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Mose Jefferson

Mose Oliver Jefferson (August 28, 1942 – May 12, 2011) was a member of the New Orleans family that includes his younger brother, former U.S. Representative William J. Jefferson.[1] On 21 August 2009, Mose Jefferson was convicted on four felony counts of bribery.[2]

Background edit

Mose Jefferson left his native Lake Providence, Louisiana, to join his older sister Betty Jefferson in Chicago, Illinois, where he attended Marshall High School but dropped out to join the U.S. Air Force in 1959. After being honorably discharged and returning to civilian life, he was convicted of a $450 robbery and served 9 months in Stateville Correctional Center, being released in 1967. He then became a Democratic Party field lieutenant with the political organization of Robert Shaw and his brother William Shaw, the latter of whom served in the Illinois Senate from 1982 to 2002.[3]

Legal difficulties edit

On July 22, 2009 — during the 16-indictments trial of Mose Jefferson's brother, Congressman William J. Jefferson, before U.S. judge T. S. Ellis III — lead prosecutor Mark Lytle presented a chart which showed

money flowing from Jigawa State in Nigeria to in Baton Rouge to pay for a study of the feasibility of Arkel building a sugar plant there, to the coffers of Providence Lake, a company controlled by the congressman's brother Mose Jefferson, to BEP, another company controlled by Mose Jefferson, and on to Harvard University, where it helped pay expenses for Jelani Jefferson, one of the congressman's daughters.[4]

On August 5, 2009, William J. Jefferson was convicted in the Virginia court on 11 of the 16 felony counts.[5] Four days later, on August 9, in an article starting on the front page and extending for almost the entirety of another page, Laura Maggi analyzed Mose Jefferson's imputed connection with the criminal behaviors on which William J. Jefferson had been convicted.[6]

In 2009, while other members of the Jefferson family were facing indictment or trial on various corruption charges, Mose Jefferson faced two trials. Originally a racketeering trial was to begin on August 3, 2009, followed by a bribery trial on August 10. On July 28, 2009, the sequence changed, the bribery trial remaining on August 10, 2009, and the racketeering trial moving to January 25, 2010.

Bribery accusations edit

In the bribery allegations Mose Jefferson was accused of paying Orleans Parish School Board president Ellenese Brooks-Simms $140,000 in exchange for her support of adopting a software-based teaching system sold by Mose Jefferson. Brooks-Simms accepted the money but, on getting caught, entered into a plea-bargain to testify (along with two other witnesses) against Mose Jefferson, including cooperating with investigators in recording certain conversations she had with Mose Jefferson.[7] According to CBS News, the software sale was just part of a set of schemes wherein Brooks-Simms steered $14 million in sales toward a company which paid Mose Jefferson $913,000 in commissions.[8]

Racketeering accusations edit

Racketeering charges under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) involved Mose Jefferson and Renée Gill Pratt,[9] Mose Jefferson's "long-time companion" in a relationship described as being "as close as it gets" by columnist Stephanie Grace.[10] The indictment alleged that Gill Pratt, a former state senator and member of the New Orleans City Council (defeated in 2006 by Stacy Head), had assisted Mose Jefferson in obtaining government grants for humanitarian causes managed by him, his sister Betty Jefferson, and Betty Jefferson's daughter Angela Coleman, whereupon the Jeffersons unduly used some of the money for personal interests. Betty Jefferson and Angela Coleman were additional defendants in the racketeering trial.[11]

Pre-trial Motions edit

On June 3, 2009, Mose Jefferson requested that the racketeering charge be postponed because of the then-potential time overlap with the trial on bribery charges (both trials originally being docketed to begin in August). The request for delay was probably mooted, however, by new charges arraigned on June 5, effectuating postponement of one trial (the racketeering trial) by request of the court.

Potential change in defense attorneys edit

The situation was further complicated by an implication that Mose Jefferson needed to obtain a new lawyer, in that Arthur "Buddy" Lemann, according to U.S. attorney Daniel Friel, faced a conflict of interest in having once represented Stacy Simms, daughter of Ellenese Brooks-Simms. Lemann was to represent Mose Jefferson in the racketeering case. Stacy Simms had assisted her mother in laundering the bribe (in the other case), through Stacy's bank account and, after pleading guilty to the felony, joined her mother in becoming a witness for the prosecution of Mose Jefferson. Lemann (arguing that "the very inclusion of allegations related to another pending indictment is improper") had objected that the racketeering indictment described a relationship to the (undecided) bribery case in that part of the alleged racketeering involved Gill Pratt's supposed obtaining of $300,000 for a couple of private schools so that they could buy the software which Mose Jefferson, with Ellenese Brooks-Simms' help, also sold to the public schools; according to the indictment, Mose Jefferson's commission on the sales to the private schools was $30,000, of which Gill Pratt pocketed $3500.[12] "It's not RICO, it's wacko"—said Lemann on June 5 as he objected to the move to separate him from the racketeering case.[13]

