POLITICS | Rich Miller
Call it “Blagojevich Lite,”
or whatever else you want, but it became pretty darned clear last week
that state Rep. Derrick Smith’s attorneys are planning the same sort of
mockery of the system that Rod Blagojevich’s legal team did during those
dark days after the former governor’s arrest.
“While
I have been troubled to experience the shenanigans being played by the
FBI, to lean on people around me and to get them to say bad things about
me, I will not cower,” Smith, D- Chicago, told reporters after he pled
not guilty to federal bribery charges. Never mind the fact that nowhere
in the arrest report or indictment is there any reference to anybody
saying “bad things” about him.
Smith
also claimed that the people of his district “elected” him on March 20
because, he said, “they believed in me.” Yeah. Right. OK. The voters
gave him the Democratic nomination on March 20, despite the fact that
he’d been arrested, because party leaders warned them that Smith was up
against a white, very conservative Republican activist appearing to pose
as a black Democrat. Many of those same Democratic leaders are now
calling for Smith’s resignation.
Smith’s
pledge to never “cower” in the face of the federal prosecution was
right out of Blagojevich’s defiant playbook. Blagojevich loudly declared
his complete innocence, vowed to fight to the end, said he’d been
persecuted by the establishment and once even challenged the U.S.
attorney to a manliness contest. Right up until he checked himself into
federal prison to serve a 14-year term, Blagojevich said the coppers had
the wrong guy. Smith, by the way, is now looking at 10 years in a
federal penitentiary.
But it was one of Smith’s attorneys, Victor Henderson, who really brought the former governor to mind.
Henderson told reporters
that Smith was entrapped, but the lawyer’s evidence of this alleged
entrapment was an allegedly phony government website
and a fictitious day care center operator. That’s hardly proof of
entrapment. Actually, it’s standard sting operation stuff.
And,
frankly, doesn’t claiming Smith was entrapped into allegedly accepting a
$7,000 cash bribe mean Smith and his lawyers are all but admitting that
he took the money? And if he did take the cash, isn’t that enough right
there to expel him from office? The House doesn’t have to consider
whether or not Smith is guilty under state or federal criminal statutes.
This is not about criminality. It’s about politics. According to the
chamber’s own rules (Rule 89), the House merely has to establish
“disorderly behavior” by the offending member. That isn’t a very high
bar. Theoretically, the House could expel a member for spitting on the
sidewalk if two thirds of the members wanted to.
Henderson
did make a good point about the FBI failing to inform a judge of its
informant’s extensive criminal record, but he gave the strongest
indication yet that he planned to disrupt and distract the process from
beginning to end when he quoted anti-Nazi Lutheran Pastor Martin
Niemoller’s immortal poem about moral cowardice during the Holocaust.
“First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out because I
was not a socialist. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did
not speak out because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for the
Jews, and I did not speak out because I am not a Jew. Then they came
for me, and there was no one left to speak to, for me.”
“Today
it’s Derrick Smith,” Henderson told reporters, according to Chicago
Public Radio. “Who is it tomorrow?” Needless to say, invoking the
Holocaust to defend a client accused of taking a cash bribe is more than
a bit much. But now that the House Special Investigating Committee has
allowed Smith and his legal team more than enough time to get their feet
underneath them by continually postponing the inevitable, we can
probably expect a lot more crud like this.
Henderson told Illinois Issues that his client plans to testify at future House hearings. The next one is scheduled for Thursday, May 10.
If Henderson was telling the truth about Smith testifying, we can all expect an embarrassing circus.
Rich Miller publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and CapitolFax.com.