Citizen Wells open thread, June 16, 2010, Real News
For real news on the Blagojevich trial, Obama eligibility and economy.
Joseph Aramanda, with ties to Blagojevich, Rezko and Obama, on the witness stand.
US Economy
Citizen Wells open thread, June 16, 2010, Real News
For real news on the Blagojevich trial, Obama eligibility and economy.
Joseph Aramanda, with ties to Blagojevich, Rezko and Obama, on the witness stand.
US Economy
Posted in Announcements, Barack Obama, Birth Certificate, Blagojevich, Blagojevich Impeachment, Blagojevich trial, Chicago, Chicago machine, Citizen, Citizen Journalism, Citizen News, Citizens for the truth about Obama, CitizenWells, constitution, corruption, Courts, FBI, Federal Court, Government, Illinois, indictment, Law firms, Lawyers, Natural born citizen, News, Obama, Obama administration, Obama indictment, Obama lies, Obama Nation, Obama records, Obama thugs, Pay to play politics, politicians, Politics, The Case Against Barack Obama, United States, US Constitution, US Department of Justice, US District Court, US economy, Washington DC, white house
Tagged 2010, Blagojevich trial, Citizen Wells open thread, economy, June 16, Obama eligibility, Real news
Blagojevich trial continues, June 14, 2010, Alonzo Monk testimony, FBI tapes
From Citizen News June 14, 2010.
The Rod Blagojevich trial resumes today, Monday, June 14, 2010. Although the indictment against Blagojevich is extensive and Obama’s name has already surfaced during the trial, the corruption ties involving Rod Blagojevich and Barack Obama are far deeper and go back for many years.
“A few months after receiving his final payment from EKI, Obama sent a request on state Senate letterhead urging Illinois officials to provide a $50,000 tourism promotion grant to another Blackwell company, Killerspin.”
“With support from Obama, other state officials and an Obama aide who went to work part time for Killerspin, the company eventually obtained $320,000 in state grants between 2002 and 2004 to subsidize its tournaments.”
“But Obama portrays himself as a lawmaker dedicated to transparency and sensitive to even the appearance of a conflict of interest.”
“Killerspin’s owner, Blackwell, was a political supporter and friend as well. Both men lived on Chicago’s South Side. Blackwell, a savvy and successful entrepreneur, was one of the first donors to Obama’s early campaigns, including the state senator’s failed bid for a congressional seat in 2000. In the presidential race he is credited on Obama’s website with committing to raise $100,000 to $200,000 for Obama’s campaign.”
“Robert Blackwell had strong ties to Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich who has been mentioned many times during the Tony Rezko corruption trial.
The following is from a news release by EKI Consulting:
“BLACKWELL JR. NAMED TO ILLINOIS GOVERNOR’S TRANSITION TEAM”
The top of the press release reads:
For Immediate Release
Contact: Dan Shomon, (312) 578-0450”
“Obama supported the re-election of Gov. Rod Blagojevich, whose administration is embroiled in corruption probes.
EKI, a Blackwell company, gave $20,000 to Blagojevich.
Electronic Knowledge Interchange won $6 million in technology consulting and software development contracts. EKI did no state
work until after Blagojevich took office.”
Read more:
Posted in Announcements, Attorneys, Barack Obama, Blagojevich, Blagojevich Impeachment, Blagojevich trial, Chicago, Chicago machine, Citizen, Citizen Journalism, Citizen News, Citizens for the truth about Obama, CitizenWells, Courts, Crime, Criminal Complaint, DC, Defense, Election, Election 2008, FBI, Federal Court, fraud, Government, Grand Jury Indictment, Illinois, impeachment, indictment, Judges, Law firms, Lawyers, News, Obama, Obama administration, Obama impeachment, Obama indictment, Obama lies, Obama Nation, Obama records, Obama thugs, Patrick Fitzgerald, Pay to play politics, politicians, Politics, Prosecution, Rezko, Robert Blackwell, Senator Obama, Stuart Levine, The Case Against Barack Obama, Tony Rezko, United States, US Department of Justice, US District Court, Washington DC, white house
Tagged 2010, Alonzo Monk testimony, Blagojevich trial continues, Citizen Wells open thread, Corruption far worse than indictment, FBI tapes, June 14
Blagojevich trial, Obama’s name surfaces
From the Chicago Tribune June 10, 2010.