Lemann himself was not Mose Jefferson's original attorney; Lemann had replaced Ike Spears, who had earlier been disqualified on a conflict of interest inherent in his having previously represented Brenda Jefferson Foster, younger sister of Mose and William J. Jefferson. Brenda Jefferson Foster had entered a guilty plea in the racketeering case and obtained a promise of leniency in exchange for agreeing to testify against her siblings.

As of June 6, 2009, Mose Jefferson's attorney in the bribery case continued to be Mike Fawer, "another pugnacious defense attorney" as described by the Times-Picayune.[12]

Political allegations by defenders edit

On June 8, 2009, Lemann called the racketeering case "a political prosecution initiated by the office of a Republican prosecutor against a minority neighborhood association led by the Jefferson family" and asked for the case to be dismissed as being politically motivated. U.S. Attorney Jim Letten claimed to be "not surprised to see that again" in reference to Lemann's having made allegations of prosecutorial political or racial bias when defending former mayor Marc Morial's administrator Kerry DeCay, who was convicted and spent 9 years in federal incarceration.[14]

Indigence claim edit

Lemmon referred to magistrate judge Louis Moore Jr. the question of whether Mose Jefferson should be declared indigent, a status conference on that question set for July 28. Fawer and Lemann both asked Moore to declare Mose Jefferson indigent because a building he owns on New Orleans' Loyola Avenue was put on hold by U.S. attorney Jim Letten. Fawer and Lemann had intended to use the building as a "means of obtaining payment for their services"; but Moore, on August 6, 2009, cited that Mose Jefferson owns a New Orleans East house which he used as collateral for his bond pending trial. According to Laura Maggi of the Times-Picayune on Mose Jefferson's wherewithal to pay defense lawyers, "Moore pointed out that Jefferson could give up the bond on the house and go to jail"; Moore denied the request for indigence.[15]

Requests for delay edit

At a hearing before U.S. District Judge Ivan L. R. Lemelle on June 17, 2009, lawyers for Betty Jefferson and Angela Coleman requested a delay from the August 3, 2009, start date for the racketeering trial; at the same hearing, however, lawyers for Gill Pratt and Mose Jefferson requested that the racketeering trial begin as scheduled on August 3.[16]

During the ensuing week, on June 26, 2009, U.S. District Judge Mary Ann Vial Lemmon denied Mose Jefferson's request to delay the start of the bribery case also involving Gill Pratt and Ellenese Brooks-Simms.[17] Fawer immediately filed a second request for delay of the bribery trial, this request arguing that Gill Pratt could not risk testifying in the racketeering case if a charge against her were to be pending in the bribery case. On July 16, 2009, Lemmon ruled as follows:[18]

  • denied Fawer's (Mose's Jefferson's) second request for delay.
  • denied a motion by Fawer (representing Mose Jefferson) to stay the proceedings so that Fawer (Mose Jefferson) could appeal, to the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, Lemmon's June 26 denial of Fawer's (Mose Jefferson's) request for delay in the bribery trial.
  • denied a Fawer motion to remove a government lien on Mose Jefferson's property on Loyola Avenue to cover Fawer's lawyer charges.
  • denied a motion by Fawer to remove him as Mose Jefferson's attorney.
Racketeering trial delayed edit

On July 28, 2009, Lemelle delayed the start of the racketeering trial to January 25, 2010. The bribery trial of Mose Jefferson alone was still set to begin on August 10, 2009, with jury selection beginning on August 4, 2009.[19]

Bribery trial not delayed edit

On August 4, Fawer unsuccessfully sought (denied by Lemmon) to delay the bribery trial until after the racketeering trial, because, as summarized by Michael Kunzelman of the Times-Picayune:

Gill Pratt ... isn't available to testify during the bribery case this month because she is awaiting her own trial next year in a [the] separate but related racketeering conspiracy case.[20]

Requests for change of venue edit

On August 7, 2009, Fawer requested to move the bribery trial from New Orleans because the "trial atmosphere has been utterly corrupted by ongoing media coverage" (Fawer's words) of the conviction of William J. Jefferson; Lemmon's written denial was just two sentences in length, including that questions to potential jurors "will reveal the extent of prejudice, if any, resulting from news coverage of the trial of defendant's brother" (Lemmon's words).[21]

