Published: 10:25AM Wednesday December 10, 2008
Source: Reuters
Source: ReutersIllinois Governor Rod Blagojevich, a Democrat, has been taken into custody on criminal charges
The governor of Illinois, Rod Blagojevich, was arrested on
staggering corruption charges that alleged he tried to sell the US
Senate seat vacated by fellow Democrat, President-elect Barack
Obama.
The governor also tried to extort the Chicago Tribune, one of the
country's leading newspapers, into firing editorial writers who
were critical of him, federal prosecutors said.
Obama has long distanced himself from the governor of his home
state - who has been under investigation on other issues for years
- but Blagojevich's arrest was a likely embarrassment to the
president-elect.
Obama said he was saddened and sobered by the news and had not
been aware of the alleged efforts to sell the Senate seat he
vacated.
The case shined light again on old-style corruption in the grimy
caldron of Chicago politics from which Obama emerged.
Obama, who takes office on January 20, resigned from the Senate
after winning the November 4 presidential election.
The Illinois governor is meant to pick Obama's Senate
replacement.
The US Senate's Democratic leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, called for
the decision on appointing Obama's replacement to be taken out of
Blagoveich's hands.
State lawmakers said they would go into session to try to have the
law changed so a replacement can be picked by a special election -
meaning that Obama's replacement could be Republican if the voters
so decided.
Caught on tape, Blagojevich used an expletive as he described the
Senate seat as something so valuable you just don't give it away
for nothing.
He said he might even appoint himself if he could get nothing
for it, the criminal complaint against him said.
"The breadth of corruption laid out in these charges is
staggering," US Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, the federal
prosecutor, said in a statement detailing the charges.
It was enough to make revered Illinois statesman Abraham Lincoln
roll over in his grave, Fitzgerald later told reporters, adding the
arrest of Blagojevich was made in order to stop a crime
spree.
The governor and his chief of staff, John Harris, were taken into
custody at their Chicago homes.
Blagojevich appeared in court later and was released on his own
recognizance, meaning he did not have to post bail.
There were immediate calls from both Republicans and Democrats in
Illinois for Blagojevich to resign.
Blagojevich's office issued a statement saying the allegations
would not affect the functioning of the state.
Fitzgerald stressed there were no allegations in the criminal
complaint about Obama.
The president-elect told reporters: "I had no contact with the
governor or his office and so I was not aware of what was
happening."
For Sale sign
Blagojevich and Harris were each charged in a federal complaint
with conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, and a second count
of solicitation of bribery.
The mail and wire fraud charge carries a maximum sentence of 20
years in prison while the bribery charge has a maximum sentence of
10 years in prison.
Each count carries a maximum fine of US$250,000.
The charges "allege that Blagojevich put a 'for sale' sign on the
naming of a United States senator; involved himself personally in
pay-to-play schemes with the urgency of a salesman meeting his
annual sales target; and corruptly used his office in an effort to
trample editorial voices of criticism," Fitzgerald said in his
statement.
Blagojevich was accused of threatening to withhold state assistance
to the Tribune Company in connection with the sale of the Chicago
Cubs' baseball home, Wrigley Field, in order "to induce the firing
of Chicago Tribune editorial board members sharply critical" of
him, Fitzgerald said.
Investigators said Blagojevich and Harris were caught on
court-authorized wiretaps.
Blagojevich was seeking a substantial salary for himself at a
non-profit foundation or union affiliated organization, a spot on a
corporate board for his wife, promises of campaign cash, as well as
a cabinet post or ambassadorship in exchange for his Senate choice,
an FBI affidavit said.
Democrats, with independent allies, would hold at least 58 seats in
the 100-seat Senate when the new Congress convenes in early January
if Obama's successor is a Democrat.
A Minnesota Senate seat is still undecided.
Blagojevich, in his second term, is the latest in a string of
Illinois governors to run afoul of the law.
His immediate predecessor, George Ryan, is in jail following a federal corruption conviction.
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