William Jefferson - Indictment

Rep. Jefferson is being indicted today. His indictment was pending during his election in 2006.

What should happen to him? Should he resign? Be censured? Continue to serve?

Grand Jury Expected to Indict Congressman Jefferson on Bribery Charges
Monday , June 04, 2007

WASHINGTON ? Associated Press

An indictment charging Rep. William Jefferson, D-La., in a long-running bribery investigation is being announced Monday, federal officials said.

The indictment is being handed up in U.S. District Court in Alexandria. A press conference was being organized for late Monday in Washington to discuss the case.

A Justice Department official familiar with the case said the indictment outlining the evidence against Jefferson is more than an inch thick and charges the congressman with crimes that could keep him in prison for up to 200 years. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case.

Almost two years ago, in August 2005, investigators raided Jefferson’s home in Louisiana and found $90,000 in cash stuffed into a box in his freezer.

Jefferson, 63, whose Louisiana district includes New Orleans, has said little about the case publicly but has maintained his innocence. He was re-elected last year despite the looming investigation.

Jefferson, in Louisiana on Monday, could not immediately be reached for comment.

Two of Jefferson’s associates have already struck plea bargains with prosecutors and have been sentenced.

Brett Pfeffer, a former congressional aide, admitted soliciting bribes on Jefferson’s behalf and was sentenced to eight years in prison.

Another Jefferson associate, Louisville, Ky., telecommunications executive Vernon Jackson, pleaded guilty to paying between $400,000 and $1 million in bribes to Jefferson in exchange for his assistance securing business deals in Nigeria and other African nations. Jackson was sentenced to more than seven years in prison.

Both Pfeffer and Jackson agreed to cooperate in the case against Jefferson in exchanges for their pleas.

The impact of the case has stretched across continents and even roiled presidential politics in Nigeria. According to court records, Jefferson told associates that he needed cash to pay bribes to the country’s vice president, Atiku Abubakar.

Abubakar denied the allegations, which figured prominently in that country’s presidential elections in April. Abubakar ran for the presidency and finished third.

Court records indicate that Jefferson was videotape taking a $100,000 cash bribe from an FBI informant. Most of that money later turned up in a freezer in Jefferson’s home.

In May 2006, the FBI raided Jefferson’s congressional office, the first such raid on a sitting congressman’s Capitol office. That move sparked a constitutional debate over whether the executive branch stepped over its boundary.

The legality of the raid is still being argued on appeal. House leaders objected to the search saying it was an unconstitutional intrusion on the lawmaking process. The FBI said the raid was necessary because Jefferson and his legal team had failed to respond to requests for documents.

I’m still amazed at how he easily won his seat, despite finding a freezer full of cash in his basement. Its disturbing to see people vote for someone because he can bring benefits into the their district all the while being caught with his hand in the cookie jar.

Prison. Like any thief.

More congressmen and senators should see retirement in a federal penitentiary rather than the customary 500k per year jobs lobbying for the companies they were supposedly regulating.

[quote]hedo wrote:
What should happen to him? Should he resign? Be censured? Continue to serve?
[/quote]
As long as he’s a democrat nothing should happen. If he were a republican then he should get the chair.

Lock up the bastard, he’s not above the law.

[quote]Mick28 wrote:
Wow a sleazy politician caught on the take. I never thought I’d hear of such a thing. What’s the world coming to. ;)[/quote]

… Slowpoke is slow…
lulz
(I need to get off the internet…)

[quote]hedo wrote:
Rep. Jefferson is being indicted today. His indictment was pending during his election in 2006.

What should happen to him? Should he resign? Be censured? Continue to serve?

Grand Jury Expected to Indict Congressman Jefferson on Bribery Charges
Monday , June 04, 2007

WASHINGTON ? Associated Press

An indictment charging Rep. William Jefferson, D-La., in a long-running bribery investigation is being announced Monday, federal officials said.

The indictment is being handed up in U.S. District Court in Alexandria. A press conference was being organized for late Monday in Washington to discuss the case.

A Justice Department official familiar with the case said the indictment outlining the evidence against Jefferson is more than an inch thick and charges the congressman with crimes that could keep him in prison for up to 200 years. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case.

Almost two years ago, in August 2005, investigators raided Jefferson’s home in Louisiana and found $90,000 in cash stuffed into a box in his freezer.

Jefferson, 63, whose Louisiana district includes New Orleans, has said little about the case publicly but has maintained his innocence. He was re-elected last year despite the looming investigation.

