Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich Got 14 years in Prison for Corruption





A US federal judge sentenced former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich to 14 years in prison for corruption today.

Blagojevich, who turns 55 this Saturday, must start serving his prison term within 90 days and he must also pay a $20,000 fine.

"This is the time to be strong," Blagojevich told reporters and hecklers as he left the Chicago federal courthouse. "This is the time to fight through adversity. This is the time for me to be strong for my children." In as much as he is a day late and a dollar short on coming clean. he will make a nice bitch for someone in the pokey.

The sentence followed a dramatic apology, in a last ditch attempt to get his sentence reduced by Blagojevich to his home state, his family and the judge, in which he said he is "unbelievably sorry." and went on how he is accepting responsibility for his actions.

"I've had plenty of time to reflect on all that's happened," Blagojevich said. "I'm here convicted of crimes, and I am accepting of it, acknowledge it."

In as much as that is just as well. Blagojevich is surely likely to do poorly in Prison as well as be a target to other inmates hungry for love, bitches, and affection.

"It comes late," U.S. District Judge James Zagel said before imposing the prison sentence as he passed down a just and righteous sentence to this enemy of the people.

Zagel said that Blagojevich did not resign his as governor despite the indictments, but if he had it might have helped show he accepted responsibility. As this means had the idiot come clean sooner, he might of got off with just a few years.

Blagojevich, a Democrat, was accused of trying to profit as he considered whom to appoint to succeed Barack Obama when he vacated his Senate seat to move to the White House. A highly unethical and illegal undertaking.

Now he seems to have of forgotten all the excuses he said in the initial aftermath and has proclaimed, "There is a line between routine politics, horse trading and campaign politics," Blagojevich said. "I thought they were permissible and I was mistaken."

He was convicted of corruption in June after a jury returned 17 guilty verdicts against him. Ever since then he has been sweating bullets wating for his harsh sentence to be handed down.

Federal prosecutors sought a sentence of 15 to 20 years, but his lawyers called that excessive and asked the judge for leniency on Tuesday, even as they admitted for the first time that crimes were committed finally.

His law team was quick to try and make the crime appear to be less severe than what it actually was. "He asked for a job in return (for Obama's former U.S. Senate seat). That's all he did at first. We accept that that's a crime," Blagojevich attorney Sheldon Sorosky said, according to CNN affiliate WLS. "He did it and he should not have done it (but) that crime does not call for a 15-year jail sentence."

Yeah, like this guy did not know that was illegal. Enough with the lying. He should have to go to prison tomorrow.

"Blagojevich betrayed the trust and faith that Illinois voters placed in him, feeding great public frustration, anger, cynicism and disengagement among citizens," U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald said after the sentencing. "People have the right to expect that their elected leaders will honor the oath they swear to, and this sentence shows that the justice system will stand up to protect their expectations."

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan, a Democrat, issued a statement saying Blagojevich promised reform, "but from the start, he relentlessly used his position to pursue illegal and morally bankrupt schemes motivated by power and greed." As it is clear that this guy was in it all for and about himself. Public service and duty were never on his agenda.

"His conduct was disgraceful, and the cost to the state has been devastating. Blagojevich refused to govern responsibly and, instead, put Illinois up for sale," Madigan said. "He tarnished the state's reputation nationally and internationally, and he destroyed the public's trust in government."

It will take some work to undo the damage this guy has done to the public trust.

A corrupt governor can be "more damaging than any other office in the United States, except that of the president," Judge Zagel said before announcing the sentence.

"When it is the governor who goes bad, the fabric of Illinois is torn, disfigured and not easily repaired," Zagel said. "The harm here is not measured in the value of money or property. The harm is the erosion of public trust in government."

Defense attorney Aaron Goldstein read letters from his relatives Tuesday asking the judge to be lenient.

"Your honor, I ask you humbly -- with the life of my husband and the childhood of my daughters in your hands -- be merciful," his wife, Patti, wrote.

Their teenage daughter said: "I need my father. I need him here." - What a lamer. Having his kids beg for him in court.

"Why did the thoughts of his children not weigh heavily on his reckless conduct?" Zagel asked and for good reason. Seems reason was missing from the sooner to be inmate's former life.

Blagojevich is not alone as he is the second consecutive Illinois governor convicted of corruption. Former Republican Gov. George Ryan is serving time in federal prison. Maybe the 3rd time is a charm.