Former Congressman William Jefferson Found Guilty

Former Louisiana Congressman William Jefferson was found guilty Wednesday of taking bribes. A Federal jury convicted the New Orleans Democrat on 11 of 16 counts in a case in which FBI agents found $90,000 in his freezer. The former Congressman was accused of accepting more than $400,000 in bribes and seeking millions more in exchange for brokering business deals in West Africa.

His defense team argued that Congressman Jefferson was acting as a private business consultant in brokering the deals and that his actions did not constitute bribery under Federal law. Prosecutors, in turn, accused Jefferson of hiding bribes by funneling money disguised as consulting fees through sham companies controlled by his wife and brother. In a separate case,  Brenda Jefferson, the youngest sister of embattled Congressman, pleaded guilty in June 2008 to concealing her knowledge of a conspiracy to skim money from nonprofit groups controlled by relatives. It was a family affair.

More from the New Orleans Times-Picayune:

Jefferson faces sentencing Oct. 30 by Judge T.S. Ellis III, who earlier meted out stiff sentences for lesser figures in the case. According to the U.S. attorney's office, Jefferson faced 235 years in prison if convicted on all counts. Chief prosecutor Mark Lytle said Jefferson could face more than 20 years in prison under federal sentencing guidelines.

With Jefferson, 62, facing what could be the equivalent of a life sentence, prosecutors asked Ellis to remand him to jail as a flight risk. But the judge allowed him to remain free pending his sentencing. A forfeiture hearing will be held Thursday to decide what assets Jefferson will have to surrender.

In a post-verdict news conference, Jefferson referred all questions to his attorney Robert Trout. When asked how he was holding up, the former congressman said, "I'm holding up."

Trout said he was very disappointed in the verdict and did not believe that the government had proved its case. He said he was planning to file an appeal.

William Jefferson represents much of what is wrong with politics today. These individuals seek public office not to serve the public interest but in the cause of their own self-aggrandizement and self-enrichment. A life sentence seems wholly warranted.

Tags: congressman william jefferson, Corruption & Governance Issues (all tags)

Comments

1 Comment

Where do we draw the boundary of treason

In a very direct way, I agree with the author of this post. It drew out of me something I had long denied. But now must face.

If our representatives knowingly and willfully subvert the democratic process for bribery - whether blatant - as in the case of William Jefferson  - or with the wink, and the nod - as in the case of lobbyism.  What difference is it?

Lobbyism should be a felony crime, and I slowly write as I consider carefully the authors conclusion. My fingers warring the keyboard while my mind turns over the implications.

It should be considered a crime of high treason.

It is certainly a high crime and misdemeanor, is it not?  And the fact that William Jefferson is a Democrat is not entirely irrelevant. It seems to me that the Democratic party has had a brief respite from this kind of thing, thanks to guys like Howard Dean - but we can rest assured its only a respite - the lobbyists get paid each week their salary checks by Corporate America - for example, Insurance companies in the wake of declining health and coverage - in America - have posted a 430% gain in their profits since the past ten years or so - they can write the big checks. And they're writing them to Democrats right now.

This is a party of smart government: finding Democrats like William Jefferson, and in the words of the senator from "the Manchurian Candidate"... throwing everything in the book at them.

As well as the party of smart government to realize that 90,000.00 can be raised online in about 4 days direct deposit to your bank account
in settled funds , 7 days.

More time to you  Charles

by Trey Rentz 2009-08-06 07:12AM | 0 recs

Diaries

Advertise Blogads


----------- myDD - skin -----------