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Jesse Jackson Jr Pulls a Modified Giffords

 
 
joefromchicago
 
  3  
Reply Wed 21 Nov, 2012 02:47 pm
@JPB,
JPB wrote:

So, yes, she'll probably get elected to fill his seat in Congress.

I have no doubts. After all, Chicagoans just reelected a guy to the Illinois general assembly who is currently under indictment and who had recently been expelled from the House. "Under federal investigation," in comparison, is like getting a merit badge.
0 Replies
 
OmSigDAVID
 
  2  
Reply Fri 23 Nov, 2012 12:05 pm
@hawkeye10,
hawkeye10 wrote:

The deprivation of the citizens was all about how getting caught doing illegal acts is depressing. Not a good enough reason to leave the chair empty for nearly half a year before even beginning to look for an occupent.
The chair is less dangerous MT than full.
Give him a break. Let him recover at his own natural speed.





David
0 Replies
 
hawkeye10
 
  1  
Reply Sat 9 Feb, 2013 02:07 pm
Quote:
Former U.S. Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. has signed a plea deal with prosecutors who were investigating potential financial improprieties, according to a source close to Jackson's family.

Lawyers representing Jackson did not return CNN phone calls Friday, and the U.S. Attorney's office in Washington had no comment when asked about the Jackson case.

Last year, a law enforcement official told CNN that the FBI and federal prosecutors in Washington were investigating Jackson for possible financial improprieties. On Friday, the source told CNN that investigators are also looking at the possible involvement of Jackson's wife, Sandi Jackson, in those alleged improprieties. This official did not know if she might be charged in the investigation.

Sandi Jackson stepped down from the Chicago City Council on January 15, saying in a letter to Mayor Rahm Emanuel that she could not "deny my commitment to those most important personal responsibilities" of being a wife and mother.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2013/02/08/jesse-jackson-jr-signs-plea-deal/?hpt=hp_t2

and the House is still investigating. it seems that the ploy failed, that after all of the victim power plays that dear old dad has pulled over the years that there is little tolerance for the same BS from the son. Dad does not have many gullible friends left either.
0 Replies
 
hawkeye10
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Feb, 2013 01:05 am
Quote:
By Dana Milbank, Wednesday, February 20, 4:55 PM

Jesse Jackson Jr. arrived in court wearing a leather bracelet, not the gold-plated Rolex watch he bought with $43,350 in federal campaign cash.

The former congressman’s head was bare, unadorned by the Michael Jackson fedora, purchased with $4,600 from the campaign kitty.

His wife, at his side, eschewed the reversible mink parka, procured with $1,200 in campaign money from Edwards-Lowell furrier of Beverly Hills.

Those purchases — part of $750,000 that Jackson and his wife, Sandi, took from his campaign coffers for personal use — led the couple to enter his-and-hers guilty pleas Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Washington.

Their years-long spending spree — which included everything from movie tickets to a cruise and from health-club dues to an Eddie Van Halen guitar — has the Illinois Democrat looking at four to five years in prison, assuming Judge Robert Wilkins follows guidelines in his June 28 sentencing.

Jackson already has served the sentence of public disgrace, resigning his seat after heading off to the Mayo Clinic for treatment of bipolar disorder. His father, the famed civil rights leader, sat in the first row of the audience as his namesake stood before the judge, dabbing his eyes and nose with a tissue, then weeping audibly as he entered his plea: “Guilty, Your Honor.”

Three times during the proceedings, the defendant looked over his shoulder at his wife, who entered her guilty plea a few hours later, and offered a weak smile, which she returned. The last time, he mouthed the word “Sorry.”

In the hallway after the proceedings, a red-eyed Jackson spied Lynn Sweet from the Chicago Sun-Times. “Tell everybody back home I’m sorry I let them down, okay?” he asked her.

The spectacle generated particular interest because of Jackson’s famous name, his once-promising career, and because of the lurid details of his fall.

First there was the House ethics investigation of whether a supporter tried to buy President Obama’s Senate seat for Jackson. Then there was Jackson’s disappearance last year for medical treatment. Finally came the list of items purchased with campaign cash, including the Bruce Lee memorabilia ($10,105), the children’s furniture ($9,588), the Jimi Hendrix keepsakes ($2,775) and the $5,000 football signed by American presidents.

But in another sense, Jackson’s story is a tale often told in Washington: A public official amasses power and comes to think the rules don’t apply to him. Campaign funds are routinely abused — usually with impunity.

The late congressman John Murtha (D-Pa.) used campaign money to pay for near-weekly grocery runs. Former senator Rick Santorum’s political action committee supported the Pennsylvania Republican’s prodigious Starbucks habit and various forms of retail therapy. Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) spent more than $80,000 over five years at a Morton’s steakhouse in Washington.

Jackson’s problem was that he did what everybody else does — but he took it to a new level of excess. And that’s why he sat, in a fine blue suit, in court Wednesday in the matter of United States of America v. Jesse L. Jackson Jr. The judge made sure Jackson was fit to enter his guilty plea, asking him about his “employment experience” (his father’s presidential campaigns, 17 years in Congress) and his psychiatric care.

Any drugs or alcohol in the past 24 hours?

“No, sir,” Jackson replied, then reconsidered. “I did have a beer last night.”

Might that impair his judgment?

“I’ve never been more clear in my life,” Jackson said, stealing a look at his wife. He glanced back again after the judge mentioned the sentencing guidelines of 46 to 57 months, then he spoke with contrition when asked about the fraud charge.

“Sir, for years I lived in my campaign. I used money that should have been used for my campaign to benefit me personally,” he said.

His attorney got him a tissue from the clerk’s desk, and Jackson used it to wipe his eyes. He said he wouldn’t appeal his sentence; “I have no interest in wasting the taxpayers’ time or money.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/dana-milbank-for-jesse-jackson-jr-the-rules-do-apply/2013/02/20/1ebb6286-7bb5-11e2-9a75-dab0201670da_story.html?hpid=z2

HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA, HA,
0 Replies
 
 

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