“Aide: Blagojevich said he made deal for Obama seat”
“A former top aide to Rod Blagojevich testified Thursday that the then-governor said he had a deal to appoint a state legislator to Barack Obama’s U.S. Senate seat in exchange for letting a veto of ethics legislation stand.
Alonzo Monk testified that Blagojevich was worried the legislation would hurt his ability to raise funds because it banned people with state contracts of $50,000 or more from donating to the campaigns of politicians who administered them.
Blagojevich, who had campaigned by saying he would bring a new era of ethics in state government, had complained the bill unfairly targeted the governor’s office. It had passed both houses without a single ‘no’ vote before his veto.
Monk quoted Blagojevich as saying former state Senate President Emil Jones agreed to the alleged deal. But Jones called for the vote, which passed just over a month before Obama was elected president. The override vote might not have occurred had Obama not urged Jones — his mentor — to call his chamber to action.
Jones did not immediately respond to a message Thursday at his business. His cell phone was not able to accept a message.”
Read more:
Posted in Announcements, Attorneys, Barack Obama, Blagojevich, Blagojevich Impeachment, Blagojevich trial, Chicago, Chicago machine, Citizen, Citizen Journalism, Citizen News, Citizens for the truth about Obama, CitizenWells, corruption, Courts, Crime, Criminal Complaint, Election, Election 2008, FBI, Federal Court, Government, Illinois, News, Obama, Obama administration, Obama impeachment, Obama indictment, Obama lies, Obama Nation, Obama records, Obama thugs, Patrick Fitzgerald, Pay to play politics, politicians, Politics
Tagged Alonzo Monk testimony, Blagojevich trial, Obama mentor Emil Jones, Obama's name surfaces
Alonzo Monk testimony, Blagojevich trial update, June 10, 2010
From the Chicago Tribune June 10, 2010.
“Witness says Blagojevich urged silence about money”
“Monk testified Thursday that Blagojevich fundraiser Tony Rezko, currently awaiting sentencing for fraud and other charges, slipped him as much as $90,000 in cash when he was the governor’s chief of staff — typically $10,000 at a time stuffed in an envelope.
Blagojevich has pleaded not guilty to trying to profit from his power to fill the U.S. Senate seat vacated by President Barack Obama and squeezing people for campaign contributions. If convicted, he could be sentenced to up to 415 years in prison, though a judge would consider many factors. Blagojevich also could face fines totaling $6 million.
Monk has pleaded guilty to scheming to pressure a racetrack owner for a contribution and is testifying in hopes of getting a lighter sentence.”
“Monk said Rezko began paying him cash in 2004. At Monk’s wedding, Rezko’s present to Monk was $10,000 in cash and an offer to pay for a remodeling project at the newlyweds’ home. Thanks to the flow of cash, which Monk kept at home, he said he never had to withdraw money from the bank or use an ATM. ”
“Earlier Thursday, Monk testified about how Blagojevich put supporters and fundraisers on state boards that oversaw major business sectors, often at the urging of members of his inner circle. ”
Posted in Announcements, Attorneys, Chicago, Chicago machine, Chicago Tribune, Citizen, Citizen Journalism, Citizen News, Citizens for the truth about Obama, CitizenWells, corruption, Courts, Crime, Criminal Complaint, Defense, Election, Election 2008, FBI, Federal Court, fraud, Government, Grand Jury Indictment, Illinois, impeachment, indictment, Judges, Jury, Law firms, Lawyers, Money, News, Obama thugs, Patrick Fitzgerald, Pay to play politics, politicians, Politics, Prosecution, Senator Obama, Stuart Levine, The Case Against Barack Obama, Tony Rezko, United States, US Department of Justice, US District Court
Tagged 2010, Alonzo Monk testimony, Blagojevich trial update, June 10, Rezko began paying Blagojevich in 2004
Blagojevich trial update, Alonzo Monk testimony, Blagojevich Monk Kelly Rezko
Today, Wednesday, June 9, 2010, the first day of testimony in the Rod Blagojevich trial, is off to a interesting start.
From the Chicago Tribune.
“Blago pal talks of secret meetings, code names and favors”
“They met in secret and referred to each other as “1,2, 3 and 4.”
Rod Blagojevich, his longtime friend Lon Monk and trusted fundraisers Chris Kelly and Antoin “Tony” Rezko.”
Their agenda: How to exchange state contracts and jobs for campaign cash for Blagojevich.