Jefferson, in Louisiana on Monday, could not immediately be reached for comment.

Two of Jefferson’s associates have already struck plea bargains with prosecutors and have been sentenced.

Brett Pfeffer, a former congressional aide, admitted soliciting bribes on Jefferson’s behalf and was sentenced to eight years in prison.

Another Jefferson associate, Louisville, Ky., telecommunications executive Vernon Jackson, pleaded guilty to paying between $400,000 and $1 million in bribes to Jefferson in exchange for his assistance securing business deals in Nigeria and other African nations. Jackson was sentenced to more than seven years in prison.

Both Pfeffer and Jackson agreed to cooperate in the case against Jefferson in exchanges for their pleas.

The impact of the case has stretched across continents and even roiled presidential politics in Nigeria. According to court records, Jefferson told associates that he needed cash to pay bribes to the country’s vice president, Atiku Abubakar.

Abubakar denied the allegations, which figured prominently in that country’s presidential elections in April. Abubakar ran for the presidency and finished third.

Court records indicate that Jefferson was videotape taking a $100,000 cash bribe from an FBI informant. Most of that money later turned up in a freezer in Jefferson’s home.

In May 2006, the FBI raided Jefferson’s congressional office, the first such raid on a sitting congressman’s Capitol office. That move sparked a constitutional debate over whether the executive branch stepped over its boundary.

The legality of the raid is still being argued on appeal. House leaders objected to the search saying it was an unconstitutional intrusion on the lawmaking process. The FBI said the raid was necessary because Jefferson and his legal team had failed to respond to requests for documents.

[/quote]

Most important question: Did Fox News cover this?

If they mentioned it, then all charges should be immediately dropped.

In other news, I agree with liftus’ sarcasm.

The end of the world is nigh!!!

JeffR

[quote]LIFTICVSMAXIMVS wrote:
hedo wrote:
What should happen to him? Should he resign? Be censured? Continue to serve?

As long as he’s a democrat nothing should happen. If he were a republican then he should get the chair.
[/quote]

Excellent.

[quote]Zap Branigan wrote:
LIFTICVSMAXIMVS wrote:
hedo wrote:
What should happen to him? Should he resign? Be censured? Continue to serve?

As long as he’s a democrat nothing should happen. If he were a republican then he should get the chair.

Excellent.[/quote]

Just trying to polarize criminal behavior–just like always happens on these threads.

The dude who indicted DeLay had to empanel quite a few Grand Juries before he found one with enough libs and 60s-hippies to indict DeLay.

Wonder how many it’ll take to indict a Dem videotaped taking the cash?

[quote]LIFTICVSMAXIMVS wrote:
hedo wrote:
What should happen to him? Should he resign? Be censured? Continue to serve?

As long as he’s a democrat nothing should happen. If he were a republican then he should get the chair.
[/quote]

Funny!
Who wants to wager on the fact that the bastard will get away with it?

[quote]pat36 wrote:
Funny!
Who wants to wager on the fact that the bastard will get away with it?
[/quote]
He’s black. He isn’t getting away with shit.

Unless he was specifically working with law enforcement in a sting, he’s toast. It’s about damned time they were able to bring charges!

[quote]LIFTICVSMAXIMVS wrote:
pat36 wrote:
Funny!
Who wants to wager on the fact that the bastard will get away with it?

He’s black. He isn’t getting away with shit.
[/quote]

So was O.J. Jefferson will walk and keep the money.

[quote]pat36 wrote:
LIFTICVSMAXIMVS wrote:
So was O.J. Jefferson will walk and keep the money.[/quote]

Are we talking about a Louisiana or Southern California? White people in the south don’t have as many issues with race guilt. Not only that but an all black jury would probably still convict him.

[quote]LIFTICVSMAXIMVS wrote:

Are we talking about a Louisiana or Southern California? White people in the south don’t have as many issues with race guilt. Not only that but an all black jury would probably still convict him.[/quote]

Well, since the charges are filed in a federal district court in Alexandria, Virginia, we won’t have to worry about a Louisiana jury.

[quote]LIFTICVSMAXIMVS wrote:
pat36 wrote:
LIFTICVSMAXIMVS wrote:
So was O.J. Jefferson will walk and keep the money.

Are we talking about a Louisiana or Southern California? White people in the south don’t have as many issues with race guilt. Not only that but an all black jury would probably still convict him.[/quote]

I guess we’ll find out! I predict he’ll walk. I hope I am wrong, I was wrong about the Enron guys. I thought they were going to walk.