He is right out of a Frank Capra movie–a clean-cut crime fighter who lives to bring down the bad guys–but in the current Illinois Senate seat mess, Patrick Fitzgerald had to make a hard choice that could eventually let Rod Blagojevich off the hook: Should he try to stop the crime before it happens or nail the wrongdoer but only after the damage has been done?
The results of his decision to go public prematurely can be seen in a New York Times analysis under the headline, “In Blagojevich Case, Is it a Crime, or Just Talk?” that explores the fine line between political wheeling-dealing and a prosecutable crime:
“Mr. Fitzgerald’s decision to bypass a grand jury initially could signal a belief on his part that he did not yet have a fully prosecutable case on his hand, though it appears to have been prompted at least in part by the publication…of an article that tipped off Mr. Blagojevich that investigators were listening in on his conversations.
“Mr. Fitzgerald has also said he had been worried that if he did not intervene, Mr. Blagojevich might go ahead with some of his schemes, including appointing a successor to Mr. Obama.”
Just so…
