The plotting started even before Blagojevich was elected governor in 2002, according to Monk, who took the stand today to testify against his pal from college days.
“This was something that we were going to be able to do now that we were close to Rod and he was going to become governor,” Monk said as Blagojevich stared straight at him and shook his head.
“I was intrigued,” Monk added. “And I wanted to make money.”
At one of the secret meetings — at Rezko’s offices in 2003 — the four discussed money-making ideas that involved state action, said Monk, sometimes sighing loudly as he testified.”
“Collecting kickbacks was too risky while Blagojevich was still governor, Monk said. “It would be easier for people to find out we were receiving money.”
Rezko was to hold the funds while Blagojevich was in office, Monk alleged. “Any money found would be held in separate accounts that would be difficult to locate.”
Rezko would often bring up firms and individuals to help with state business or an appointment to a state board, Monk said.
Prosecutor Christopher Niewoehner asked why Rezko would do that.
“So that he could ask them for more money or additional money for donations,” Monk replied.
Asked whether Rezko was trying to give rewards for political contributions, Monk answered yes.
Monk said he also had conversations with Kelly also about helping people get state business or positions.
What would Monk do when Rezko or Kelly asked him for help getting someone appointed or a contract, Niewoehner asked.
“Whatever they asked,” he said.
Monk also recalled being a meeting with Blagojevich and Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of staff who was then a congressman. Emanuel was help getting a state grant for the Chicago Academy, Monk said.
Blagojevich had a simple answer. “He’d try and get it done,” Monk recalled as jurors were shown a photo of Emanuel.”
Read more:
Posted in Announcements, Attorneys, Barack Obama, Blagojevich, Blagojevich Impeachment, Blagojevich trial, Chicago, Chicago machine, Citizen, Citizen Journalism, Citizen News, Citizens for the truth about Obama, CitizenWells, corruption, Courts, Crime, Defense, District Court, Election, Election 2008, FBI, Federal Court, fraud, Government, Illinois, impeachment, indictment, Judges, Jury, Justice, Law firms, Lawyers, Money, money laundering, News, Obama, Obama administration, Obama impeachment, Obama indictment, Obama lies, Obama Nation, Obama records, Obama thugs, Patrick Fitzgerald, Pay to play politics, politicians, Politics, Prosecution, Rahm Emanuel, Rezko, Senator Obama, Stuart Levine, The Case Against Barack Obama, Tony Rezko, United States, US Department of Justice, US District Court, Washington DC, white house
Tagged Alonzo Monk testimony, Blagojevich Monk Kelly Rezko, Blagojevich trial update, Rahm Emanuel grant, Secret meetings at Rezko's offices in 2003
Blagojevich trial witnesses, Alonzo Monk, June 9, 2010, Blagojevich chief of staff, Rezko trial revelations
Alonzo Monk, former Blagojevich chief of staff and law school roommate, will likely be one of the first witnesses called by the prosecution. Monk has plead guilty to scheming with Rod Blagojevich to shake down a racetrack businessman for a $100,000 campaign contribution. Here is some background on Alonzo Monk and his involvement in Chicago and Illinois corruption.
From the Tony Rezko trial in 2008.
March 10, 2008
“”He called me and he said we need to move on Stuart Levine,” Hayden testified. Hayden said Rezko told her he had already spoken to her boss, Blagojevich chief of staff Lon Monk, about the Levine reappointment and been assured the appointment would go through.
Hayden said Rezko laughed when she said she would have to check with Monk herself. “I took that to mean that I could go ahead and ask him, but it was already a done deal,” she recalled.”
March 19, 2008
“Levine also said that Rezko told him that he and fellow Blagojevich fundraiser Christopher Kelly “exercised the most influence” in Blagojevich’s kitchen cabinet. And Levine said Rezko told him that “all the major decisions in the governor’s office were cleared through [chief of staff] Lon Monk and through Mr. Rezko.”
“Mr. Rezko told me that he was able to have individuals appointed to state boards and was able to have individuals hired into state agencies and that he spoke very often — and in fact went over decisions — that Lon Monk would put into place,” Levine said.”
April 15, 2008
“Cari said he met with Stuart Levine at Rezko’s office in January that year. Rezko said he had the power to award contracts and get consultants hired through the governor’s then-chief of staff, Lon Monk, Cari said.
“Mr. Monk took direction from [Rezko],” Cari told the jury.
