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Posted: 6/4/2008 12:26:17 PM EDT
Keep your fingers crossed, the more convictions the better chance he will roll on Blago and Barry.
Link Posted: 6/4/2008 12:36:02 PM EDT
[#1]
just heard governor is making statement after verdict

its on wls 890 am streaming
Link Posted: 6/4/2008 12:37:04 PM EDT
[#2]

Quoted:
Keep your fingers crossed, the more convictions the better chance he will roll on Blago and Barry.


My bet he will not be convicted!  A beer at Hooters on Sat!
Link Posted: 6/4/2008 1:03:17 PM EDT
[#3]
18/24 counts
the ones most closely related to bribery and extortion to blago
not guilty
fucking bastards
Link Posted: 6/4/2008 1:17:24 PM EDT
[#4]

Quoted:
18/24 counts
the ones most closely related to bribery and extortion to blago
not guilty
fucking bastards


That does not surprise me!  
Link Posted: 6/4/2008 1:52:04 PM EDT
[#5]
BOND REVOKED TAKEN INTO CUSTODY PRAISE JESUS!!
Hopefully he is in Cook County.
Link Posted: 6/4/2008 2:43:19 PM EDT
[#6]
guilty
on 16 count
I hope he rats out the big "O"
Link Posted: 6/4/2008 6:55:43 PM EDT
[#7]

Quoted:
guilty
on 16 count
I hope he rats out the big "O"

For the rest of us, at least, that's the real prize here.


ETA: Watch for him to fall on a metal spike while in lock-up, somewhere between 37 and 52 times.
Link Posted: 6/4/2008 7:30:58 PM EDT
[#8]
Political fundraiser convicted in corruption trial By MIKE ROBINSON, Associated Press Writer
44 minutes ago



A prominent fundraiser for Sen. Barack Obama and Gov. Rod Blagojevich was convicted of fraud, money laundering and bribery Wednesday after a trial that exposed a corrupt culture of payoffs and campaign finance abuses plaguing Illinois politics.

Antoin "Tony" Rezko, 52, who according to witnesses wielded wide powers within the Blagojevich administration and now faces a stiff prison sentence, was immediately taken into custody following the verdict.

U.S. Attorney Patrick J. Fitzgerald told reporters the verdict represented "an antidote to the poison of corruption" that testimony alleged included the fixing of state boards that controlled a $40 billion pension fund and made major decisions about hospital construction.

The nine-week trial included explosive testimony about all-night drug-fueled parties involving the government's star witness and allegations that Blagojevich personally discussed a state job for a donor.

Political corruption in Illinois has been deemed so extensive that the FBI has sent an extra official corruption squad into the state. Federal officials say the investigation is far from over.

"If morals don't get to them, I hope the fear of going to jail does," Fitzgerald told reporters.

Rezko's conviction also intensifies the spotlight on his relationship with Obama. Rezko has known Obama since he entered politics, raised money for his Illinois campaigns and was involved in a 2005 real estate deal with him. Obama has donated $150,000 in Rezko-related contributions to charity.

The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee is accused of no wrongdoing and his name was barely mentioned at trial, but Republicans are unlikely to let voters forget about his ties to Rezko as the presidential race heats up.

Obama issued a statement saying he was "saddened," adding, "This isn't the Tony Rezko I knew, but now he has been convicted by a jury on multiple charges that once again shine a spotlight on the need for reform."

Blagojevich also was not accused of wrongdoing, but his reputation received a serious battering by the testimony that emerged. The Legislature has been discussing impeachment, and a wide-open Democratic primary in 2010 is likely.

One witness said the governor discussed a state payroll job for a campaign contributor with a $25,000 donation lying on the table. Another said Blagojevich spoke of big-money state contracts for those who helped him advance his political career — possibly as a presidential candidate.

A money management executive who wanted to invest state pension assets said he was told to sign a contract promising to pay a $800,000 fee to a consultant he had never heard of based in the Turks & Caicos islands.

"That's the way the governor handles patronage here," he quoted a Chicago attorney who was pressing him to sign the contract as saying.

Blagojevich has repeatedly denied taking part in any of the shadowy political dealings that were described from the witness stand. On Wednesday, he read a prepared statement to reporters in which he called Rezko "a friend" who "was a supporter."

"On a personal level I am deeply sad for what's happened to Tony," Blagojevich said. "The jury's decision is yet another reminder that ours is a system of government that is ruled by laws and not by men. I respect the decision of the jury."

Rezko, a Chicago real estate developer and fast-food entrepreneur, was convicted of six counts of mail fraud, six counts of wire fraud, two counts of aiding and abetting bribery and two counts of money laundering.

The jury acquitted him of three counts of wire fraud, four counts of aiding and abetting bribery, and one count of attempted extortion.

His conviction was a victory for federal prosecutors, who had accused him of plotting with admitted political fixer Stuart Levine to squeeze payoffs out of money management firms that sought to invest the assets of the $40 billion state Teachers Retirement System.

