Trump expected to pardon former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich

CHICAGO (CBS) — President Trump will issue a pardon to former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich Monday, a White House official confirmed to CBS News. The development was first reported by Axios.

Legally, a pardon is official forgiveness — removing most of the legal consequences of the criminal conviction. 

Blagojevich was originally sentenced to 14 years in prison in December 2011 on 18 corruption charges, including attempting to sell Barack Obama’s U.S. Senate seat after Obama won the White House in 2008. Blagojevich only served nearly eight years before being commuted in February 2020 during Mr. Trump’s first presidency

Upon his release from prison, he told CBS Chicago that he believed he “was sent to prison for practicing politics,” but also admitted to having made “mistakes.”

Months after his release, he filed a federal lawsuit claiming his removal from office by the Illinois Senate following his 2009 impeachment trial was unconstitutional and sought the ability to run for state or local elected office in Illinois.

In 2024, a judge issued a ruling in Blagojevich’s filed lawsuit seeking to overturn the ban on him running for state or local office. The judge’s ruling utilized allusions to Dr. Seuss to underline their message. 

“Read generally Dr. Seuss, Marvin K. Mooney Will You Please Go Now! (1972) (‘The time has come. The time has come. The time is now. Just Go. Go. GO! I don’t care how. You can go by foot. You can go by cow. Marvin K. Mooney, will you please go now!’),” U.S. District Judge Steven Seeger wrote. 

Blagojevich and Mr. Trump have worked together in the past. He appeared in Season 3 of the reality competition show “Celebrity Apprentice,” in which he was “fired” by Mr. Trump during the season’s run.

In fact, Blagojevich mentioned Mr. Trump — then not yet president or a presidential candidate — in the hours before reporting to prison in 2012.

“I got fired by Donald Trump,” Blagojevich said at the time. “This thing I’ve got to do now is worse.”

Could Blagojevich be named ambassador to Serbia?

The news of the likely pardon sets in motion a possible political revival. While Blagojevich remains barred from holding elected office in Illinois after his impeachment from office, there is now word he could be named ambassador to Serbia in the new Trump White House.

In 1999, Blagojevich, who has Serbian roots, joined the Rev. Jesse Jackson as Jackson helped broker the release of three American prisoners in Serbia. Blagojevich was a U.S. congressman at the time.

Now, 26 years and a political lifetime later, Blagojevich may be dispatched back to the region of his ancestors by the very man who released him from prison early — as the Rod Blagojevich story takes another unexpected turn.

The political land mines Blagojevich faced resemble much of Trump’s political career. Patrick Fitzgerald, the former U.S. attorney who prosecuted Blagojevich, represented former FBI Director James Comey, whom President Trump fired from the agency in 2017.

Comey was working in the private sector during the Blagojevich investigation and indictment.

Former special counsel Robert Mueller, who oversaw the investigation into ties between Russia and Mr. Trump’s 2016 campaign, was FBI director during the investigation into Blagojevich.

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