Rezko illustrated his clout by picking up the phone and apparently calling Monk in front of him, Cari said.”
Alonzo Monk pleads guilty in 2009.
From CBS Chicago Oct 20, 2009
“Blagojevich Pal Alonzo Monk Pleads Guilty
Former Chief Of Staff Cooperating With Feds In Exchange For Reduced Sentence”
“Former Rod Blagojevich Chief of Staff Alonzo Monk pleaded guilty Tuesday to his role in an alleged scheme by Blagojevich and his top aides to profit off state business deals.
A longtime friend and ex-chief of staff to Rod Blagojevich said he was an eyewitness to a litany of corruption — including a scheme by the former governor and his top aides to profit off state business deals, according to a guilty plea entered Tuesday.
Lon Monk, 51, of Decatur, said in a plea agreement with the federal government that during the ex-governor’s first term in office, there was an ongoing agreement among Blagojevich and his closest advisers that involved making hundreds of thousands of dollars off state business deals.
A personal friend of Blagojevich who was also the ex-governor’s law school roommate, Monk said Blagojevich sat in on meetings where there were discussions about splitting money from state business four ways, according to the plea. The alleged recipients: Blagojevich, the now-deceased Christopher Kelly, convicted businessman Tony Rezko and Monk.
The plea indicates that Rezko was responsible for setting up money-making arrangements from the state deals. Monk said that Blagojevich and Monk agreed to use “their power and authority in state government” to help Rezko and Kelly make money. Monk said as part of the agreement, he and Blagojevich would “share in the money that was made” but they wouldn’t get their cut until after they were no longer in government, according to the deal.
Monk’s plea pledges his cooperation with federal prosecutors in exchange for a two-year prison sentence instead of the nearly four years he faced.”
“One of the state deals involved the refinancing of $10 billion in Pension Obligation Bonds by the state of Illinois in 2003, according to the plea.
Monk says that two of Blagojevich’s advisers picked the underwriter that Blagojevich subsequently chose to take the lead role on the bond sale. Monk said he learned there was a deal in which the four would split a $500,000 kickback from an investment firm acting as a consultant on the deal. The plea agreement doesn’t give further details about the money.
Discussions about making money off of state deals stopped when the FBI visited Stuart Levine, a member of two state boards and a longtime political donor, according to the plea.
Still, Monk claims he received cash payments from Rezko from 2004 to 2005. Rezko delivered to Monk $10,000 in cash payments seven to nine times, his plea says.
“Rezko never suggested that [Monk] would have to pay Rezko back and [Monk] understood that the money that Rezko provided was a gift, not a loan,” the plea indicates.”
“Monk also claims in his plea deal that Blagojevich and others met about making money off of a lucrative piece of property at Roosevelt and Clark in Chicago.
“Rezko talked about different ways that [Monk], Blagojevich, and Kelly could benefit from the Roosevelt and Clark Project, such as by having Blagojevich’s wife work on marketing the project or by allowing [Monk] to work on the project after [Monk] left state government,” the plea indicates.
While Monk admitted to knowing about a variety of alleged schemes including one involving a tollway project and another involving state money for Children’s Memorial Hospital.”
Read more:
http://cbs2chicago.com/local/alonzo.monk.plea.2.1258765.html
From Citizen Wells April 3, 2010.
“This issue may be sorted out soon enough because Fitzgerald’s charts matching up Obama’s contributions, visits and calls are bound to be every bit as thorough as the ones produced to prove Rezko is guilty as charged in the first trial. They simply were not produced because they were not needed to prove the defendant guilty in the first case.
As an example of what records might be squirreled away, consider that an FBI agent presented a chart to the jury on April 28, 2008, showing 257 calls from Rezko’s phones to Blagojevich’s chief of staff, Lon Monk, between March 2004 and May 2004 alone.”
