What Fitzgerald Is Hiding in His Blagojevich Complaint

Two days after Fitz indicted Scooter Libby, I did a post showing how details Fitz left unstated in the indictment pointed directly at Dick Cheney.

Tricky Fitzgerald!! He’s been hiding Dick right in the middle of his Libby indictment.

Fifteen months later, the press finally noticed Fitz pointing to the cloud over the Vice President. 

Yesterday’s complaint against Blagojevich has similar silences worthy of note. We know this, partly, because Fitz tells us. He makes it clear that he has not included everything he’s got in this case, generally.

Because this affidavit is submitted for the limited purpose of securing a criminal complaint and corresponding arrest warrants, I have not included each and every fact known to me concerning this investigation.

That is, Fitz has only laid out what he needs to make the case on the two charges described here–the conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud to deprive Illinois of his honest services (this includes attempts to get campaign contributions, favorable coverage from the Trib, and money or a job for the Senate seat), and the attempt to extort the Tribune Company (the firing of editorial staff in exchange for help on Wrigley Field). Note already how this shifts the focus onto recent events–particularly the Trib bribery attempt–and away from his larger investigation into corruption; this allows him to keep much of the latter investigation (which undoubtedly relies on more cooperating witnesses than he has named) hidden for now. Indeed, note how the general corruption investigation generally jumps from evidence from the 2004 timeframe presented at Rezko’s trial to stuff collected from the wiretaps. Fitz doesn’t want to tell us everything about how he got from Rezko to the taps (except insofar as revealing some details of Rezko’s cooperation, which I’ll get to in a later post).

Similarly, Fitz tells us that he hasn’t revealed everything pertaining to Blago’s attempt to sell Obama’s Senate seat.

Set out below are summaries of certain of the conversations referenced above. This affidavit does not include all calls dealing with the corrupt efforts of ROD BLAGOJEVICH, JOHN HARRIS, and others to misuse the power of ROD BLAGOJEVICH to appoint a United States Senator for the personal gain of ROD BLAGOJEVICH and his family, nor does this affidavit set forth other calls where ROD BLAGOJEVICH and others discussed a possible appointment to the Senate seat based on considerations other than financial gain for ROD BLAGOJEVICH and his family, discussions which took place with greater frequency after efforts to arrange for a private job for ROD BLAGOJEVICH in exchange for appointing a particular candidate to the open Senate seat did not meet with success. As set forth below, more recent discussions focused on an effort to obtain campaign contributions up front in consideration of an appointment to
the Senate. [my emphasis]

Now, in this case, I don’t so much think Fitz is hiding how he got the evidence about the Senate seat. We know that: he discovered this in the course of his taps regarding campaign donations.

Overall, I think Fitz leaves all this unsaid for two reasons: to hide the extent to which he may have gotten cooperation from witnesses. More importantly–and he made this point in his press conference yesterday–to encourage those who have evidence about this stuff to come forward on their own accord to provide information to investigators. Fitz knows he hasn’t nailed this prosecution yet, and he’s trying to turn the lemon of having to arrest Blago early into lemonade, by using the complaint to encourage cooperation from others. So he has repeatedly provided enough in the complaint to let people know he’s investigating them, without revealing everything he has against those people.

Just as an example, consider Fitz’s mention of a list of people Blago’s team intended to target for bribes before yearend, when the new Ethics Law goes into effect.

Specifically, Individual A advised that ROD BLAGOJEVICH is seeking a total of approximately $2.5 million in campaign contributions by the end of the year, principally from or through individuals identified on a list maintained by Friends of Blagojevich. The FBI has obtained a copy of that list, which identifies individuals and entities targeted for campaign contributions, as well as amounts sought from those individuals and entities.

The FBI executed a search warrant at Friends of Blagojevich yesterday, so they not only have this list, records of any campaign donations, but potentially more from the campaign office that would incriminate these people.  I’m guessing that if people have been hit up for donations of late, they’re going to get awfully chatty with the FBI in short order, because they know Fitz has that list in his hand and has been using it as a road map of whose donations to investigate next. Clearly, Fitz has left clues like this in the complaint to induce other to come forward to tell about Blago’s demands for bribes from government contractors.