Rezko also was charged in the 24-count indictment with plotting with Levine to get a $1.5 million bribe from a contractor who sought state approval to build a hospital in the McHenry County suburb of Crystal Lake.

Levine pleaded guilty to the charges and became the government's star witness in hopes of getting a relatively lenient 5 1/2-year sentence.

Fitzgerald declined to estimate what sentence Rezko might get. U.S. District Judge Amy J. St. Eve set sentencing for Sept. 3.

Clad in a sharply tailored tan suit, Rezko showed no emotion as St. Eve read the verdict. He smiled slightly at well-wishers and waved as U.S. Marshal Kim Widup and a crew of deputies escorted him to the lockup.

Rezko, who has dual U.S. and Syrian nationality, had been free on $8 million bond pending the trial's conclusion.

"Mr. Rezko, on his own, decided that if he was convicted he wanted to immediately start serving his sentence," said defense attorney Joseph Duffy, who added that he would pursue an appeal.

Levine was a bizarre witness by any yardstick. He freely admitted to years of attending marathon drug parties in a suburban hotel and taking large doses of cocaine, crystal methamphetamine, ketamine and other drugs, frequently accompanied by shots of vodka.

Jurors who met briefly with reporters following the verdict said that they realized Levine was not the most reliable witness.

"He played with us in the courtroom also," Andrea Coleman said. But another juror, Mona Lisa Mauricette, said his testimony appeared to fit in with tapes of phone conversations made secretly by the FBI.

"We weren't going only on Levine's testimony," Mauricette said.

The jurors laughed and declined to comment when one reporter asked whether they had realized before the trial how corrupt Illinois politics could be. They also said Blagojevich's role in the case had no influence on them.

___

Associated Press writers Deanna Bellandi, Sophia Tareen and Maria Danilova contributed to this report.

Link Posted: 6/4/2008 7:46:07 PM EDT
[#9]
You know guys, I think ultimately what pisses me off the most is that all of us work so hard for what we have and so hard to hang on to it and these people shit all over us when they are supposed to be representing us, not Rezko but Blago and Obama and Daley and the rest and they just get away with it. Rezko deserves what he got and I hope he takes Blago and Obama down with him. Life just gets harder and harder for us and these people take from us, shit on us and get away with it. It's a shame, total shame.
Link Posted: 6/4/2008 9:01:45 PM EDT
[#10]

Quoted:
You know guys, I think ultimately what pisses me off the most is that all of us work so hard for what we have and so hard to hang on to it and these people shit all over us when they are supposed to be representing us, not Rezko but Blago and Obama and Daley and the rest and they just get away with it. Rezko deserves what he got and I hope he takes Blago and Obama down with him. Life just gets harder and harder for us and these people take from us, shit on us and get away with it. It's a shame, total shame.

It's a lot like some of these superchurch preachers, especially those in the 80s when televangelism first broke out into its own.

You've got the true believers, living like paupers, certainly not donating out of their excess, sometimes tithing 10% of income, multiplied by *how* many people.......?

And then the top 2 or 3 sleazeballs are jet-setting around America and Europe, doing lines off of strippers chests, etc.

At least with the bilking at the hands of televangelism/superchurches, the suckers are giving voluntarily, rather than at the barrel of a gun.
Link Posted: 6/5/2008 7:28:10 AM EDT
[#11]

Quoted:

Quoted:
You know guys, I think ultimately what pisses me off the most is that all of us work so hard for what we have and so hard to hang on to it and these people shit all over us when they are supposed to be representing us, not Rezko but Blago and Obama and Daley and the rest and they just get away with it. Rezko deserves what he got and I hope he takes Blago and Obama down with him. Life just gets harder and harder for us and these people take from us, shit on us and get away with it. It's a shame, total shame.

It's a lot like some of these superchurch preachers, especially those in the 80s when televangelism first broke out into its own.

You've got the true believers, living like paupers, certainly not donating out of their excess, sometimes tithing 10% of income, multiplied by *how* many people.......?

And then the top 2 or 3 sleazeballs are jet-setting around America and Europe, doing lines of of strippers chests, etc.

At least with the bilking at the hands of televangelism/superchurches, the suckers are giving voluntarily, rather than at the barrel of a gun.


Yeah, like Jeremiah Wright and Michael Pleger, peas in a pod with the politicians
Link Posted: 6/5/2008 8:42:30 PM EDT
[#12]
Another notch in Patrick Fitzgerald's belt, that man hasn't lost a corruption case yet
Link Posted: 6/6/2008 4:39:02 AM EDT
[#13]

Quoted:
Another notch in Patrick Fitzgerald's belt, that man hasn't lost a corruption case yet


He's like the modern day Elliot Ness. I'm grateful for Pat, I hope he goes after Blago and Daley next
Link Posted: 6/6/2008 6:55:32 AM EDT
[#14]

Quoted:

Quoted:
Another notch in Patrick Fitzgerald's belt, that man hasn't lost a corruption case yet


He's like the modern day Elliot Ness. I'm grateful for Pat, I hope he goes after Blago and Daley next


Lets just hope Obama doesn't remove him (Fitz) if he wins the election.
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