By David Ingram
WASHINGTON, Feb 20 (Reuters) - Onetime Democratic Party
rising star Jesse Jackson Jr., weeping and repentant as his
famous father looked on, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to misusing
about $750,000 in campaign funds on luxuries such as fur capes
and a Rolex watch.
Jackson, 47, who had represented Illinois in the House of
Representatives from 1995 until his resignation in November,
told U.S. District Judge Robert Wilkins he had supplemented his
income with political campaign funds for seven years.
When Wilkins asked for Jackson's plea, he responded:
"Guilty, your honor. I misled the American people."
Prosecutors said they may ask for a five-year prison
sentence in the corruption case - the maximum permitted by law -
while Jackson's legal team said it may argue for four or less.
Sentencing is scheduled for June 28.
"His campaign funds were a personal piggy bank," Ronald
Machen, U.S. attorney for Washington, told a news conference.
Jackson, once considered among the nation's most promising
black politicians, expressed regret for misusing the campaign
money. At one point, he turned around to face his family and
appeared to mouth the words: "I'm sorry."
"I fully understand the consequences of my actions,"
Jackson, who dropped out of public view last year and underwent
treatment for bipolar disorder, told the judge.
Waiving his right to a jury trial, he said: "I have no
interest in wasting the taxpayers' time, or their money."
Jackson's father, civil rights leader Jesse Jackson Sr., and
other relatives and friends sat in the front rows of a
Washington courtroom. The elder Jackson declined to answer
reporters' questions after the hearing.
The former congressman's wife, Sandi, tearfully pleaded
guilty at a separate hearing on Wednesday to filing false tax
returns that did not report the campaign money as income. She is
a former member of the Chicago City Council. She walked into the
hearing holding hands with her husband just hours after he also
had pleaded guilty.
'WASTED POTENTIAL'
Jackson signed an agreement with federal prosecutors to end
an investigation into his personal finances. Prosecutors said he
had cooperated fully with them.
"The guilty plea today is so tragic because it represents
such wasted potential. Jesse Jackson Jr. had the drive, the
ability and the talent to be the voice of a new generation. But
he squandered that talent and exchanged that instead to satisfy
his personal whims and his extravagant lifestyle," Machen said.
The prosecutors had accused Jackson of shipping a $43,350
man's Rolex watch purchased with campaign funds to his
Washington address. He also sent fur capes and parkas purchased
with $5,150 in campaign funds from Beverly Hills to the home of
an unnamed person, court documents said.
The government had said earlier that Jackson must forfeit
tens of thousands of dollars worth of celebrity memorabilia
derived from the alleged crimes, including a $4,600 fedora that
once belonged to the late pop star Michael Jackson.
He must also forfeit $5,000 worth of footballs signed by
American presidents, $10,105 in memorabilia from martial arts
film star Bruce Lee and $11,130 in Martin Luther King Jr.
memorabilia. Prosecutors say a final list of the items Jackson
must forfeit will be released at his sentencing.
They say he used campaign money to buy $9,588 worth of
children's furniture and $1,553 in porcelain items.
The bulk of the money, $582,773, paid for 3,100 purchases on
Jackson's personal credit cards. He charged routine items like
nightclub tabs, clothing, movie tickets and dining, court papers
say. One billing entry in November 2008 lists $5,688 for
"Martha's Vineyard Holistic Retreat." Martha's Vineyard is a
Massachusetts island that is popular as a summer retreat for the
affluent.
"For years I lived off my campaign," Jackson said in court.
In another complicated transaction, Jackson's campaign paid
$8,000 to someone identified in court papers as "Person A" for
work described as "data entry & cleanup." In fact, prosecutors
say, Person A used the money to buy two mounted elk heads for
Jackson's congressional office in 2011.
In 2012, Person A sold the elk heads to an undercover FBI
agent who was instructed to wire payment to one of Jackson's
personal bank accounts.
Jackson's actions add up to conspiracy to commit fraud and
give false statements, according to the plea agreement.
BIPOLAR TREATMENT
Jackson ran for Congress and won at age 30, serving from
1995 until resigning on Nov. 21, citing health reasons and
acknowledging he was under investigation by the FBI.
One of Jackson's lawyers, Reid Weingarten, told reporters
after the hearing that the court should take Jackson's years of
public service into account when he is sentenced. Jackson would
not speak to the media but would make his case in court papers,
Weingarten said.
Jackson may already be thinking of life after prison.
"There will be another chapter in Jesse Jackson's life, a
chapter that brings joy to the people who care about him,"
Weingarten said.
Jackson disappeared from public view last summer and
speculation swirled for weeks about his condition. At first he
said he was being treated for exhaustion and in July his doctor
said Jackson was receiving intensive care for a "mood disorder."
Jackson eventually was treated for at least six weeks at the
Mayo Clinic in Minnesota for bipolar disorder.
In accepting Jackson's plea, Wilkins went through a series
of questions that are routinely asked of defendants but that
took on poignancy because of Jackson's father's career as a
civil rights champion: Did he realize he would no longer be able
to vote, serve on a jury or own a firearm due to his felony
conviction?
Jackson said he did and wiped tears from his eyes.
The elder Jackson was a protege of Martin Luther King Jr.
during the civil rights movement of the 1960s and campaigned for
voting rights for blacks.
Wilkins' own civil rights history complicated the case. He
was a leader of a group of Harvard students supporting Jackson
Sr.'s 1988 presidential campaign. Wilkins, who became a judge in
2010, also had appeared on the elder Jackson's CNN television
show in 1999 to discuss his successful lawsuit against the state
of Maryland for racial profiling of black drivers.
Wilkins offered to step aside from the Jackson cases but
neither side wanted him to do so.
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