Bribery trial edit

Jury selection for Mose Jefferson's trial on charges of bribery began on August 10, 2009, with Fawer again requesting a venue change and Lemmon again denying it. By the end of the day attorneys on both sides had selected a 12-member panel of jurors—six women, six men—with two women alternates.[22]

The bribery trial per se began on August 11 at 10:00 AM CDT, with strikingly different perspectives between the prosecution and the defense on the $140,000 which Mose Jefferson gave to Ellenese Brooks-Simms. According to Fawer, Brooks-Simms said "what the government wanted to hear" concerning the $140,000. Fawer maintained that the FBI-recorded conversations between Brooks-Simms and Mose Jefferson would be shown to concur with the defense's characterization of the exchange of money as a gift or loan to Brooks-Simms in that her husband was at the time experiencing expensive medical costs. Fawer also revealed defense plans to call as witnesses not only Mose Jefferson but also Republican former U.S. Representative Bob Livingston, head of the Livingston Group lobbying firm which represented , contractor for the "I CAN LEARN" program, in successful efforts to obtain $36 million in federal contracts. The prosecution called Paul Cambon, Livingston's former congressional aide who later became a partner in the Livingston Group.[23] After Cambon testified that the Livingston Group had received monthly retainers of up to $30,000 from JRL Enterprises, prosecutor Michael Simpson asked: "Did the Livingston Group ever kick back $140,000?"—which question was overridden by Lemmon on Fawer's objection.[24]

On August 18, Mose Jefferson, testifying under oath, countervailed the testimony of Brooks-Simms and characterized her as a former lover for whom the $140,000 was a gift; she had testified that they first met in 1999, but he testified that their relationship began in the 1980s.[25]

On August 19, 2009, former Orleans Parish schools superintendent Tony Amato testified in support of the "I CAN LEARN" program, but most of the testimony on that day centered on the nature of the relationship between Mose Jefferson and Brooks-Simms. Fawer called as witness 83-year-old minister Zebedee Bridges who testified that in the 1980s Mose Jefferson was involved in an adulterous affair with Brooks-Simms, but Ralph Capitalli, attorney for Brooks-Simms, characterized the story as "a lie" and stated that Fawer had not inquired of Brooks-Simms about the alleged affair; Capitelli asserted that Brooks-Simms was loyal to her husband throughout 40 years of marriage. Prosecutor Michael Simpson, who repeatedly during the day attempted to steer the discussion back to the exchange of money and the recorded conversations between Brooks-Simms and Mose Jefferson, adopted "an incredulous tone" in that Fawer had said nothing about adultery during the opening statement and during the three days when Brooks-Simms was on the witness stand.[26]

Before the case went to the jury on August 20, 2009, the defense called Livingston as witness, in an attempt to analogize the lobbying activities of the Livingston Group to the involvements of Mose Jefferson,[27] Fawer's repeated arguments that the $140,000 payment could only be a gift in that adoption of I CAN LEARN already had Brooks-Simms' support as well as that of the other voting members of the school system, but Fawer's observations of the time of the payment and the prior day's testimony by Amato were "sideshows" when "This case is about payoffs and rewards" according to federal prosecutor Sal Perricone. At 6:00 PM on August 20 Lemmon ordered the jury sequestered to consider the charges against Mose Jefferson.[28]

The following morning, on August 21, 2009, the jury returned the following verdicts declaring Mose Jefferson guilty on four of the seven felony counts, as reported by WDSU-TV New Orleans Channel 6 (NBC):[29]

Count 1—Conspiracy to commit bribery: Not guilty
Count 2—Bribery of an agent (Brooks-Simms) of an organization seeking federal funding: Guilty
Count 3—Bribery of an agent (Brooks-Simms) of an organization seeking federal funding: Guilty
Count 4—Bribery of an agent (Brooks-Simms) of an organization seeking federal funding: Not guilty
Count 5—Money laundering: Not guilty
Count 6—Obstruction of justice: Guilty
Count 7—Obstruction of justice: Guilty

Sentencing by Lemmon was set for December 9, 2009, Mose Jefferson remaining in the meantime free on personal surety bond.[30]

