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Alleged Murder-For-Hire Rattles Small Town

by Chris Buhneing on Dec.17, 2008, under Legal

SHAWANO, Wisc., Dec. 17, 2008

(CBS) At the annual holiday parade in scenic Shawano, Wisc., for the first time someone was missing this year. The long-time mayor was nowhere in sight. She was afraid for her life, CBS News cheif investigative correspondent Armen Keteyian reports.

“To have this happen, who would - who would think it?” said Shawano Mayor Lorna Marquardt.

So unthinkable that Marquardt’s open-door policy is now officially closed, and she had bulletproof glass installed on her office door.

It’s all part of a once-quiet town that’s been turned upside down.

“We have weapons in our home now,” Marquardt said.

All a reaction to news of an alleged hit list and claims by a so-called hit man, now telling his story for the first time.

“And I said, ‘you want me to kill 60 people? You want me to kill the whole town of Shawano?” said Canadian businessman Bob Cameron.

Keteyian asked: “They were hiring you as a hit man?”

“Yes, they were,” Cameron said.

“You’re talking about the mayor, the city administrator, the city treasurer, the city attorney, the police chief, judges, investigators, fire commissioners,” Keteyian asked.

“Uh huh,” Cameron assented.

Cameron says in late October he received $175,000 in wire transfers from people known to be part of a secretive group long run out of a house near Shawano called SIST.

 

image4674339gAP / CBS)

Minutes later, Cameron says his fax machine spit out this list of 60 names - with the city’s Mayor at No. 1 and at the top of the page the word REDRUM. That’s “Murder” spelled backwards.

“And he could get me guns and he had a place to buy them and everything,” Cameron said. “And that’s when I realized that I was in over my head. And I sent this to the authorities right away.”

Sources tell CBS News both the FBI and Royal Canadian Mounted Police consider Cameron’s claims about the hit list to be both serious and credible.

For 30-plus years the group now known as SIST has been led by a man once named Rama Behera, now called Dr. Avraham Cohen.

The group says it’s an educational non-profit, but over the years news reports, public records and former members have characterized it as a religious cult, a charge a lawyer for the group strongly denied.

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Ill. Gov. Charged In Obama Successor Probe

by Chris Buhneing on Dec.09, 2008, under Legal, Political

(CBS/AP) Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich was arrested Tuesday on charges he brazenly conspired to sell or trade President-elect Barack Obama’s vacant Senate seat to the highest bidder as part of what federal prosecutors called a “political corruption crime spree.”

Prosecutors did not accuse Obama himself of any wrongdoing. Mr. Obama said he is “saddened and sobered” by the allegations and he had no contact with the governor or his office on the matter.

Blagojevich also was charged with illegally threatening to withhold state assistance to Tribune Co., the owner of the Chicago Tribune, in an attempt to strong-arm the newspaper into firing editorial writers who had criticized him.

The 51-year-old Democrat was also accused of engaging in pay-to-play politics - that is, doling out jobs, contracts and appointments in return for campaign contributions.

“We were in the middle of a corruption crime spree, and we wanted to stop it,” U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald said, calling the charges against Blagojevich “a truly new low.” He added: “The conduct would make Lincoln roll over in his grave.”

Federal investigators bugged the governor’s campaign offices and tapped his home phone, capturing conversations laced with profanity and tough-guy talk from the governor. Chicago FBI chief Robert Grant said even seasoned investigators were stunned by what they heard, particularly since the governor had known for three years was under investigation for alleged hiring fraud.

“This is another aggressive move by Fitzgerald, who is best known for indicting and convicting Lewis Scooter Libby on obstruction of justice charges in the CIA Leak case,” said CBS News legal analyst Andrew Cohen. “Fitzgerald is an excellent trial attorney as well, so the Governor and his aide really are in the thick of it now.”

The FBI said in court papers that the governor was overheard on wiretaps over the last month conspiring to sell the Senate seat for campaign cash or plum jobs for himself or his wife, Patti, a real estate agent. He spoke of landing a job with a nonprofit foundation or a union-affiliated group, and even held out the possibility of a Cabinet appointment or ambassadorship for himself.

“I’ve got this thing and it’s (expletive) golden,” he said of his authority to appoint Obama’s replacement, “and I’m just not giving it up for (expletive) nothing. I’m not gonna do it.”

Blagojevich faces two counts: Conspiracy to commit fraud, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison, and solicitation to commit bribery, which is punishable by up 10 years. He was released on his own recognizance.

If the allegations are true, we’re seeing the modern-day version of old-style Chicago politics, where no hand goes ungreased and no favor occurs without some form of payback.

CBS News legal analyst Andrew Cohen

He was the latest in a long line of Illinois governors to become engulfed in scandal. Blagojevich was elected in 2003 as a reformer promising to clean up after former Gov. George Ryan, who is serving six years in prison for racketeering and fraud.

The charges do not identify by name any of the political figures under consideration for the Senate seat, calling them only “Candidate 1,” “Candidate 2,” and so on. However, those being considered for the post include: Reps. Jesse Jackson Jr., Danny Davis, Jan Schakowsky and Luis Gutierrez; Illinois Senate President Emil Jones; and Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs Director Tammy Duckworth.

Blagojevich spokesman Lucio Guerrero had no immediate comment on the charges but issued a statement saying the “allegations do nothing to impact the services, duties or function of the state.”


Read The Criminal Complaint Against Blagojevich
Statement From The Department Of Justice


 

The scandal leaves the Senate seat in limbo. Democratic leaders in Washington and Illinois called on the Illinois Legislature to quickly schedule a special election to fill Obama’s seat rather than leave that power in Blagojevich’s hands.

