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-Lurid Crime Tales- | |
Refrigerator Bill sentencing of 27-33 years recommended | |
2009-11-08 | |
![]() Jefferson, 62, will be sentenced by federal Judge T.S. Ellis III on Nov. 13. The prosecution's sentencing memorandum suggests that Jefferson, who served 18 years in Congress, may have hidden resources and "poses a significant risk of flight,'' and ought to be immediately remanded to the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service after sentencing at the Alexandria, Va., courthouse. If Ellis follows the U.S. attorney's office recommendations, Jefferson would face by far the longest prison term ever imposed for congressional corruption, dwarfing the sentences meted out in such famous scandals as Abscam, Koreagate and Wedetch. In March 2006, Former Rep. Randy ``Duke'' Cunningham of California was sentenced to eight years and four months in prison for taking $2.4 million in bribes to help military contractors win government contracts. At the time, prosecutors described the sentence as longest ever handed down for a member or former member of Congress in a corruption case. "Because Congressman Jefferson's crimes against the people of the United States were exceptional in their sheer number, length and breadth, the United States respectfully requests that this Court sentence the defendant within the applicable guideline range,'' the memorandum states. "While the guidelines sentence calculated by the Probation Office is lengthy, it is appropriate, in that Congressman Jefferson's criminal activities have surely caused or substantially added to the loss of public confidence and trust in our nation's highest levels of government.'' Later, the 25-page memorandum states, "A sentence within the guidelines range will communicate to Congressman Jefferson that his repeated attempts to sell his office were not only criminal, they were egregious. ... A severe sentence would send the message to the public that such egregious and criminal behavior will not be tolerated in our society.'' As to his flight risk, the government asserted that despite being in bankruptcy, Jefferson may have sufficient hidden resources and contacts in Africa to try to make his escape between sentencing and being remanded to prison if he has the opportunity. According to the memorandum, "law enforcement agents learned of several wire transfers from offshore territories into U.S. financial accounts that were either controlled by the defendant or whose proceeds were made available for his benefit.'' The government's conclusion: "Given the age of the defendant, the severity of the sentence calculated by the Probation Office, the defendant's frequent travel overseas and unexplained wire transfers from overseas locations to financial accounts used by the defendant, the defendant cannot rebut the presumption at sentencing that he is a risk of flight.'' Jefferson is planning to appeal his verdict, and his attorneys may submit a reply to the government memorandum next week.
Jefferson claimed he was not acting in his official capacity as a member of Congress when he was working on those deals and therefore the payments were not bribes. | |
Posted by:Fred |
#2 You see, he did not have his official "Member of Congress" hat on, so then of course he was not officially taking bribes just payment. You understand now. |
Posted by: Steven 2009-11-08 23:45 |
#1 I'm betting 2.7 to 3.3 months, SUSPENDED, with a cookie and an "atta boy..." |
Posted by: M. Murcek 2009-11-08 12:02 |