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Illinois powerbroker Cellini is sentenced to a year in prison

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CHICAGO (MCT) — William Cellini, a longtime Republican lobbyist and fundraiser, had operated in the shadows of Illinois government, cozying up to politicians in both parties to build formidable clout and expand his influence and wealth.

On Thursday, Cellini — convicted last year as part of the takedown of the scandal-plagued Blagojevich administration — stood before a federal judge in a packed courtroom and pleaded for mercy, asking to be spared time behind bars in “the twilight of his remaining years.”

“These five years have been the most difficult and trying of my life. ... My health is broken,” Cellini, who turns 78 next month, said. “My life expectancy is very short.”

But U.S. District Judge James Zagel refused the plea for a sentence of probation, saying Cellini made a series of “unwise decisions” when he joined with other Springfield insiders, including Blagojevich’s closest advisers, and conspired to extort a Hollywood producer for a campaign contribution.

“What he did was not an accident,” the judge said after noting Cellini’s years of experience. “It is the nature and culture of Springfield, and Washington, for that matter, that people like to be able to be thought of as people who have influence. That is hard to give up even as you are aging.”

Zagel then sentenced Cellini to one year and a day in prison. Under federal sentencing rules, Cellini is expected to serve 10 months.

There was little reaction in the courtroom, which was filled with Cellini supporters.

Cellini is the last major defendant in the wide-ranging Operation Board Games investigation to be sentenced. Of the roughly 15 convictions in the probe — which included Blagojevich, several of his top advisers and a former Chicago alderman — Cellini stood out as someone accused of using decades of work as a lobbyist and fundraiser to get close to the decision-makers and benefit from it.

“I think there is something to be said for incarceration for a person in Bill Cellini’s position,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Gary Shapiro after the sentencing. “In certain communities, sentences of incarceration do send a message and this is a small community we are talking about — the bipartisan cabal of Illinois, the people who are the behind-the-scenes folks that fuel the corruption and raise the money. Those people pay attention to things like this and they pay attention when someone who is almost 78 goes to prison.”

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