Racketeering trial edit

Jefferon's racketeering trial began on March 22, 2010. He died of cancer in 2011 in Lake Providence.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Stephanie Grace—in a column titled "Mose: Consultant or Conspirator"[permanent dead link]—analyzes various suppositions of symbiotic interfaces between the two brothers' alleged legal improprieties (Times-Picayune, July 21, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B5).
  2. ^ Michael Luke, "Mose Jefferson guilty on four counts" 2009-08-24 at the Wayback Machine reported by WWL-TV New Orleans Channel 4 (CBS), August 21, 2009 (accessed August 22, 2009).
  3. ^ Gordon Russell, "Mose Jefferson, William's brother, was the first to taste victory in politics... behind the scenes" 2009-08-11 at the Wayback Machine in Times-Picayune (New Orleans), May 31, 2009, Metro Edition, pp. A1, A12.
  4. ^ Jonathan Tilove & Bruce Alpert, "Jefferson's defense may wrap up before lunch"[permanent dead link] in Times-Picayune, July 23, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, pp. A3 (full article is on pp. A1, A3). Cf. Jonathan Tilove & Bruce Alpert, "William Jefferson took care of brother, Mose, witness says" in Times-Picayune, July 16, 2009. On August 6, 2009, National Public Radio's newsmagazine All Things Considered reported that the companies owned by Mose Jefferson served no purpose other than to facilitate and obscure the movement of money.
  5. ^ See William J. Jefferson#Indictment and trial for details and sources.
  6. ^ Laura Maggi "Jefferson family tree is shaken: Mighty political organization falls to legal assault portraying corruption" 2009-08-12 at the Wayback Machine in Times-Picayune, August 9, 2009, Metro Edition, pp. A1, A18. Maggi described Mose Jefferson as "the man responsible for running the Progressive Democrats street operation" (p. A18). See also Stephanie Grace, "Another Jefferson on trial" 2009-08-13 at the Wayback Machine in Times-Picayune, August 11, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B5.
  7. ^ "Mose Jefferson asks for trial delay" in Times-Picayune, June 4, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B3 (web version = "Mose Jefferson seeks trial delay"). Archived 2012-09-06 at archive.today
  8. ^ John Bresnahan, "William Jefferson's brother indicted on corruption charges from N.O. school probe" (April 2, 2008).
  9. ^ John Pope, "Gill Pratt named to SUNO Cabinet" in Times-Picayune, May 28, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, pp. A1, A11 (web version = Gill Pratt will sit on SUNO Cabinet). Archived 2012-09-06 at archive.today
  10. ^ Stephanie Grace, "Jefferson grip on SUNO isn't what it once was" 2009-08-12 at the Wayback Machine in Times-Picayune, June 2, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B5.
  11. ^ "SUNO advisor angers Jindal"[permanent dead link] in Advocate (Baton Rouge), May 29, 2009, p. 15A.
  12. ^ a b Laura Maggi, "Mose Jefferson may need a new lawyer: Fed prosecutors cite conflict of interest" Archived 2012-09-04 at archive.today in Times-Picayune, June 5, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B3.
  13. ^ Lemann quoted in Michelle Krupa, "Ex-N.O. official pleads innocent" in Times-Picayune, June 6, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, pp. A1, A11 (quote from Lemann appears on p. A11).
  14. ^ "Mose Jefferson asks judge to dismiss case" in Times-Picayune, June 8, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B2 (web version = Mose Jefferson wants case dismissed: Lawyer calls case 'accident of birth'"). Archived 2012-09-06 at archive.today
  15. ^ Laura Maggi "Judge doesn't buy indigence plea" in Times-Picayune, August 7, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B3. Letten's office had put the Loyola Avenue property on hold because of concerns over its potential forfeiture if involved in the felony counts associated with Mose Jefferson's brother William J. Jefferson.
  16. ^ Laura Maggi, "Gill Pratt, Jefferson push for August trial" in Times-Picayune, June 18, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B3 (web version = Gill Pratt, Mose Jefferson push to keep August trial date).
