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Illinois Ex-Governor to Appeal Corruption Sentence Again

© Flickr / WBEZThen-U.S. Rep. Rod Blagojevich thanks supporters at his election night party in Chicago, March 19, 2002, after he received his party's nomination for governor. Blagojevich would later be sentenced to 14 years in prison for blatant corruption.
Then-U.S. Rep. Rod Blagojevich thanks supporters at his election night party in Chicago, March 19, 2002, after he received his party's nomination for governor. Blagojevich would later be sentenced to 14 years in prison for blatant corruption. - Sputnik International
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Former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich is appealing again his 14-year prison sentence because prosecutor’s manipulated the laws to convict him in the first place, Blagojevich attorney Leonard Goodman told Sputnik.

Then-U.S. Rep. Rod Blagojevich thanks supporters at his election night party in Chicago, March 19, 2002, after he received his party's nomination for governor. Blagojevich would later be sentenced to 14 years in prison for blatant corruption. - Sputnik International
Court Overturns Certain Convictions Against Ex-Illinois Gov. Blagojevich
WASHINGTON (Sputnik) — On Tuesday, Goodman notified the US 7th Circuit Court of Appeals that Blagojevich was challenging the sentence, an appeal that comes two weeks to the day after federal District Judge James Zagel reaffirmed the former governor’s 14-year term on corruption charges, for seeking campaign contributions in exchange for political favors.

"In order to convict him on these counts they changed the law, literally," Goodman said on Tuesday. "They twisted the law in order to put him in prison and that is a danger."

Blagojevich, Goodman argued, never promised favors for campaign contributions, but did tell President Barack Obama that he would appoint the president's pick for a vacant US senate in exchange for a cabinet post.

"That was the center of the case against him originally, but that part has been overturned as the appellate court correctly found that was a political deal and it was not corrupt," Goodman stated. "To make an example of Blagojevich, when what he did was allowed under the law that was established by the Supreme Court in 1991, seems unfair."

By the standard under which Blagojevich was judged any US politician could be taken down at the whim of a US federal prosecutor because every time a large donation is requested it is connected in some way to some official act, he added.

Blagojevich's first trial resulted in a hung jury and so the jury instructions were rewritten for the second trial in order to convict him on other counts, Goodman claimed.

"It’s hard to tell now what’s legal and what’s not," Goodman noted. "Foreign donors giving money to a foundation and then getting access to the [US] State Department seems like that could be prosecuted but the Obama administration has chosen not to prosecute her [Hillary Clinton]."

A newly released batch of 725 US State Department emails are fueling claims that the Clinton Foundation provided big donors special access to Hillary Clinton when she was secretary of state, according to a Monday press release by legal watchdog Judicial Watch.

On August 9, the former governor’s attorneys asked Judge Zagel for a five-year prison term, citing Blagojevich’s good behavior in prison. Prosecutors argued that Blagojevich was not rehabilitated and has never admitted criminal responsibility for his actions.

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