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US feds win cold cash case after Stevens fiasco
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 06 - 08 - 2009


A jury handed U.S. federal
prosecutors a victory in finding an ex-congressman guilty
of bribery, racketeering and other charges, four months
after a corruption conviction against former Alaska Sen.
Ted Stevens was tossed aside in an embarrassing blow to the
Justice Department, AP reported.
William Jefferson, a Democrat who represented parts of New
Orleans for almost 20 years, was convicted Wednesday on 11
corruption counts including money laundering after a
two-month trial in Virginia that included evidence of
$90,000 in cash from an FBI sting found stashed in the
freezer of Jefferson's home.
Jefferson was stoic as the verdict was read. Asked how he
was doing, he said, «I'm holding up.» His attorney said
he plans an appeal.
Prosecutors pursued an aggressive indictment, charging
Jefferson on 16 counts that were far more serious than
those levied against Stevens, who was convicted in October
of lying on Senate forms about home renovations and gifts
he received from wealthy friends.
Five months later, the Justice Department asked an angry
judge to drop all charges against the longtime senator,
admitting that prosecutors withheld important evidence from
the defense.
In Jefferson's case, the government alleged that he took
more than $400,000 in bribes and sought millions more in
exchange for using his influence to broker business deals
in Africa.
Defense lawyers argued that federal bribery laws are
narrowly written and were never intended to ensnare the
conduct alleged against Jefferson, and some legal experts
agreed. The defense said Jefferson was acting as a private
business consultant in brokering the deals.
Interestingly, the charge most closely associated with the
most famous evidence _ the freezer money wrapped in foil
and hidden in boxes of frozen pie crust _ was one of five
counts on which Jefferson was acquitted.
Still, the guilty verdicts represent a clear victory for
the Justice Department, who said Jefferson hid the bribes
by funneling money disguised as consulting fees through
sham companies controlled by his wife and brother.
U.S. Attorney Dana Boente commented afterward that «no
person, not even a congressman, is above the law.
Ninety-thousand dollars in a freezer is not a gray area.
It's a violation.»
And U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis rejected the defense's
efforts to get the case tossed out.
The charges Jefferson originally faced could have landed
him in jail for 235 years. Prosecutor Mark Lytle said
Jefferson could be sentenced on Oct. 30 to more than 20
years in prison under federal sentencing guidelines. The
62-year-old technically faces up to 150 years.
Jefferson rose from the poverty of the Louisiana Delta
parishes to prominence as a street-savvy political
tactician.
Known for a sharp ability to work the vote, he held his
congressional seat for nearly two decades with strong
backing of black voters in New Orleans, where neighborhood
political organizations were the backbone of politics,
especially before Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Even after was
accused of taking bribes, those well-cultivated voters
still re-elected him in 2006.
Some remain on his side.
The Rev. Aubrey Wallace, a Baptist church assistant pastor
in suburban Jefferson Parish, said the verdict doesn't
erode his belief in the ex-congressman's innocence or his
view that the prosecution was politically motivated.
«We're going to rally around him,» he said. «I'll be a
supporter until the last breath in my mouth.»
Like Stevens, who lost the seat he held for 40 years
because of his case, the bribery scandal cost Jefferson his
spot.
Louisiana's first African-American congressman since
Reconstruction lost in December to Republican attorney Anh
«Joseph» Cao, a year after a grand jury indicted him.
«This is a difficult day for the people of New Orleans
and Louisiana, but now we can turn the page on a negative
past to focus on a positive future. My thoughts and prayers
go out to Mr. Jefferson and his family during this time,»
Cao said Wednesday.
Had Jefferson been acquitted, he might have considered a
run for his former congressional seat.
Pollster Silas Lee, who has studied black politics in New
Orleans for many years, thinks Jefferson's loss, coupled
with the convictions, have ended his political career.
«Once he lost, it automatically moved the city on, a
changing of the guard,» Lee said.
Jefferson had been under investigation since March 2005,
and in August that year, FBI agents searched his Washington
home and found the freezer stash. 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 there 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 in the
freezer.
Jefferson will remain free on bond until sentencing.
Jurors must return to the courthouse Thursday to consider
whether Jefferson has to forfeit more than $450,000 in
alleged bribe receipts now that he has been convicted.
Daniel Ritter, a Gretna, La., business owner, said he
thinks jurors got it right.
«I don't know how he was going to deny $90,000 in his
freezer,» he said. «You can't explain that. I think there
would have been mass hysteria if he was not found guilty.»


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