Now, I don’t think there’s much that Fitz left out of the Trib discussions; while Zell and his finance advisor may be in some trouble (particularly if they left the Cubbies out of Monday’s bankruptcy deal believing they had won favors from Blago), Zell may have been saved by the Trib’s decision to break the wiretap story on Friday, forestalling layoffs that could be construed as Zell delivering his end of the bribe.

But the sale of the Senate seat is another issue. As I’ve pointed out in comments, for example, Candidate 5 is in a heap of trouble right now. Fitz includes details of Candidate 5’s discussions with Blago’s team as if it were an afterthought, just one more example of Blago’s continued scheming.

These calls [after the SEIU and Obama-related ones] have included the following:

a. On December 4, 2008, ROD BLAGOJEVICH spoke to Advisor B and informed Advisor B that he was giving Senate Candidate 5 greater consideration for the Senate seat because, among other reasons, if ROD BLAGOJEVICH ran for re-election Senate Candidate 5 would “raise[] money” for ROD BLAGOJEVICH, although ROD BLAGOJEVICH said he might “get some (money) up front, maybe” from Senate Candidate 5 to insure Senate Candidate 5 kept his promise about raising money for ROD BLAGOJEVICH. (In a recorded conversation on October 31, 2008, ROD BLAGOJEVICH described an earlier approach by an associate of Senate Candidate Five as follows: “We were approached ‘pay to play.’ That, you know, he’d raise me 500 grand. An emissary came. Then the other guy would raise a million, if I made him (Senate Candidate 5) a Senator.”)

Yet this is obviously no afterthought. Candidate 5 is portrayed as having approached Blago, not the other way around, and offered large sums for the Senate seat. By saying they got this conversation among others, Fitz is suggesting to those around Candidate 5 that he may well have more and that they might want to come forth to explain that more of their own accord.

"Oh, by the way, Candidate 5? Blago says you tried to bribe him to the tune of $500,000. What do you have to say about that, Candidate 5? I’d love to hear your version of that story…"

The most intriguing such reference, in my opinion, is Fitz’s description of a November 10 strategy session that took place on a 2-hour conference call between Chicago and DC.

On November 10, 2008, ROD BLAGOJEVICH, his wife, JOHN HARRIS, Governor General Counsel, and various Washington-D.C. based advisors, including Advisor B, discussed the open Senate seat during a conference call. (The Washington D.C.-based advisors to ROD BLAGOJEVICH are believed to have participated on this call from Washington D.C.). Various individuals participated at different times during the call. The call lasted for approximately two hours, and what follows are simply summaries of various portions of the two-hour call. [my emphasis]

Fitz makes sure to signal to Blago’s wife (who is legally implicated elsewhere in this complaint, and in other activities reported by the Trib) and Advisor B (who brokered some of these deals, including to Obama’s team) that he’s got their statements during this long meeting. But he also signals to others who participated in the call–"various individuals"–that he knows they were part of these discussions but has not yet focused on their particular actions.

Fitz spends three pages discussing the various strategies laid out in this call, and describes Blago’s insistence on getting cash value for himself or his wife in exchange for the Senate seat. It’s clearly a goldmine of proof about Blago’s efforts to sell the seat.

Advisor B has got to realize he’s in some doo doo here; that may make him want to chat.

But those other individuals who participated in the call? They’ve just been sent a very clear invitation from Fitz to visit their local FBI office for a long discussion.

It’s a remarkable sort of hospitality Fitz has, with these public but unspoken invitations, don’t you think?

One final thing. Fitz states clearly that he does not include details of discussions that aren’t clearly related to financial gain for his family.

nor does this affidavit set forth other calls where ROD BLAGOJEVICH and others discussed a possible appointment to the Senate seat based on considerations other than financial gain for ROD BLAGOJEVICH and his family

He may do this for one of two reasons. First, he may simply not think it appropriate to show us all the sausage-making that got picked up on the wiretaps, the offers of political (as opposed to financial) favors in exchange for the Senate seat. He’s right–since those things would not support his legal case, why include them? That’s when you’d get into criminalizing politics (and laying out those discussions would only intensify the feeding frenzy to determine who gets mentioned where in this complaint.

