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Illinois powerbroker Cellini is sentenced to a year in prison

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In the end, as he stood before Zagel, Cellini said he regretted the pain he has caused his family and told the judge he accepted full responsibility, without being more specific.

Prosecutors argued that Cellini’s crimes had earned him 6 ½ to 8 years in prison, but they conceded his health called for a sentence just below that.

Cellini was convicted last November by a federal jury of conspiracy to commit extortion and of aiding and abetting in the solicitation of a bribe but was acquitted of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and attempted extortion. He had agreed to help try and squeeze Hollywood producer Thomas Rosenberg, who was seeking a contract to invest money for the Illinois Teachers’ Retirement System, for a campaign contribution for Blagojevich.

Prosecutors alleged that two of Blagojevich’s closest advisers, Antoin “Tony” Rezko and Christopher Kelly, targeted Rosenberg after learning he had not made contributions to the then-governor’s campaign even though his investment firm had a lucrative deal with TRS.

Cellini, working with corrupt TRS board member Stuart Levine, was to relay the message to Rosenberg in 2004 that a $220 million allocation from TRS had been bricked until the contribution was made.

Levine was a key witness in the trial, but the defense chipped away at his credibility. Prosecutors also had secretly recorded phone calls between Levine and Cellini to support the allegations that Cellini joined the conspiracy and agreed to deliver the message to Rosenberg.

The plan, however, went awry when Rosenberg blew up at the extortion attempt and threatened to go to the authorities. In the end, he kept his state business.

In arguing for probation, defense attorney Dan Webb downplayed Cellini’s criminal conduct in the conspiracy, saying it was limited to about a week during which he made a series of phone calls regarding the conspiracy. It was a small amount of time, considering Cellini’s long history of honest work in Springfield trying to broker deals among parties.

“He spent his entire life in politics as a peace-maker,” Webb said.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Julie Porter cast Cellini in an entirely different light, saying he did not “stumble” into a conspiracy but used his years as a Springfield power broker to get access to the TRS board and then used it as “leverage.”

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