of a remodeled Illinois Tollway oasis…the
Illinois Department of Transportation…the Illinois
Department of Corrections…thje Department of Children and
Family Services…a letter sent to Attorney General Lisa
Madigan from U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald that the
feds are looking into “very serious allegations of
endemic hiring fraud” in the Blagojevich
administration…that Blagojevich had accepted a $1,500
check from Mike Ascaridis, described as a close
Blagojevich friend two weeks after Ascaridis’ wife
received a state job, she receiving the job despite
having failed a hiring exam, Blagojevich says the check
was written as a birthday gift to his oldest daughter and
then that it was given for his younger daughter’s
christening…that a company contributing nearly $120,000
to his gubernatorial campaign in 2002 won a no-bid
contract, awarded by the Illinois Capital Development
board that reports to the governor. And all this before
we get to Tony Rezko.
As we all know Blagojevich fundraisers
Antonin Rezko and Stuart Levine were indicted and are on
trial for participating in a scheme to obtain kickbacks
from investment firms seeking business from two state
boards, Levine pleading guilty and testifying against
Rezko.
On top of this the feds are
investigating the fact that Patricia Blagojevich was a
business partner of Rezko for at least a decade and in
2004 received over $38,000 in real estate commissions
from him…that as a licensed real estate broker she
received $113,700 in commissions from Anita and Amrish
Mahajan. Anita Mahajan owns a urinalysis company that has
been given a no-bid contract with the state Department of
Children and Family Services and Amrishajan is president
of a bank that has had two requests pending before state
regulators to acquire two out-of-state banks…that Melvyn
L. Weiss, a lawyer was indicted after having made a
$10,000 contribution from his firm which “Friends of
Blagojevich” returned…that Blagojevich did not return
another $40,000 from Melvyn Weiss and other lawyers in
Weiss’ firm…that Weiss paid $5,000 toward lodging, meals
and entertainment for Blagojevich and others with him
during a December, 2003 trip to New York.
Moreover that Blagojevich campaign
adviser Chris Kelly was indicted on federal charges of
tax fraud unrelated to either the governor of political
work but Kelly has been listened as a “co-schemer” in
court filings related to the Rezko fcase and that
prosecutors say he was involved in pressuring prospective
state contractors for “finders fees” or political
contributions…that Blagojevich is widely acknowledged to
be “Public Official A” in the Rezko indictment…that a
federal district judge named the Blagojevich campaign and
Blagojevich as the intended beneficiary of at least one
of Rezko’s extortion attempts…that federal prosecutors
sought to prove that his top advisers were involved in
kickback schemes…that Levine mentioned Blagojevich by
name at least 30 times in opne day of testimony,
declaring under oath that the governor told him “[Y]ou
stick with us and yhou’ll do very well for yourself,”
that Levine testified Blagojevich was aware of a
shakedown involving a film producer Tom Rosenberg in
2004…
In addition, that Joseph Cari, Jr.,
the former finance chairman of the Democratic National
Committee testified Blagojevich was at one time trying to
form a national fundraising presence in order to run for
president, the governor tellilng him that “contracts,
legal work and investment banking work” would be awarded
to “people who helped”…that the former head of the
Illinois Finance Authority, Ali Ata, became the first
person to accuse Blagojevich of personally offering a
position in his administration in return for campaign
contributions…that having met Rezko several times
regarding fund-raising efforts for Blagojevich’s campaign
and discussing a job with a state agency in return for
contributions,” Ata subsequently being appointed to the
IFA post…that a federal judge
confirmed Blagojevich was indeed “Official A”…that a
“$25,000 Club” has been probed in which 75% of
businesses, unions and individuals that give $25,000
donations to the Blagojevich campaign fund received
benefits from the state, including state contracts and
appointments to state boards…that “Friends of
Blagojevich” received a $10,000 campaign from an elevator
constructors PAC in the same
month that three union officers received appointments to
the Illinois Elevator Safety Board.
Blagojevich and his press spokesmen
have consistently denied his involvement in all these
matters. Nevertheless…
…in view of all this, the former
federal prosecutor told me the feds are expected to offer
a deal to both Blagojevichs. The governor will take a
plea of an indeterminate lesser nature and resign in
return for which his wife shall either not be prosecuted
or receive a confinement sentence, allowing her to
continue to care for their two daughters.
Thus endeth the insight of the former
prosecutor. Political types are moving into speculation.
The Emergence of Pat Quinn as
Governor.
If he accepts as Agnew did, the
resignation would propel Lt. Governor Pat Quinn to the
governorship. The types I talked to maintain that
Attorney General Lisa Madigan would likely not move to
challenge Quinn rather than become governor with such
enormous state fiscal problems to solve-preferring to
wait for a better opportunity. But Quinn would be
challenged for the Democratic nomination on the grounds
that as part of the Blagojevich administration he has
inherited the taint albeit he has been vociferous about
opposing the governor.
Quinn is seen as a seasoned campaigner
and brilliant media strategist who would make the most of
the ability to try to bring order out of chaos but highly
unpopular with the Democratic party regulars.