Ex-congressman gets 13 years in freezer cash case

Former Democratic Louisiana Congressman William Jefferson, left, arrives at U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Va. on Friday, Nov. 13, 2009 for sentencing in his bribery case accompanied by his wife Andrea Jefferson. Jefferson was convicted on charges including bribery and racketeering. Prosecutors said he took in nearly half a million dollars in exchange for using his influence to broker business deals in Africa. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) - A former Louisiana congressman who famously stashed cash in his freezer was sentenced Friday to 13 years in prison for taking hundreds of thousands in bribes in exchange for using his influence to broker business deals in Africa.
The sentence handed down in suburban Washington was far less than the nearly 30 years prosecutors had sought for William Jefferson, a Democrat who represented parts of New Orleans for nearly 20 years.
Agents investigating the case found $90,000 wrapped in foil and hidden in boxes of frozen pie crusts in his freezer.
Prosecutors had asked a judge to follow federal guidelines and sentence him to at least 27 years. The defense asked for less than 10 years, arguing a stiffer sentence would be far longer than those imposed on congressmen convicted of similar crimes in recent years, none of whom was sentenced to more than a decade.
Jefferson said nothing in court after he was sentenced. He was convicted in August of 11 counts, including bribery and racketeering. Prosecutors at his two-month trial said he took roughly $500,000 in bribes and sought millions more. He was acquitted of five other charges, including the one most closely associated with the money in his freezer.
The investigation started in March 2005. In August of that year, FBI agents searched Jefferson’s Washington home and found the cash. Prosecutors said he had planned to use the money to pay a bribe to the then-vice president of Nigeria to secure a multimillion-dollar telecommunications deal there, an accusation Jefferson denied.
The money ended up in the freezer after a disgruntled businesswoman, Lori Mody, agreed to wear a wire after telling the FBI she had been cheated out of $3.5 million in deals brokered by Jefferson. The jury saw videotape of Mody handing over a suitcase filled with $100,000 cash outside an Arlington hotel. Most of that money was recovered from the freezer.
The defense argued that Jefferson was acting as a private business consultant in brokering the deals and his actions did not constitute bribery.
New Orleans voters had long been loyal to Jefferson, who in 1991 became Louisiana’s first African-American congressman since Reconstruction. He rose from the poverty of the Louisiana Delta parishes to prominence as a street-savvy political tactician.
He was re-elected in 2006 even after news of the bribery scandal broke but was indicted and then lost to Republican attorney Anh “Joseph” Cao this past December.
Tags: alexandria, louisiana, louisiana democrats, new orleans, SDNN, u.s. congress scandal, virginia, william jefferson
- Suspicious object prompts school evacuation
72 - Adam Lambert: Get the birthday cake ready
38 - Hemet woman arrested after Bank of America robbed
36 - Lake Elsinore teen, 13, killed after being struck by pickup
30 - Teachable Moments: Sally Smith off Serra site council at packed meeting
29 - Tickets still available for Adam Lambert's Indio concert
29 - Menifee USD pulls dictionaries due to explicit word
25 - Salm: Think our teachers are doing a lousy job? You try doing it
24 - Feds: Phony U.S. Marshal made it into S.D. airport with 'prisoner'
22 - Opponents to high-speed rail route through Rose Canyon stand firm
19
- Hundreds attend MSJC foundation gala at Temecula winery The gala is the foundation's second signature event to raise funds for student scholarships, faculty mini grants and other philanthropic endeavors.
- State route 15 reopened; jumper comes down Authorities have reopened all freeway lanes at the interchange State Route 15 and SR-94 in eastern San Diego after detaining that apparently suicidal man who was standing on an overpass there, according to the California Highway Patrol. The pedestrian was taken into custody without incident.
- Air2Air Ends Moon Program Sponsored By: Air2Air The 2011 budget proposal for NASA only addresses fueling spacecraft in orbit, new types of engines to accelerate spacecraft through space, and other support development programs.
- Settlement nets janitorial employees $100K A settlement announced on Tuesday resolves charges that a contractor did not provide adequate funds to a subcontractor, depriving janitorial employees in San Diego County and Los Angeles of social security, disability and unemployment insurance.
- California Budget Crisis Diaries: State spends $75 mil on furnishings and more A new report shows office expenditures hit about $75 million last budget year despite the $25 billion budget hole.
- Jury's verdict has Murrieta man 'dumbfounded,' but he faces long prison term Ryan Mickey faces 25 years to life in prison, the same term he would have faced if he had been convicted of murder.
BlogsAir Charter, Airports & AviationAir2Air Ends Moon Program25 minutes, 26 seconds ago Giving’em the BusinessWhat businesses can learn from the Leno-Conan debacle2 hours, 30 minutes ago A More Perfect UnionPeterson: San Diego could still be the ‘Enron by the Sea’7 hours, 3 minutes ago Blogs‘Twilight’ star wows Temecula teens21 hours, 46 minutes ago San Diego at Work BlogElected Officials Sponsor Job Fairs in San Diego22 hours, 40 minutes ago Giving’em the BusinessFinancial fitness: Estate tax planning 2010, or nailing Jell-O to the wall1 day, 3 hours ago |
|