“No appointment by this governor, under these circumstances, could produce a credible replacement,” said Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois.

Some Illinois politicians immediately demanded that the governor step down or face impeachment.

Also arrested was the Blagojevich’s chief of staff, 46-year-old John Harris, who was accused of taking part in the schemes to enrich the governor.

Blagojevich also considered appointing himself to the Senate seat, telling his deputy governor that if “they’re not going to offer me anything of value, I might as well take it,” prosecutors said.

He said becoming a senator might remake his image for a possible presidential run in 2016, according to court papers. And he allegedly said that he would have access to greater resources if he were indicted while in the Senate.

Prosecutors said Blagojevich also talked about getting his wife placed on corporate boards where she might get $150,000 a year in director’s fees.

In court papers, the FBI said Blagojevich expressed frustration at being “stuck” as governor. “I want to make money,” the governor, whose salary is $177,412, was quoted as saying in one conversation.

The head of the FBI’s office in Chicago said he phoned Blagojevich at 6 a.m., telling him of a warrant for his arrest and that there were two FBI agents at his door of his Chicago home. Blagojevich’s first comment was, “Is this a joke?” Grant said.

Nothing in the court papers suggested Obama had any part in the discussions or knew of them - something Fitzgerald repeatedly made clear at Tuesday’s news conference.

In fact, Blagojevich was overheard complaining at one point that Obama’s people are “not going to give me anything except appreciation.” He added: “(Expletive) them.”

The conversations took place between Election Day and as recently as last week. On the recordings, Blagojevich was clearly aware authorities might be listening, warning one person not to use the phone and saying, “The whole world is listening. You hear me?”

Political fundraiser Antoin “Tony” Rezko, who raised money for the campaigns of both Blagojevich and Obama, is awaiting sentencing after being convicted of fraud and other charges. And Blagojevich’s chief fundraiser goes on trial next year on obstruction charges.

The court papers also outline Blagojevich conversations related to Tribune Co., which has been hoping for state aid in selling Wrigley Field, the home of the Chicago Cubs. Blagojevich was quoted as telling his chief of staff, Harris, in a profanity-laced Nov. 4 conversation that Tribune executives should fire the editorial writers “and get us some editorial support.”

Harris is later overheard telling the governor on Nov. 11 that an unnamed Tribune owner, presumably CEO Sam Zell, “got the message and is very sensitive to the issue.”

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O.J. Simpson Gets Up To 33 Years In Prison

by Chris Buhneing on Dec.05, 2008, under Legal

O.J’s Emotional Plea “CBS New RAW”: Before being sentenced on kidnapping and armed robbery charges, a visibly emotional O.J. Simpson apologized to the court for his actions.

CBS/AP) A broken O.J. Simpson was sentenced Friday to as much as 33 years in prison for a hotel armed robbery after a judge rejected his apology and said, “It was much more than stupidity.”

The 61-year-old football Hall of Famer stood shackled and stone-faced as Judge Jackie Glass rattled off the punishment. Moments before, Simpson made a rambling, five-minute plea for leniency, simultaneously apologizing for the holdup as a foolish mistake and trying to justify his actions.

He choked back tears as he told her: “I didn’t want to steal anything from anyone. … I’m sorry, sorry.”

Simpson said he was simply trying to retrieve sports memorabilia and other mementos, including his first wife’s wedding ring, from two dealers when he stormed a Las Vegas hotel room on Sept. 13, 2007.

But the judge emphasized that it was a violent confrontation in which at least one gun was drawn, and she said someone could have been shot. She said the evidence was overwhelming, with the planning, the confrontation itself and the aftermath all recorded on audio or videotape.

Glass, a no-nonsense judge known for her tough sentences, imposed such a complex series of consecutive and concurrent sentences that even many attorneys watching the case were confused as to how much time Simpson got.

Simpson could serve up to 33 years but could be eligible for parole after nine years, according to Elana Roberto, the judge’s clerk.

“The sentencing rules bound the judge to hand out these sentences the way she did,” said CBS News legal analyst Andrew Cohen. “The state legislators in Nevada made sure that these sorts of crimes are punished harshly, so the judge didn’t have a ton of discretion. Simpson’s fate was sealed, you could say, when prosecutors threw the book at him and jurors rejected his defense.”

The judge said several times that her sentence in the Las Vegas case had nothing to do with Simpson’s 1995 acquittal in the slaying of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman.

“I’m not here to try and cause any retribution or any payback for anything else,” Glass said.

Simpson was immediately led away to prison after the judge refused to permit him to go free on bail while he appeals.

“We haven’t heard the last of Simpson or this case,” Cohen said. “His lawyers have several good issues to raise on appeal, including some key issues relating to the credibility and reliability of some of the most important witnesses against him. So I wouldn’t be surprised if the appeals courts change, or tweak, to what has just happened.”

Simpson’s co-defendant and former golfing buddy, Clarence “C.J. Stewart, also was sentenced to at least 15 years.

Outside court, Goldman’s father, Fred Goldman, and sister, Kim, said they were delighted with the sentence.

“We are thrilled, and it’s a bittersweet moment,” Fred Goldman said. “It was satisfying seeing him in shackles like he belongs.”

The Goldmans took a measure of credit for Simpson’s fate, saying their relentless pursuit of his assets to satisfy a $33.5 million wrongful-death judgment “pushed him over the edge” and led him to commit the robbery to recover some of his sports memorabilia.

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