  17. ^ Laura Maggi, "Jefferson's request to delay trial denied: School Board case set to start August 10" in Times-Picayune, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B3 (web version = "Jefferson fails in bid to push back trial: School Board case set to start August 10"[permanent dead link] accessed June 26, 2009).
  18. ^ "Trial delay for Mose Jefferson denied"[permanent dead link] in Times Picayune, July 17, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B3.
  19. ^ "Trial delayed for Gill Pratt, Jefferson kin" in Times-Picayune, July 29, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B3.
  20. ^ Michael Kunzelman "Trial delay rejected for Mose Jefferson" 2011-06-04 at the Wayback Machine in Times-Picayune, August 5, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. A6.
  21. ^ Fawer and Lemmon, both quoted in Janet McConnaughey, "Judge won't move bribery trial from N.O." in Advocate, August 9, 2009, p. 5B. Cf. Laura Maggi, "Mose Jefferson heads to court for first trial"[permanent dead link] in Times-Picayune, August 10, 2009, Metro Edition, pp. A1, A4.
  22. ^ Laura Maggi, "Jury picked in Mose Jefferson case: Judge snubs defense motion to move trial"[permanent dead link] in Times-Picayune, August 11, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B1.
  23. ^ See the Livingston Group.
  24. ^ Laura Maggi, "Mose Jefferson to take stand in his defense" 2009-08-25 at the Wayback Machine in Times-Picayune, August 12, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, pp. A1, A5 (quotations are on p. A5).
  25. ^ Laura Maggi, "Payments called a favor, not a bribe" in Times-Picayune, August 19, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, pp. A1, A8.
  26. ^ Lauri Maggi, "Lawyers hammer Jefferson on cash" in Times-Picayune, August 20, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, pp. A1, A8. Amato's statements supportive of I CAN LEARN did not necessarily mean that he was sympathetic to Mose Jefferson, whose associate Brooks-Simms was often at odds with Amato until the school board unexpectedly ousted her as superintendent in a January 2004 evening meeting characterized by "Shouting and cursing" (Brian Thevenot, "Final antics of School Board laid bare" in Times-Picayune, August 23, 2009, Metro Edition, pp. A1, A16). Ironically, the Board members being unaware, the meeting occurred on the same day after Brooks-Simms had received the second payment from Mose Jefferson. See also John P. McCall, "Good riddance to old ways"[permanent dead link] in Times-Picayune, August 25, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B4.
  27. ^ James Gill wrote in his column the next morning:
    A particularly "supportive" member, one of Livingston's partners testified, was none other than William Jefferson. That was kind of Jefferson, considering that he has nothing in common with Livingston.
    Livingston's attorney was Jim Wright. ("Influence-peddling, the legal way" 2009-08-26 at the Wayback Machine in Times-Picayune, August 21, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B7.) Gill returned to the subject on the trial on August 26, 2009, satirically claiming that "Whether Brooks-Simms and [Mose] Jefferson were once an item or not, it must be admitted that they might have been made for each other" (James Gill, "A match not made in heaven"[permanent dead link] in Times-Picayune, August 26, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B5).
  28. ^ Laura Maggi, "Mose Jefferson case goes to jury" in Times-Picayune, August 21, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, pp. A1, A11.
  29. ^ Mose Jefferson guilty of 4 of 7 bribery charges. 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ Laura Maggi, "Guilty on 4 counts: In a split verdict, Mose Jefferson is convicted" in Times-Picayune, August 22, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, pp. A1, A6. The court deemed Mose Jefferson to have forfeited the $100,000 paid to Brooks-Simms relative to counts 2 and 3. The charge in count 4 was dropped because, at the time it was paid, Brooks-Simms had left the school board. These and other details of the verdicts are set forth in Maggi's August 22, 2009, article.

