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Rod Blagojevich broke, so taxpayers would pay for defense in retrial

The defense team for Rod Blagojevich is trying to rouse public anger at the prospect of taxpayer money being used in a retrial. But the cost probably wouldn鈥檛 be considerable for the state.

Former Gov. Rod Blagojevich stands on the porch of his home on the north side of Chicago after being convicted on one of 23 counts in his federal corruption trial on Tuesday Aug. 17.

Eric Y. Exit/AP

August 20, 2010

Former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich is broke, which means the state鈥檚 taxpayers may be tapped to pay for a second trial against him.

The federal trial that ended this week with a single conviction against Mr. Blagojevich cost him $2.6 million, which he paid in full last Friday with a final payment of $75,693.94, according to the US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. The money, which also paid for the legal fees of his brother Robert Blagojevich, came from Rod Blagojevich鈥檚 former campaign coffers.

In April 2009, five months after his arrest, that campaign money was transferred to the courts, according to a ruling by Judge James Zagel that allowed it to be used to pay for his defense.

But with that money and other funds depleted, changes are probable for Blagojevich in a second trial, which prosecutors indicated they would mount after jurors in the first trial deadlocked on 23 counts. It is likely, legal experts say, that his lawyers, Sam Adam Sr. and Sam Adam Jr., will withdraw from the case to make themselves available to other clients 鈥 those who can pay what many say is three times the $100-an-hour public-defender rate that Blagojevich paid them.

鈥淭he Adams鈥 phone is ringing off the hook with other defendants who can pay them top dollar, and they certainly want to do that.... It does come down to money,鈥 says Chicago securities attorney Andrew Stoltmann. It is likely, Mr. Stoltmann adds, that Blagojevich鈥檚 legal team is 鈥渆motionally drained鈥 from the case, which would make going through a second trial potentially difficult.

If his legal team does quit, Blagojevich has the opportunity to request access to funds in the Criminal Justice Act鈥檚 Federal Defender Program. The program provides court-appointed attorneys who would be paid the same rate as the Adams charged.

This week, Blagojevich鈥檚 defense team has tried to rouse public anger at the prospect of taxpayer money being used to fund both the defense and prosecution in a second trial 鈥 in a state that鈥檚 groaning under a $13 billion budget deficit.

鈥淲hy are we spending $20 million to $30 million on a retrial when you couldn鈥檛 prove it the first time?鈥 said the younger Mr. Adam Tuesday.

That reasoning is already being echoed in discussions on Chicago radio talk shows and local blogs. But Ralph Martire, executive director of the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability, a watchdog group in Chicago, says the total cost of a second trial 鈥渋s not even a rounding error in the state budget.鈥 He adds, 鈥淚 just don鈥檛 see it as a legitimate counterargument.鈥

Pursuing more convictions may save taxpayers money in the long run if it persuades Illinois politicians to think twice before committing corrupt acts, Mr. Martire says. If Blagojevich does jail time, he will be the second consecutive Illinois governor to do so.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it stops corruption overnight, but I don鈥檛 think you can ever stop corruption if you stop convicting [corrupt politicians],鈥 Martire says.