But there is one other possibility–that those things, not of financial value, still have interest for his legal case, and he’s signaling that he heard those conversations as well. For example, is it possible Blago pitched a Presidential pardon in exchange for the Senate seat? I have no idea–he was thinking more seriously about impeachment than prosecution–but if so, it would be of legal interest. I actually think a pardon would be considered to have financial value, but who knows what else the flailing Blago was pitching?

If those discussions were of more interest than simple political horsetrading, then Fitz has made it clear he’d like to learn more about them. 

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51 replies
    • rhfactor says:

      Marcy — your old fan is back again. I would really really LOVE to see you doing some TV standups, as you did on the Plame case, in which you share these kinds of insights in a very accessible way for more general audience consumption and understanding. THE BIG DIFFERENCE? Now firedoglake has its own YouTube channel, so it’s kind of all there waitingfor you now

      You’re the best. No one comes close in untangling these twisting roots, and doing so in a friendly engaging demeanor.

      my 2 cents

  1. Professor Foland says:

    EW said:

    “By saying they got this conversation among others, Fitz is suggesting to those around Candidate 5 that he may well have more and that they might want to come forth to explain that more of their own accord.

    Oh, by the way, Candidate 5? Blago says you tried to bribe him to the tune of $500,000. What do you have to say about that, Candidate 5? I’d love to hear your version of that story…”

    ABC said:

    Chicago Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr. (D-IL) is the anonymous “Senate Candidate #5″ whose emissaries Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich reportedly claimed offered up to a million dollars to name him to the U.S. Senate, federal law enforcement sources tell ABC News.

    Jackson Jr. said this morning he was contacted yesterday by federal prosecutors in Chicago who he said “asked me to come in and share with them my insights and thoughts about the selection process.”

    You can sure call ‘em.

  2. Leen says:

    EW your insights keep it moving.

    Fitz must have invited people to come forward five times He rolled out the red carpet

    Blago would say “It’s clearly a “bleeping” goldmine of proof about Blago’s efforts to sell the seat”

    Are you saying that Blago could have been looking to sell this seat to a Republican so that Blago could get a pardon from the Bush administration? Not clear on this at all?

    Sure sounds like Candidate 5 is in a heap to trouble

    Did Fitz use as strong of language having to do with Libby’s role in outing Plame and lying about it as he is using describing the actions of Blago “appalling, as low as it gets” “Lincoln would roll over in his grave” etc

    • hackworth1 says:

      Did Fitz use as strong of language having to do with Libby’s role in outing Plame and lying about it as he is using describing the actions of Blago “appalling, as low as it gets” “Lincoln would roll over in his grave” etc

      I noticed that too. Hypocritical, crass, polemic judgment is apparently reserved for Democrats. I guess since Libby served defacto President Barnacle and its Algae it was necessary for Fitz to maintain appropriate decorum. Lincoln, indeed. Sheesh!

      • sunshine says:

        Abe Lincoln has roots and is endeared to the people of Springfield, IL. And Abe’s 200th birthday celebrations come next year preparations have been in the making for quite a while now.

        The people and events of the past serve no useful purpose if they are forgotten. It is in the act of commemoration that we remember and discover Lincoln and his times for a new generation.

        After 200 years…
        Abraham Lincoln was born in Kentucky, spent his youth in Indiana, and made Illinois his home. The State of Illinois captured this special relationship with Lincoln with its slogan “Land of Lincoln”.
        Illinois communities have a significant connection to the Lincoln story since he lived in and traversed the state from 1830 until his departure on February 11, 1861. His most endearing relationship was with the town of Springfield where he departed with these words: “To this place, and the kindness of these people, I owe every thing. Here I have lived for a quarter of a century, and have passed from a young to an old man.”

        The Illinois Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission encourages every community and citizen to become involved. Communities are encouraged to learn about their Lincoln stories and explore ways to relate their Lincoln heritage in public events and commemorative activities. Individuals are encouraged to visit their public library, the many museums and Lincoln sites throughout the state to learn more about what has been called “The Great American Story”.

        http://www.lincoln200.net/
        Here is a list of states at the bottom of this page that are planning celebrations.

        • sunshine says:

          I should add that last summer I read that Springfield, Ill is one of the few cities whose employment is not (ws not last summer anyways) was in good shape due to the work and preparations of Honest Abe’s 200th birthday celebration. Many mueseums, shops, resturants and business are in the building stages or have opened for this event.

