Quote from bigdavediode:
Yes, he served 40 days for not filing his taxes in 1971, 12 years before his election. By contrast, "a prominent, well-connected Chicago attorney was charged with not filing from 1973â1975; he was neither prosecuted, nor charged a penalty."
With shameful equivocation like that, you get the government you deserve.
Fuck off you judgmental asshole. You HAVE NO IDEA if Obama has ever done the same as Stevens. Do you?
I can already predict your reply. 'Obama did no wrong or less he'd be indicted." Fine. So by the same token Harold Washington DID WRONG because he went to jail. Just because Wikipedia says someone else did the same crime and didn't go to prison doesn't excuse Washington breaking Federal tax law. I know a half dozen traders who went to prison for curb trading. Two years later it was MADE LEGAL. Can those traders now get NFA registered? Hell no.
Here's Obama's pal Rezko.
Gov. Blagojevich and his wife, Patti, upgraded their Northwest Side bungalow in 2003 by renovating their family room and building a deck.
What makes the home improvement project noteworthy is who Illinois' first family put in charge of it: a company owned by now-indicted political fund-raiser and real estate developer Antoin "Tony" Rezko.
FUND-RAISER SOUGHT FAVORS
Chicago Construction Services began overseeing the Blagojevich work in July 2003, six months after Rezko began pushing the governor to place friends and associates in key state posts. The project took place during a 16-month period in which Patti Blagojevich, a real estate broker, netted about $86,000 from Rezko-orchestrated real estate deals.
The work on the governor's home wasn't the only time that Rezko mixed his real estate dealings with politics. Last year, his wife, Rita, struck a deal with Sen. Barack Obama that enabled Obama to buy a piece of her adjoining property to expand the size of his yard in the Kenwood neighborhood.
In 2003, Rezko sold a riverfront town house to Rep. Luis Gutierrez for $434,900, far less than what the congressman's neighbors paid for their properties. Last March, Gutierrez sold the home for $610,000, a 41 percent profit. The congressman insisted he was given no special treatment by Rezko.
In December 2002, Rezko was involved in a real estate deal in which Patti Blagojevich got a $47,557 commission, the Chicago Sun-Times reported in November.
Also, Patti Blagojevich has disclosed that she earned nearly $39,000 off Rezko-related transactions during the first four months of 2004.
Ottenhoff said Rezko's tie to home improvement work at the Blagojevich house didn't pose a conflict of interest, even though Rezko was a fund-raiser and had sought government favors.
âThey paid full price for the work that was done," she said, referring to the state's first family. "Where's there a conflict?â
http://www.suntimes.com/news/metro/blagojevich/921836,blagohome021807.article