From the Sun-Times
Star witness draws Blagojevich into Rezko case
March 19, 2008
BY NATASHA KORECKI AND CHRIS FUSCO Staff Reporters
They were on a flight home from a political fund-raising swing to New York in
2003, businessman Stuart Levine testified today, when he thanked Gov. Blagojevich
for reappointing him to a state board.
Levine told jurors this morning at the corruption trial of indicted Blagojevich
fund-raiser Tony Rezko that Blagojevich responded: “Never discuss any
state board with me. You discuss them with Tony Rezko or Chris Kelly, but you
stick with us, and you’ll do very well for yourself.”
Levine told the jury how he interpreted that statement: “I took it to
mean I would have an opportunity to make a lot of money.”
The conversation with Blagojevich was among another round of bombshells Levine
dropped on his second day of testimony against Rezko. Levine, 62, of Highland
Park, has pleaded guilty to corruption schemes involving Rezko and is the star
prosecution witness against him.
Blagojevich is not accused of any wrongdoing and has denied ever telling Levine
he could profit from his administration.
Besides talking about the conversation with the governor, Levine said he and
Rezko discussed theor prospect of collaborating on illegal deals involving Blagojevich’s
administration during meetings at Rezko’s offices in 2003. He said Rezko
he “spoke very often and, in fact, went over decisions that Lon Monk”
— then the governor’s chief of staff — “would put into
place.”
According to Levine, “Mr. Rezko told me that all major decisions that
were made in the governor’s office were cleared by Mr. Monk through Mr.
Rezko.”
Levine said the discussions he had with Rezko about their relationship included
Levine’s roles on two state boards on which he sat: the Illinois Health
Facilities Planning Board and the state Teachers’ Retirement System board.
During one meeting, “I told Mr. Rezko up until this time I had not benefited
personally, financially from being a trustee of” TRS, Levine said. “As
I finished, — at that point in the conversation — Mr. Rezko said
to me, ‘Stuart, anything that I decide to do at TRS, you will be a partner
in.’
“I understood Mr. Rezko to mean if there are things he would like done,
and that my assistance was required, that any monies that would be earned from
doing that, he would share with me.”
Levine also said he understood “the nature of that conversation transcended
the relationship with the Teachers’ Retirement System” and included
Levine’s role as a health planning board member.
“I told Mr. Rezko that I was extraordinarily pleased to know him . . .
and I thought we could do a lot of business together,” Levine said.
By that, Levine testified, “I meant that there were deals, illegal deals,
that I could potentially bring to the Teachers’ Retirement System, and
perhaps to the Illinois Health Facilities Plan Board, and would like to go forward.”
After that, Levine said he and Rezko started to meet more frequently. Eventually,
another top Blagojevich fund-raiser, Christopher G. Kelly, began attending those
meetings, too, Levine said. He said Kelly was on the flight with him and the
governor returning from New York.