To learn more about Chicago and Illinois corruption and Alonzo Monk’s involvement:
Posted in Announcements, Attorneys, Barack Obama, Blagojevich, Blagojevich Impeachment, Blagojevich trial, Bribery, Bribes, Chicago, Chicago machine, Citizen, Citizen Journalism, Citizen News, Citizens for the truth about Obama, CitizenWells, Courts, Crime, Criminal Complaint, Defense, Election, Election 2008, FBI, Federal Court, fraud, Government, Grand Jury Indictment, Illinois, Judges, Law firms, Lawyers, Money, News, Obama, Obama administration, Obama impeachment, Obama indictment, Obama lies, Obama Nation, Obama records, Obama thugs, Patrick Fitzgerald, Pay to play politics, politicians, Politics, Prosecution, Senator Obama, Stuart Levine, The Case Against Barack Obama, Tony Rezko, United States, US Department of Justice, US District Court, Washington DC, white house
Blagojevich trial prosecution opening statements, Prosecution witnesses, Patrick Fitzgerald
The prosecution side of the Blagojevich trial presented opening statements. I was pleased to see references to the earlier corruption that Blagojevich was involved in, not just the selling of the senate seat.
From the Chicago Tribune June 8, 2010.
“Hamilton ticked off a list of some of the witnesses who will testify against Blagojevich, including former chiefs of staff Lon Monk and John Harris. She did not mention fundraiser Antoin “Tony” Rezko, who has been cooperating with government agents since his 2008 conviction.
Hamilton also stressed how jurors will get to hear the alleged corruption unfold for themselves on government wiretaps, including the now infamous phrase where Blagojevich describes his power to appoint a successor as senator to President Obama as “(expletive) golden.” As she spoke, those words, in their entirety, were flashed on the screen.
“He corrupted the office of the governor of the state of Illinois for his own personal benefit,” she concluded. “When you hear him say this senate seat is golden and he’s not giving it up for nothing, you are going to know, that’s how he viewed his power.”
Earlier today, Hamilton began her opening statement with the most emotionally packed of the charges against Blagojevich: the government claim that he tried to shake down the CEO of Children’s Memorial Hospital.
“On the North Side of Chicago,” she began, “there is a hospital called Children’s Memorial Hospital. It is a non-profit hospital that treats kids no matter where they are from or ability to pay…”
Hamilton then explained how Blagojevich committed to helping the hospital with millions of dollars in increased reimbursements to help pay its doctors. “But there was a catch,” she said. “Now that he decided to help the hospital, he wanted the hospital to pay him.”
Blagojevich is charged with demanding tens of thousands of dollars in fundraising help from the CEO of the hospital before he would release the increased reimbursements.
That was just one of a series of illegal shakedowns that started shortly after Blagojevich became governor in 2003 and extended into 2008, the prosecutor alleged.
“He was trying to use his power as governor to get something of personal benefit for himself,” she said.
Time and again, she continued, “when he was supposed to be asking ‘what about the people of the state of Illinois?’ he was asking, ‘what about me?’”
As Hamilton spoke, a chart was projected on a screen in the courtroom with a picture of fundraisers Antoin “Tony” Rezko, Christopher Kelly and Alonzo “Lon” Monk, Blagojevich’s college roommate and later chief of staff who has pleaded guilty in the case and is expected to testify for prosecutors.
On the other end of the hall from the 25th-floor courtroom where the case is being heard, U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald sat in a different “overflow” courtroom listening to Hamilton’s presentation on an audio hookup. He stared at the ceiling as Hamilton launched into a long laundry list of Blagojevich’s alleged misdeeds.
Proceeding in largely chronological fashion, Hamilton told jurors how Blagojevich, Rezko, Monk and others allegedly schemed to take kickbacks from investment firms seeking state business and squeeze mountains of campaign cash out of contributors in exchange for state action.
Some of the alleged kickbacks to Blagojevich, she said, were funneled to him in the form of $12,000 monthly payments from Rezko through his real estate company to Blagojevich’s wife, Patti, who did no work to earn the money. Patti Blagojevich has not been charged in the case.
Hamilton said the Rezko payments to Patti Blagojevich abruptly ended in May 2004 when another conspirator in the case, political fixer Stuart Levine, was confronted by the FBI.”
Read more:
Posted in Announcements, Barack Obama, Blagojevich, Blagojevich Impeachment, Blagojevich trial, Bribes, Chicago, Chicago machine, Citizen, Citizen Journalism, Citizen News, Citizens for the truth about Obama, CitizenWells, corruption, Courts, Crime, Criminal Complaint, Defense, District Court, Election, Election 2008, FBI, Federal Court, fraud, Government, Illinois, impeachment, indictment, Judges, Justice, Law firms, Lawyers, Money, Motion, News, Obama, Obama administration, Obama impeachment, Obama indictment, Obama lies, Obama Nation, Obama records, Obama thugs, Patrick Fitzgerald, Pay to play politics, politicians, Politics, Prosecution, Rezko, Roland Burris, Senator Obama, Stuart Levine, The Case Against Barack Obama, Tony Rezko, United States, US Department of Justice, US District Court, Washington DC, white house
Tagged Blagojevich Rezko Monk others kickbacks, Blagojevich trial prosecution opening statements, Children’s Memorial Hospital, Patrick Fitzgerald, Prosecution witnesses
Rod Blagojevich trial opening statements, Day 4, June 8, 2010
From Citizen News.