  3. Peterr says:

    It’s a remarkable sort of hospitality Fitz has, with these public but unspoken invitations, don’t you think?

    Unless, of course, you try to lie to him and the federal investigators who work for and with him. Then his hospitality dries up rather quickly.

    Right, Scooter?

    • Leen says:

      How tough was Fitz really in the Plame case? Scooter and the Plame traitors are ALL still walking free. Hell some of them are still filling up our air waves with more twisted hogwash. Rove/Cheney

      Equal Justice Under the Law…where and when?

      • Peterr says:

        Scooter isn’t walking around free because Fitz is such a softy. Twelve jurors believed the case that Fitz made, and a judge sentenced him to prison.

        The fact that Bush waved his pardon pen and commuted Libby’s sentence reflects on Bush, not Fitzgerald.

        • Leen says:

          I get it but it still pisses me off that the individuals who outed a woman who put her own life on the line for this country was outed by the very people who should have been protective of her life. These same “bleeping” traitors undermined US national Security and they are all out walking

  4. Leen says:

    What the hell is going to happen to this Senate seat at this point? Special election, flip a coin? Will impeachment proceedings start pronto if Blago does not resign?

    • Hugh says:

      I believe the legislature is considering meeting next week both to limit Blago’s choice for Senate replacement and begin impeachment, unless Blago resigns or “temporarily” steps aside first. In other words, things are in flux and people are looking to see what Blago will do.

      • foothillsmike says:

        Additionally, I believe the IL AG is looking into bringing Blago before the IL Supreme CT to attempt to have him declared unfit to continue as GOV.

    • Minnesotachuck says:

      It seems to me that at this point anyone who accepted an appointment by Blogo as Senator would be forever under a cloud and thus doomed politically. If Blogo resigns and an appointment is made by his successor the appointee’s prospects probably won’t be much better. Durbin’s suggestion is sounding better and better.

  5. Hugh says:

    I’m not sure that after Fitzgerald got Ryan that investigation went any further. Similarly, with Libby, people thought a dozen indictments were in the offing, but in fact Fitzgerald stopped with Libby. Just looking at Fitzgerald’s record, I would say that Fitzgerald may seek to fine tune the current cases against Blago and Harris but otherwise this investigation too is done.

    • Leen says:

      Hugh Ot .. on your Summers blog (comments closed) go check out the interview that Amy (”Right livelihood Recipient”) Goodman did with a former Harvard Professor who Summers not only slammed but did not renew his contract for challenging him.
      http://www.democracynow.org/20….._effort_to

      “BRIAN PALMER: Larry Summers was then Harvard’s president, and the 600 students and I invited him to be interviewed by us. And I think that in the environments in which he traveled, he wasn’t—
      BRIAN PALMER: Larry Summers was then Harvard’s president, and the 600 students and I invited him to be interviewed by us. And I think that in the environments in which he traveled, he wasn’t—
      BRIAN PALMER: Larry Summers was then Harvard’s president, and the 600 students and I invited him to be interviewed by us. And I think that in the environments in which he traveled, he wasn’t—

      AMY GOODMAN: The name of your class?

      A

  6. plunger says:

    If Zell hasn’t been somehow stung in this matter, I’ll be shocked. You can’t strip out your prime asset – then declare bankruptcy – then have something like this break the next day, and expect us not to take a very close look at Mr. Zell.

  7. bell says:

    tom is mentioning Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. as candidate 5.. sounds about right to me given his birth data.. this is coming from an astro pov..

  8. bgrothus says:

    I think, unless there was some promise that was made good on by Candidate 5, that it would be hard to prosecute. But it would really look bad. And not the least for teh stupit of talking about it with someone who was already being investigated for corruption.

    But, IANAL.

    But on conspiracy, the amount of the talking/swearing that was going through Blago and associates, that has to add up to something. Even if no conviction can be had, the process of replacing the Senate seat is “in the sunshine” as Fitz said yesterday.

      • snoboysdrift says:

        A lot of wanta-be senators, a short amount of time before congress convenes, “we have a republic here if we can keep it”

  9. yellowdogD says:

    I’m with Hilzoy; when Fitz is done with this investigation, Obama should put him in charge of investigating entire Bush Criminal Organization with free rein, no interference.