mose, jefferson, mose, oliver, jefferson, august, 1942, 2011, member, orleans, family, that, includes, younger, brother, former, representative, william, jefferson, august, 2009, convicted, four, felony, counts, bribery, contents, background, legal, difficulti. Mose Oliver Jefferson August 28 1942 May 12 2011 was a member of the New Orleans family that includes his younger brother former U S Representative William J Jefferson 1 On 21 August 2009 Mose Jefferson was convicted on four felony counts of bribery 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Legal difficulties 2 1 Bribery accusations 2 2 Racketeering accusations 2 3 Pre trial Motions 2 3 1 Potential change in defense attorneys 2 3 2 Political allegations by defenders 2 3 3 Indigence claim 2 3 4 Requests for delay 2 3 4 1 Racketeering trial delayed 2 3 4 2 Bribery trial not delayed 2 3 5 Requests for change of venue 3 Bribery trial 4 Racketeering trial 5 NotesBackground editMose Jefferson left his native Lake Providence Louisiana to join his older sister Betty Jefferson in Chicago Illinois where he attended Marshall High School but dropped out to join the U S Air Force in 1959 After being honorably discharged and returning to civilian life he was convicted of a 450 robbery and served 9 months in Stateville Correctional Center being released in 1967 He then became a Democratic Party field lieutenant with the political organization of Robert Shaw and his brother William Shaw the latter of whom served in the Illinois Senate from 1982 to 2002 3 Legal difficulties editOn July 22 2009 during the 16 indictments trial of Mose Jefferson s brother Congressman William J Jefferson before U S judge T S Ellis III lead prosecutor Mark Lytle presented a chart which showed money flowing from Jigawa State in Nigeria to Arkel Sugar in Baton Rouge to pay for a study of the feasibility of Arkel building a sugar plant there to the coffers of Providence Lake a company controlled by the congressman s brother Mose Jefferson to BEP another company controlled by Mose Jefferson and on to Harvard University where it helped pay expenses for Jelani Jefferson one of the congressman s daughters 4 dd On August 5 2009 William J Jefferson was convicted in the Virginia court on 11 of the 16 felony counts 5 Four days later on August 9 in an article starting on the front page and extending for almost the entirety of another page Laura Maggi analyzed Mose Jefferson s imputed connection with the criminal behaviors on which William J Jefferson had been convicted 6 In 2009 while other members of the Jefferson family were facing indictment or trial on various corruption charges Mose Jefferson faced two trials Originally a racketeering trial was to begin on August 3 2009 followed by a bribery trial on August 10 On July 28 2009 the sequence changed the bribery trial remaining on August 10 2009 and the racketeering trial moving to January 25 2010 Bribery accusations edit In the bribery allegations Mose Jefferson was accused of paying Orleans Parish School Board president Ellenese Brooks Simms 140 000 in exchange for her support of adopting a software based teaching system sold by Mose Jefferson Brooks Simms accepted the money but on getting caught entered into a plea bargain to testify along with two other witnesses against Mose Jefferson including cooperating with investigators in recording certain conversations she had with Mose Jefferson 7 According to CBS News the software sale was just part of a set of schemes wherein Brooks Simms steered 14 million in sales toward a company which paid Mose Jefferson 913 000 in commissions 8 Racketeering accusations edit Racketeering charges under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act RICO involved Mose Jefferson and Renee Gill Pratt 9 Mose Jefferson s long time companion in a relationship described as being as close as it gets by columnist Stephanie Grace 10 The indictment alleged that Gill Pratt a former state senator and member of the New Orleans City Council defeated in 2006 by Stacy Head had assisted Mose Jefferson in obtaining government grants for humanitarian causes managed by him his sister Betty Jefferson and Betty Jefferson s daughter Angela Coleman whereupon the Jeffersons unduly used some of the money for personal interests Betty Jefferson and Angela Coleman were additional defendants in the racketeering trial 11 Pre trial Motions edit On June 3 2009 Mose Jefferson requested that the racketeering charge be postponed because of the then potential time overlap with the trial on bribery charges both trials originally being docketed to begin in August The request for delay was probably mooted however by new charges arraigned on June 5 effectuating postponement of one trial the racketeering trial by request of the court Potential change in defense attorneys edit The situation was further complicated by an implication that Mose Jefferson needed to obtain a new lawyer in that Arthur Buddy Lemann according to U S attorney Daniel Friel faced a conflict of interest in having once represented Stacy Simms daughter of Ellenese Brooks Simms Lemann was to represent Mose Jefferson in the racketeering case Stacy Simms had assisted her mother in laundering the bribe in the other case through Stacy s bank account and after pleading guilty to the felony joined her mother in becoming a witness for the prosecution of Mose Jefferson Lemann arguing that the very inclusion of allegations related to another pending indictment is improper had objected that the racketeering indictment described a relationship to the undecided bribery case in that part of the alleged racketeering involved Gill Pratt s supposed obtaining of 300 000 for a couple of private schools so that they could buy the software which Mose Jefferson with