Posted by Jim Lindgren:

http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_12_07-2008_12_13.shtml#1229148771


   A qualified defense of Obama, Emanuel, and Obama�s staff if they did
   not turn in Blagojevich.

   This post is not for those demented souls who think that Rod
   Blagojevich�s approaches were so subtle that the Obama camp did not
   know that they was being shaken down. My [1]timeline, which has now
   become the conventional account, strongly suggests otherwise.

   And this post is also not for those Kool-Aid drinkers who think that
   Rahm Emanuel (or other staffer) was so incompetent or drunk with power
   that, knowing that their boss was being shaken down, they omitted to
   tell him, even while collecting Obama�s list of acceptable candidates
   and conveying it to Blagojevich. Staffers just don�t act like that �
   certainly not a new staffer in a transition period in a state from
   which the president hails.

   We don�t yet know if Obama�s staff turned in Blagojevich. If Obama�s
   telling the truth that he was unaware of what was going on, it�s
   extraordinarily unlikely that an Obama staffer reported Blagojevich,
   since I can�t imagine that someone in the Obama camp would have turned
   in Blagojevich without telling Obama first.

   So, for the purpose of this post only, let�s assume that none of
   Obama�s staff blew the whistle on Blagojevich.

   As I [2]pointed out before, the federal misprision statute has been
   conclusively interpreted not to punish mere silence; there must be
   something more for a conviction, such as accepting a benefit to keep
   silent. Nor would obstruction of justice be an easy charge against the
   Obama camp.

   So we are in the realm of ethics, not criminal law.

   In my opinion, whether it was reasonable for the Obama camp not to
   turn in Blagojevich depends on facts we don�t know yet. If Blagojevich
   himself offered an explicit quid pro quo in a conversation with
   Emanuel or David Axelrod, then I think the ethical thing would have
   been to turn him in to the FBI.

   But if Blagojevich was careful in his discussions with the Obama
   staffers, and the quid pro quo was instead delivered by others, then I
   think that it is a close question whether the Obama camp should have
   called the FBI.

   It is generally not prudent to make charges you can�t prove � and it
   would accomplish little to bring down just a Blagojevich staffer or a
   non-official intermediary. So, while I doubt that Blagojevich camp�s
   approaches were so subtle that they were misunderstood, they may have
   been indirect enough that a conviction would have seemed impossible.

   I think that it�s hindsight bias (based on the explicitness of the
   FBI�s wiretapped conversations) to think that that the Obama camp
   thought that, if they turned in Blagojevich, a conviction was likely.

   In my opinion, while the admirable course would have been to tip off
   the FBI, whether the Obama camp acted so deficiently that they acted
   unethically turns, not just on whether they knew they were being
   shaken down, but on what they reasonably thought could be proved
   against Blagojevich himself.

   One last point: according to [3]John Kass of the Chicago Tribune, Rahm
   Emanuel has not yet resigned his Congressional seat. Kass speculates
   it�s because the power behind the governor is Jimmy DeLeo (�DeLeo is
   also considered by some to be the real governor of Illinois�), who is
   also very close to Emanuel.

References

   1. http://volokh.com/posts/1228903890.shtml
   2. http://volokh.com/posts/1228903890.shtml
   3. 
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/chi-kass-12-dec12,0,723256.column

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