    • foothillsmike says:

      It would cost less political capital for Obama if a bill came from congress to hire an independent prosecutor.

      • LabDancer says:

        That’s not going to happen, if for no other reason than there has to be a big concern that way too much of the Bush Cheney Administration crime involves ‘contact’ with the DoJ.

        That’s part of the modus operandi of the BCA: not just commission opinion-overs, but as far as possible have the legal beagles fill the role of taking down the dictation and conveying the masters’ will to the troops. This is hardly fresh insight, particularly in ew’s house, but the BCA has taken the ‘lessons’ from the past – – particularly Nixon and Reagan – – to depths that show up Blago as an amateurish piker.

        More particularly, you’ll recall that before Chitown, Fitz was in SDNY where he made his bones on the first hit on the WTC, to the point of being regarded as something of a general purpose go-to guy on terrorism for the period from 9/11 until he was sent went. He’s mentioned in the 9/11 commission report, Suskind’s book, Wright’s book, etc etc etc.

        But this musing does give rise to one observation about Eric Holder: during his time high up in Bill Clinton’s DoJ it appears he was downright special prosecution-happy. And since that expressed itself in the routine appointment of outside counsel, I would expect not just a return to the heady days of such appointments, but also that they’ll be filled out of universities, wank tanks and private practice in that order.

  10. Broadstreetbuddy says:

    “That’s when you’d get into criminalizing politics”

    From what i have been reading since 2000, I dont see how you have politics with out criminals . . .

    • Oxford08 says:

      I also can’t get over this notion. I feel somewhat ambivalent about the whole Blago affair too. Don’t these things happen most of the time when a Senate seat opens up?

  11. MrWhy says:

    JJJd may be Candidate 5, especially if they are cited in the order of appearance in Blagojevich’s taps, and all known candidates are included. But since we’ve concluded that Valerie Jarrett is candidate #1, we’ve got a difference between the number of suggested candidates and candidates cited in Fitzpatrick’s complaint.

    Jarrett, Schakowsky, Davis, Gutierrez, Jones, Jackson – I count 6.

    I’m ruling out Schakowsky on the basis of gender.

  12. Oxford08 says:

    Also, emptywheel, lover that earlier post you linked to on here. I missed it when it was first posted. Hopefully that patience you discuss at the end of that piece pays off.

  13. BayStateLibrul says:

    “One deceit needs many others, and so the whole house is built in the air and must soon come to the ground” Baltasar Gracian

    Another book in the making?

  14. Leen says:

    this is the part of EW’s post that I do not get

    “For example, is it possible Blago pitched a Presidential pardon in exchange for the Senate seat? I have no idea–he was thinking more seriously about impeachment than prosecution–but if so, it would be of legal interest. I actually think a pardon would be considered to have financial value, but who knows what else the flailing Blago was pitching? “

    Is Marcy saying that Blago may have been fishing for a pardon for himself in exchange for the Senate Seat knowing that Fitz all ready had him nailed?

    • emptywheel says:

      That’s why I don’t think it’s as likely as something innocuous. Yes, I think he might have raised pardons. Except that he’s delirious enough to have believed that Fitz wasn’t going to get him–in spite of all the arrows pointed his way in the Rezko trial. But who knows?

  15. wrensis says:

    Why doesn’t someone connect the dots with Rezko? Blagojevich has implicating information that is going to let him cut a deal with the prosecutors. Obama has one less layer of veneer today.

  16. Mauimom says:

    It’s a remarkable sort of hospitality Fitz has, with these public but unspoken invitations, don’t you think?

    Fitz is going to need LOTS of cookies available at these little meetings. I hope someone points him to the recipes in last Saturday’s “Pull Up a Chair”.

    Thanks, Marcy. You are just incredible.

  17. sunshine says:

    Ok, I mess that up. Employment was doing good there and unemployment was low in Springfield from what I read in a magazine last summer.

  18. SparklestheIguana says:

    Oh come on. While Libby’s crimes were bad and he should be in prison for them, I think we must admit that Blago’s were beyond brazen, justifying PJF’s language. Do you really believe PJF is a partisan? That is laughable. No need to rehash this argument.

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