Ellenese Brooks Simms help also sold to the public schools according to the indictment Mose Jefferson s commission on the sales to the private schools was 30 000 of which Gill Pratt pocketed 3500 12 It s not RICO it s wacko said Lemann on June 5 as he objected to the move to separate him from the racketeering case 13 Lemann himself was not Mose Jefferson s original attorney Lemann had replaced Ike Spears who had earlier been disqualified on a conflict of interest inherent in his having previously represented Brenda Jefferson Foster younger sister of Mose and William J Jefferson Brenda Jefferson Foster had entered a guilty plea in the racketeering case and obtained a promise of leniency in exchange for agreeing to testify against her siblings As of June 6 2009 Mose Jefferson s attorney in the bribery case continued to be Mike Fawer another pugnacious defense attorney as described by the Times Picayune 12 Political allegations by defenders edit On June 8 2009 Lemann called the racketeering case a political prosecution initiated by the office of a Republican prosecutor against a minority neighborhood association led by the Jefferson family and asked for the case to be dismissed as being politically motivated U S Attorney Jim Letten claimed to be not surprised to see that again in reference to Lemann s having made allegations of prosecutorial political or racial bias when defending former mayor Marc Morial s administrator Kerry DeCay who was convicted and spent 9 years in federal incarceration 14 Indigence claim edit Lemmon referred to magistrate judge Louis Moore Jr the question of whether Mose Jefferson should be declared indigent a status conference on that question set for July 28 Fawer and Lemann both asked Moore to declare Mose Jefferson indigent because a building he owns on New Orleans Loyola Avenue was put on hold by U S attorney Jim Letten Fawer and Lemann had intended to use the building as a means of obtaining payment for their services but Moore on August 6 2009 cited that Mose Jefferson owns a New Orleans East house which he used as collateral for his bond pending trial According to Laura Maggi of the Times Picayune on Mose Jefferson s wherewithal to pay defense lawyers Moore pointed out that Jefferson could give up the bond on the house and go to jail Moore denied the request for indigence 15 Requests for delay edit At a hearing before U S District Judge Ivan L R Lemelle on June 17 2009 lawyers for Betty Jefferson and Angela Coleman requested a delay from the August 3 2009 start date for the racketeering trial at the same hearing however lawyers for Gill Pratt and Mose Jefferson requested that the racketeering trial begin as scheduled on August 3 16 During the ensuing week on June 26 2009 U S District Judge Mary Ann Vial Lemmon denied Mose Jefferson s request to delay the start of the bribery case also involving Gill Pratt and Ellenese Brooks Simms 17 Fawer immediately filed a second request for delay of the bribery trial this request arguing that Gill Pratt could not risk testifying in the racketeering case if a charge against her were to be pending in the bribery case On July 16 2009 Lemmon ruled as follows 18 denied Fawer s Mose s Jefferson s second request for delay denied a motion by Fawer representing Mose Jefferson to stay the proceedings so that Fawer Mose Jefferson could appeal to the U S Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Lemmon s June 26 denial of Fawer s Mose Jefferson s request for delay in the bribery trial denied a Fawer motion to remove a government lien on Mose Jefferson s property on Loyola Avenue to cover Fawer s lawyer charges denied a motion by Fawer to remove him as Mose Jefferson s attorney dd Racketeering trial delayed edit On July 28 2009 Lemelle delayed the start of the racketeering trial to January 25 2010 The bribery trial of Mose Jefferson alone was still set to begin on August 10 2009 with jury selection beginning on August 4 2009 19 Bribery trial not delayed edit On August 4 Fawer unsuccessfully sought denied by Lemmon to delay the bribery trial until after the racketeering trial because as summarized by Michael Kunzelman of the Times Picayune Gill Pratt isn t available to testify during the bribery case this month because she is awaiting her own trial next year in a the separate but related racketeering conspiracy case 20 dd Requests for change of venue edit On August 7 2009 Fawer requested to move the bribery trial from New Orleans because the trial atmosphere has been utterly corrupted by ongoing media coverage Fawer s words of the conviction of William J Jefferson Lemmon s written denial was just two sentences in length including that questions to potential jurors will reveal the extent of prejudice if any resulting from news coverage of the trial of defendant s brother Lemmon s words 21 Bribery trial editJury selection for Mose Jefferson s trial on charges of bribery began on August 10 2009 with Fawer again requesting a venue change and Lemmon again denying it By the end of the day attorneys on both sides had selected a 12 member panel of jurors six women six men with two women alternates 22 The bribery trial per se began on August 11 at 10 00 AM CDT with strikingly different perspectives between the prosecution and the defense on the 140 000 which Mose Jefferson gave to Ellenese Brooks Simms According to Fawer Brooks Simms said what the government wanted to hear concerning the 140 000 Fawer maintained that the FBI recorded conversations between Brooks Simms and Mose Jefferson would be shown to concur with the defense s characterization of the exchange of money as a gift or loan to Brooks Simms in that her husband was at the time experiencing expensive medical costs Fawer also revealed defense plans to call as witnesses