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Krug: When is enough enough?

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OK, so let’s define “drug problem.”

If you are former Bears wide receiver Sam Hurd, and stand accused of trying to become the cocaine king of greater Chicago, you clearly have a drug problem.

If you are the despicable, deposed and deviant former Illinois Gov. “Hot” Rod Blagojevich, you say you have a drug problem.

Hurd, who tried to buy as much as 10 kilograms of cocaine and an additional 1,000 pounds of marijuana from undercover agents last week, appears destined for federal prison. Blagojevich is headed for federal prison. Blagojevich will get there first. Given the sentencing parameters for the crimes federal agents say he committed, Hurd will be clogging up our penal system for a longer stretch of time.

Hurd had it made. He was an overachieving high school player who grew into an elite college player at Northern Illinois, and became one in that microscopic segment of our population who actually made it to the NFL. He not only achieved that level of play, but has played five years in the league. He had plenty of money. His contract would have paid him $4.15 million over the next three years. And, undoubtedly, he had access to all of the trappings that come along with being a man in his 20s with millions.

Blagojevich, too, had it made. He was an overachieving son of an immigrant steelworker father from Serbia. He worked as a child as a shoeshine boy and pizza delivery guy to pay his way through college and then law school. He won a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives and then two terms as governor of Illinois. He jetted across the state in a private plane, lived the high life in a beautiful home in Ravenswood Manor on the city’s near northwest side, and appeared destined for a charmed, high-profile life.

What we’re left to wonder with Hurd is why someone like him, who seemingly has it made, who was paid $1.3 million as a bonus on top of a salary that will average $850,000 over the next three seasons, would need more. Only Hurd could answer that, and perhaps that will be relevant to his case.

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