“Today, Tuesday, June 8, 2010, jury selection is almost complete and opening statements should begin. How soon will Obama’s name be mentioned? You have heard this before. During the Tony Rezko trial Rod Blagojevich had not been indicted yet his name kept popping up. The same thing should happen for Obama.
From the Chicago Tribune.
“As courtroom styles go, it is hard to imagine a more stark contrast than the ones that will be on display Tuesday when prosecution and defense lawyers make their opening statements in the federal corruption trial of former Gov. Rod Blagojevich.”
“Blagojevich’s side, as presented by the often volcanic lawyer Sam Adam Jr., might resemble a passionate plea from a televangelist as much as a legal presentation.
With the preliminaries in the trial all but over after three days of vetting potential jurors, the final panel is set be seated early Tuesday, then the main event will get under way — with an estimated four months of testimony to follow.
At long last, prosecutors will unveil the full weight of the case against a former governor whose administration came under federal scrutiny not long after his election in 2002. It culminated in the bugging of Blagojevich’s campaign office and the tapping of his phones as he allegedly tried to trade official acts for campaign cash and sell the U.S. Senate seat vacated by President Barack Obama.
Hamilton is part of the same three-member prosecution team that secured the 2008 corruption conviction of Blagojevich’s fundraiser and friend Antoin “Tony” Rezko.
At her opening in that trial, she exhibited a biting tone of indignation as she explained how Rezko allegedly used his influence with Blagojevich to manipulate state regulatory panels so he and others could pocket kickbacks. On Tuesday, she will go a step further and claim that Rezko was acting on behalf of Blagojevich in an alleged conspiracy that the government has dubbed “the Blagojevich Enterprise.”
“The primary purpose of the Blagojevich Enterprise was to exercise and preserve power over the government of the state of Illinois for the financial and political benefit of defendant Rod Blagojevich, and for the benefit of his family members and associates,” the indictment against the governor states.
Adam will open for Blagojevich’s defense, and his statement promises to be delivered with all the calm of a gospel preacher in full fire and brimstone fury. Arguing with animated passion and sometimes belly-busting humor has become a trademark for the 37-year-old Adam at the Cook County Criminal Courts Building at 26th Street and California Avenue, where he has spent most of his legal career.
“The more you try to say things the way you think people want to hear them, the more you get away from what got you there in the first place,” Adam said in a recent interview.””
Posted in Announcements, Attorneys, Barack Obama, Blagojevich, Blagojevich Impeachment, Blagojevich trial, Chicago, Chicago machine, Citizen Journalism, Citizen News, Citizens for the truth about Obama, CitizenWells, corruption, Courts, Crime, Criminal Complaint, Defense, Election, Election 2008, FBI, Federal Court, fraud, Government, Grand Jury Indictment, Illinois, impeachment, indictment, Judges, Justice, Law firms, Lawyers, Lies, Money, News, Obama, Obama administration, Obama impeachment, Obama indictment, Obama lies, Obama Nation, Obama records, Obama thugs, Patrick Fitzgerald, Pay to play politics, politicians, Politics, Scandal, Senator Obama, Stuart Levine, The Case Against Barack Obama, Tony Rezko, United States, US Department of Justice, US District Court, Warrant, Washington DC, white house
Tagged 2010, Day 4, How soon will Obama's name be mentioned?, June 8, Open thread, Rod Blagojevich trial opening statements
Blagojevich trial Monday June 7 2010, Blagojevich states Opening statements will unlock the truth
From the Chicago tribune June 7, 2010.
“Blagojevich: Opening statements will ‘unlock the truth'”
“This is getting to be a regular thing, trial watchers. Along with your morning coffee, it appears you can also get a morning jolt of Rod Blagojevich publicly proclaiming his innocence in a variety of ways and with a variety of well worn metaphors.
The former governor started the morning on the Don and Roma talk show on WLS-AM, the same conservative talker that started giving him a platform as a weekend host shortly after his impeachment last year.
