From the Sun-Times:
Gov pushes ethics, keeps tainted funds
SPRINGFIELD | Still has $65,000 in donations from felon
September 22, 2008
BY DAVE MCKINNEY Sun-Times Springfield Bureau Chief
SPRINGFIELD -- Besides the multiple federal investigations he's facing, Gov.
Blagojevich has 65,000 other reasons he might have trouble persuading state
lawmakers this week to "follow my lead" on ethics reform.
The governor has kept $65,000 in campaign contributions from one of his administration's
former top employees, Ali D. Ata, even though Ata pleaded guilty to felony charges
earlier this year.
After cutting a deal with federal prosecutors in April, Ata testified against
former top Blagojevich adviser and fund-raiser Tony Rezko, who was convicted
in June of wide-ranging corruption involving state deals.
After a Sun-Times reporter asked about the Ata contributions, Blagojevich campaign
spokesman Doug Scofield said Sunday he was not aware of Ata's money being dumped.
Blagojevich's keeping the Ata money has given ammunition to his critics, even
as the governor is calling legislators back to Springfield today to consider
his ethics proposal. "This is a hypocritical move by him, especially at
a time when he refuses to give back the ill-gotten gains of a felon," said
state Rep. Jack Franks (D-Woodstock), one of Blagojevich's harshest critics.
Ata pleaded guilty to lying to a federal agent and evading federal income taxes.
His subsequent testimony helped convict Rezko.
Ata testified he gave $25,000 to the governor's campaign fund with the understanding
he'd then be appointed to a high-paying state post. Blagojevich appointed Ata
to be his $127,000-a-year chief of the Illinois Finance Authority. Ata also
testified he gave Rezko $25,000 to pay contractors who had threatened to place
a lien on the governor's Northwest Side home because renovation work there hadn't
been paid for.
The governor has denied Ata's accusations.
Scofield said the governor's campaign fund had been "quick" to dump
money that had been contributed by Rezko after Rezko was charged in 2006. At
that time, the campaign gave $85,000 from Rezko and Rezko companies to charity.
In all, prosecutors said Rezko raised $1.2 million for the governor, a figure
Scofield questioned, calling it "quite high."
Earlier this year, Barack Obama moved to distance himself from Rezko by giving
nearly $160,000 -- the amount of past campaign contributions his staff said
they had linked to Rezko -- to charities.
Though Blagojevich also gave away money he got from Rezko, his campaign chest
held on to a total of $212,500 from 16 donors the Obama campaign linked to Rezko,
including Ata.
"I think we'd be happy to look at a list the senator or anyone else might
provide," Scofield said. "But we have aggressively returned money
taken from Tony Rezko, and we think that's the appropriate thing to do."