
Jesse Jackson, Jr. sentenced to two and half years; wife to serve 12 months
By Freddie Allen
   WASHINGTON, D.C. (NNPA) â After openly weeping and apologizing for his behavior, former U.S. Rep. Jesse L. Jackson, Jr. was sentenced to two and a half years in federal prison on Wednesday for using $750,000 in campaign funds for personal use.
âYour honor, throughout this process, Iâve asked the government and the court to hold me and only me accountable for my actions,â Jackson told U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson. He said, âI am the example for the whole Congress. I understand that. I didnât separate my personal life from my political activities, and I couldnât have been more wrong.â
He also said, âI misled the American people, I misled the House of Representatives.â Dabbing his eyes with tissues, he said, âI was wrong and I do not fault anyone.â
As the younger Jackson delivered his statement his father, Jesse Jackson, Sr. sat in the first row listening as tears ran down his cheeks and his mother, Jacqueline, also crying, donned sunglasses for much of the proceedings.
âI also want to apologize to my dad and to my mother,â Jackson, Jr. said. His parents and siblings attended the proceedings.
Jacksonâs wife, Sandra, a former Chicago alderwoman, was sentenced to a year in prison and will have to serve all 12 months. She must also repay $22,000 taken from her own campaign account for alder-woman.
The former congressman must return for prison on Nov. 1 or shortly thereafter. Based on time off for good behavior, Jackson, Jr. could be released after completing 25.5 months. In addition, he must perform 500 hours of community service.
Because the couple has two children, aged 13 and 9, they will serve time consecutively, with the husband entering prison first. Prosecutors had asked that Jackson, Jr. be sentenced to four years in prison and his life 18 months. U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson said that Jackson treated campaign funds as âa personal piggy bank.â
The judge  acknowledged that in the past lawmakers, were  more loose with the use of campaign funds, but Jacksonâs actions far exceeded even those limits.
âThere may be blurred lines for Congress to follow when their lives are political, this case did not come near those areas,â she told Jackson, Jr., who represented Chicagoâs South Side for 17 years. âThis was a knowing, organized joint misconduct that was repeated over many years.â
Jackson, Jr., once a rising political star and the oldest son of civil rights leader Jesse L. Jackson, Sr., pleaded guilty last February to conspiracy, making false statements, mail fraud and wire fraud. His wife Sandra was charged with filing false tax returns. She will also have to perform 200 hours of community service and pay restitution of $22,000, the amount she took from her aldermanâs campaign for personal use.
According to the federal information filed in federal court, Jackson knowingly misspent campaign funds from about August 2005 through July 2012. It said Jackson and his wife conspired to âenrich themselves by engaging in a conspiracy and a scheme to defraud in which they used funds donated to the Campaign for their own personal benefit.â
Prosecutors said among the unauthorized spending was a $43,350 gold-plated Rolex watch for Jackson, Jr., more than $22,000 in Michael Jackson memorabilia, $11,130 for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. memorabilia, $10,105 for Bruce Lee memorabilia, $9,587.64 worth of childrenâs furniture shipped from New Jersey to the coupleâs Washington home, a $5,000 football signed by American presidents, $2,775 on Jimi Hendrix memorabilia, $2,200 for Malcolm X memorabilia, a $1,500 black and red cashmere cape, and a $1,200 mink reversible parka.
Reid Weingarten, Jackson, Jr.âs attorney, sought to minimize his clientâs action, saying Jackson did not victimize helpless widows or operate a Ponzi scheme.
However, Matt Graves, an assistant U.S. attorney, called Jacksonâs crimes âstaggering.â He noted that the couple had earned nearly $350,000 in 2011.
Graves spoke of Jackson being âwasted talentâ who had participated in one of the largest violations of federal campaign laws. Graves even belittled Jacksonâs bipolar disorder, saying there was no medical evidence presented in court to support that claim.
The judge agreed, noting that there was evidence to show that the purchases were made during a bipolar episode and that none of the extravagant items were returned. The judge called evidence provided to support the defenseâs bipolar disorder claim âthin.â
When it was her turn, Sandra âSandiâ Jackson said, âI am a little nervous, so I have a written statement that I would like to read to you.â
She said, I want to begin by apologizing first to my family, to my friends, my community and my constituents for actions that brought me here today. ..My heart breaks every day with the pain this has caused my babies.â
But the judge reminded her, âItâs not the government that put your children in this position.â
She recommended assigning the former congressman to a minimum-security federal prison camp in Montgomery, Ala., or a low-security facility in Butner, N.C., near Raleigh, N.C., where white-collar criminal Bernie Madoff is housed. Both institutions made Forbes magazine top 10 list in 2009 of the nationâs cushiest federal prisons.
The judge recommended that Sandra Jackson be sent to a similar facility in Florida. However, the Bureau of Prisons will make the final decision. Sandra Jackson must report to prison within 30 days of her husbandâs release.
âThe judge rendered a sentence that weâre satisfied was fair,â said Weingarten after learning Jacksonâs fate. âThe system worked well.â
Weingarten continued: âWe fully believe that our client, Jesse Jackson, Jr. is going to have another important chapter in his life. He will come back out, and we believe, that he will do great things.â
After leaving the court, Jackson, Jr. said, âI still believe in the power of forgiveness. I believe in the power of redemption. Today I manned up and tried to accept responsibility for the errors of my ways â and I still believe in the resurrection.â
In court, Jackson, Jr. said he hoped his wife can earn enough money to support the family while he is prison.
ââWhen I get back, Iâll take on that burden,â he said. âBy then, I hope my children will be old enough that the pain I caused will be easier to bear.â