Sounding much like he did when he was still governor and doing regular battle with House Speaker Michael Madigan, Blagojevich didn’t mince words in lobbing accusations of prosecution “lies” in constructing the charges against him.
He also sent out a tweet to “followers” on Twitter. “Looking forward to opening statements because that will unlock the truth… stay tuned,” he wrote.”
Read more:
Posted in Announcements, Attorneys, Blagojevich, Blagojevich Impeachment, Blagojevich trial, Chicago, Chicago machine, Citizen, Citizen Journalism, Citizen News, Citizens for the truth about Obama, CitizenWells, corruption, Courts, Crime, Criminal Complaint, Election, Election 2008, FBI, Federal Court, Government, Grand Jury Indictment, Illinois, indictment, Judges, Jury, Justice, Law firms, Lawyers, Money, money laundering, News, Obama, Obama administration, Obama indictment, Obama lies, Obama thugs, Patrick Fitzgerald, Pay to play politics, politicians, Politics, Senator Obama, The Case Against Barack Obama, United States, US Department of Justice, Washington DC, white house
Tagged Blagojevich states Opening statements will unlock the truth, Blagojevich trial Monday June 7 2010, Blagojevich twitter tweet
Blagojevich trial jury selection, June 5, 2010, Rod Blagojevich familiarity
Some of you may be weary of hearing about the Rod Blagojevich trial. Some of you may be wondering why Citizen Wells has spent so much energy attempting to provide the complete picture of Blagojevich and his involvement in Chicago and IL corruption over many years. Here are some of the main reasons.
In a perfect world, juries should know little about someone on trial. However, in this case, the indicted, impeached ex governor of IL, whose name was mentioned repeatedly over many weeks during the Rezko trial, during the presidential run of fellow Illinois resident and crony Obama, gives one cause for further concern.
From the Chicago Tribune June 5, 2010.
“Blagoje-who?
Despite ex-governor’s TV forays, some jury candidates don’t know much about him”
“One prospective juror for the corruption trial of Rod Blagojevich said her familiarity with the former governor was limited to TV wisecracks she heard from Jay Leno.
“He was a joke or something,” the woman said.
Another potential juror is a labor organizer who spent months in Minnesota in 2008 working on the U.S. Senate campaign of Democrat Al Franken. She too confessed that most of what she knew about the longtime Illinois chief executive could be summed up by his recent TV appearance on “Celebrity Apprentice.”
Ever since Blagojevich’s arrest in December 2008, his legal troubles and grandstanding have been a subject of saturation news coverage as well as merciless lampooning from critics and comedians. Even so, a large share of those being sized up for the jury by U.S. District Judge James Zagel told him their understanding of the governor and his troubles was surface at best.
All of which goes to underscore a strangely symbiotic relationship between Illinois’ often ridiculed political culture and the very busy legal system aimed at rooting out corruption. Impartial juries require members who don’t know much about the defendants whose fate they will weigh. And it is surprisingly easy, even in the highest profile of cases, to find jurors who fit that description.”
“More typical were the comments of a female juror candidate identified during the proceedings as No. 119. The woman, who works in investment accounting, said she is an avid runner whose main source of printed information was the magazine Runners World.
Asked by Zagel if she kept up on the news, the woman said no.
“I don’t have time,” she explained. “I have two daughters, and we don’t have cable.””
Read more:
Posted in Americans, Announcements, Barack Obama, Blagojevich, Blagojevich Impeachment, Blagojevich trial, Chicago, Chicago machine, Chicago Tribune, Citizen, Citizen Journalism, Citizen News, Citizens for the truth about Obama, CitizenWells, corruption, Courts, Crime, Criminal Complaint, Election, Election 2008, FBI, Federal Court, Government, Illinois, impeachment, Indonesia, Journalism, Judges, Justice, Law firms, Lawyers, News, Obama, Obama administration, Obama indictment, Obama lies, Obama Nation, Obama records, Obama thugs, Patrick Fitzgerald, Pay to play politics, politicians, Politics, Senator Obama, The Case Against Barack Obama, United States, US Department of Justice, US District Court, Washington DC, white house
Tagged 2010, Blagojevich indictment far bigger than selling senate seat, Blagojevich trial jury selection, Entertainment culture, Fact Versus Fiction, June 5, media bias, Rod Blagojevich familiarity
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