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FBI:
Congressman, Caught on Tape Taking Cold Cash
Hid Bribe Money in Freezer
By The Associated Press
New York Lawyer
May 22, 2006
ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- Allegedly scamming a Virginia businesswoman could
prove to be a major mistake for a Democratic congressman from New
Orleans.
The FBI revealed Sunday
that Rep. William Jefferson, under investigation for bribery, was
videotaped accepting $100,000 in $100 bills from an FBI informant
whose conversations with the lawmaker also were recorded. Agents
later found the cash hidden in his freezer, according to a court
document released Sunday.
At one meeting captured on
audiotape, Jefferson chuckles about writing in code to keep secret
what the government contends was his corrupt role in getting his
children a cut of a communications company's deal for work in
Africa.
As Jefferson and the
informant passed notes about what percentage the lawmaker's family
might receive, the congressman ''began laughing and said, 'All these
damn notes we're writing to each other as if we're talking, as if
the FBI is watching,''' he told the businesswoman, who was wearing
an FBI recording device.
Jefferson has not been
charged and denies any wrongdoing.
As for the $100,000, the
government says Jefferson got the money in a leather briefcase last
July 30 at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Arlington. The plan was for the
lawmaker to use the cash to bribe a high-ranking Nigerian official
-- the name is blacked out in the court document -- to ensure the
success of a business deal in that country, the affidavit said.
All but $10,000 was
recovered on Aug. 3 when the FBI searched Jefferson's home in
Washington. The money was stuffed in his freezer, wrapped in $10,000
packs and concealed in food containers and aluminum foil.
Two of Jefferson's
associates have pleaded guilty to bribery-related charges in federal
court in Alexandria. One, businessman Vernon Jackson of Louisville,
Ky., admitted paying more than $400,000 in bribes to the lawmaker in
exchange for his help securing business deals for Jackson's
telecommunications company in Nigeria and other African countries.
The new details about the
case emerged after the FBI searched Jefferson's congressional office
on Capitol Hill Saturday night and Sunday. The nearly 100-page
affidavit for a search warrant, made public Sunday with large
portions blacked out, spells out much of the evidence so far.
The document includes
excerpts of conversations between Jefferson and an unidentified
business executive from northern Virginia. She agreed to wear a wire
after she approached the FBI with complaints Jefferson and an
associate had ripped her off in a business deal.
Jefferson's lawyer, Robert
Trout, said in a statement that the prosecutors' disclosure was
''part of a public relations agenda and an attempt to embarrass
Congressman Jefferson. The affidavit itself is just one side of the
story which has not been tested in court.''
The affidavit says
Jefferson is caught on videotape at the Ritz-Carlton as he takes a
reddish-brown briefcase from the trunk of the informant's car, slips
it into a cloth bag, puts the bag into his 1990 Lincoln Town Car and
drives away.
The $100 bills in the
suitcase had the same serial numbers as those found in Jefferson's
freezer.
While the name of the
intended recipient of the $100,000 is blacked out, other details in
the affidavit indicate he is Abubakar Atiku, Nigeria's vice
president. He owns a home in Potomac, Md., that authorities have
searched as part of the Jefferson investigation.
The Jefferson investigation
has provided some cover for Republicans who have suffered black eyes
in the investigations of current and former GOP lawmakers, including
Tom DeLay of Texas, the former majority leader.
Republican Randy ''Duke''
Cunningham of California, a Vietnam-era jetfighter ace, was
sentenced in March to more than eight years in prison for accepting
bribes on a scale unparalleled in the history of Congress.
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