William Jefferson, the former Congressman who represented New Orleans, Louisiana, was convicted by a jury today of 11 of 16 criminal counts that included federal bribery, racketeering and money laundering charges.

The scandalous 95-page criminal indictment filed in 2007 charged Jefferson with conspiring to enrich him “and his family members by corruptly seeking, soliciting, and directing” that he and his family member members be paid “things of value” in exchange for performing official acts while in office that would favor those whom he sought to bribe.

But perhaps the thing that this case will be most remembered for is the FBI’s discovery of $90,000 in frozen, bundled cash inside then Congressman Jefferson’s Washington, D.C. home freezer, money that the government charged Jefferson was going to use to bribe Nigeria’s Vice President at the time.

Some of the countries where Jefferson-related companies were said to do business included Nigeria, Ghana, and Cameroon.

You can read Jefferson’s original criminal indictment here:

 

  • William Jefferson verdict: Guilty on 11 of 16 counts, The Times-Picayune (Aug. 5, 2009)
  • Why You Should Pay Attention to the William Jefferson Trial, by Ashby Jones, The Wall Street Journal (Jun. 10, 2009)
  • William J. Jefferson

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