Blagojevich arrives home to questions, support: ‘You can do it, man!’

A news helicopter hovered high up loud. Reporters, photographers and camera men jammed, former governor and his wife on the street.

Wishers the loss of a small group of close. A woman, a survivor of breast cancer, as identified in his head, came the tears.

"Can chemo, radiation, I went through my brother in Joliet. The, man!" Charly was referring to the state prison in south-western districts.

Yet another surreal scene was one of the Ravenswood Manor neighborhood of West Sunnyside Wednesday.

Rod Blagojevich and his wife, Patti, was a dark Chrysler 300 back to the Federal Court in their Northwest Side home, where the former governor had brought the sobering 14-year-old prison.

Blagojevich said he tried to pinch, push through a crowd in his home and his porch.

But his book, he found time to send a copy of the Governor's autograph.

"He has just signed his name," Brian Vickers, 41, said later in Hazel Crest. "But it is important to me."

"I am a supporter of former governors and everything - office, impeachment, conviction and punishment in the extreme - it is a miscarriage of justice," he said. "In fact, his book."

Reporters shouted questions.

Supporters shouted: "Keep your head up," We love the governor "and" we are buddies. "

Blagojevich ignored reporters, but "Thank you" and other feelings of well-wishers.

A few minutes after shaking hands with his supporters was a Blagojevich aide escorted to his car and his wife.

"Which way?" Blagojevich media scrum, when asked, before quickly disappearing into his home.

A neighbor said his dog out to the end of the condemnation of television satellite trucks and reporters often go in the neighborhood of constipation since Blagojevich was arrested three years ago, was expected.

"Nothing I have said, except for" goodbye, "said a female reporter.