not only Mose Jefferson but also Republican former U S Representative Bob Livingston head of the Livingston Group lobbying firm which represented JRL Enterprises contractor for the I CAN LEARN program in successful efforts to obtain 36 million in federal contracts The prosecution called Paul Cambon Livingston s former congressional aide who later became a partner in the Livingston Group 23 After Cambon testified that the Livingston Group had received monthly retainers of up to 30 000 from JRL Enterprises prosecutor Michael Simpson asked Did the Livingston Group ever kick back 140 000 which question was overridden by Lemmon on Fawer s objection 24 On August 18 Mose Jefferson testifying under oath countervailed the testimony of Brooks Simms and characterized her as a former lover for whom the 140 000 was a gift she had testified that they first met in 1999 but he testified that their relationship began in the 1980s 25 On August 19 2009 former Orleans Parish schools superintendent Tony Amato testified in support of the I CAN LEARN program but most of the testimony on that day centered on the nature of the relationship between Mose Jefferson and Brooks Simms Fawer called as witness 83 year old minister Zebedee Bridges who testified that in the 1980s Mose Jefferson was involved in an adulterous affair with Brooks Simms but Ralph Capitalli attorney for Brooks Simms characterized the story as a lie and stated that Fawer had not inquired of Brooks Simms about the alleged affair Capitelli asserted that Brooks Simms was loyal to her husband throughout 40 years of marriage Prosecutor Michael Simpson who repeatedly during the day attempted to steer the discussion back to the exchange of money and the recorded conversations between Brooks Simms and Mose Jefferson adopted an incredulous tone in that Fawer had said nothing about adultery during the opening statement and during the three days when Brooks Simms was on the witness stand 26 Before the case went to the jury on August 20 2009 the defense called Livingston as witness in an attempt to analogize the lobbying activities of the Livingston Group to the involvements of Mose Jefferson 27 Fawer s repeated arguments that the 140 000 payment could only be a gift in that adoption of I CAN LEARN already had Brooks Simms support as well as that of the other voting members of the school system but Fawer s observations of the time of the payment and the prior day s testimony by Amato were sideshows when This case is about payoffs and rewards according to federal prosecutor Sal Perricone At 6 00 PM on August 20 Lemmon ordered the jury sequestered to consider the charges against Mose Jefferson 28 The following morning on August 21 2009 the jury returned the following verdicts declaring Mose Jefferson guilty on four of the seven felony counts as reported by WDSU TV New Orleans Channel 6 NBC 29 Count 1 Conspiracy to commit bribery Not guilty Count 2 Bribery of an agent Brooks Simms of an organization seeking federal funding Guilty Count 3 Bribery of an agent Brooks Simms of an organization seeking federal funding Guilty Count 4 Bribery of an agent Brooks Simms of an organization seeking federal funding Not guilty Count 5 Money laundering Not guilty Count 6 Obstruction of justice Guilty Count 7 Obstruction of justice Guilty Sentencing by Lemmon was set for December 9 2009 Mose Jefferson remaining in the meantime free on personal surety bond 30 Racketeering trial editJefferon s racketeering trial began on March 22 2010 He died of cancer in 2011 in Lake Providence Notes edit Stephanie Grace in a column titled Mose Consultant or Conspirator permanent dead link analyzes various suppositions of symbiotic interfaces between the two brothers alleged legal improprieties Times Picayune July 21 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B5 Michael Luke Mose Jefferson guilty on four counts Archived 2009 08 24 at the Wayback Machine reported by WWL TV New Orleans Channel 4 CBS August 21 2009 accessed August 22 2009 Gordon Russell Mose Jefferson William s brother was the first to taste victory in politics behind the scenes Archived 2009 08 11 at the Wayback Machine in Times Picayune New Orleans May 31 2009 Metro Edition pp A1 A12 Jonathan Tilove amp Bruce Alpert Jefferson s defense may wrap up before lunch permanent dead link in Times Picayune July 23 2009 Saint Tammany Edition pp A3 full article is on pp A1 A3 Cf Jonathan Tilove amp Bruce Alpert William Jefferson took care of brother Mose witness says in Times Picayune July 16 2009 On August 6 2009 National Public Radio s newsmagazine All Things Considered reported that the companies owned by Mose Jefferson served no purpose other than to facilitate and obscure the movement of money See William J Jefferson Indictment and trial for details and sources Laura Maggi Jefferson family tree is shaken Mighty political organization falls to legal assault portraying corruption Archived 2009 08 12 at the Wayback Machine in Times Picayune August 9 2009 Metro Edition pp A1 A18 Maggi described Mose Jefferson as the man responsible for running the Progressive Democrats street operation p A18 See also Stephanie Grace Another Jefferson on trial Archived 2009 08 13 at the Wayback Machine in Times Picayune August 11 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B5 Mose Jefferson asks for trial delay in Times Picayune June 4 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B3 web version Mose Jefferson seeks trial delay Archived 2012 09 06 at archive today John Bresnahan William Jefferson s brother indicted on corruption charges from N O school probe April 2 2008 John Pope Gill Pratt named to SUNO Cabinet in Times Picayune May 28 2009 Saint Tammany Edition pp A1 A11 web version Gill Pratt will sit on SUNO Cabinet Archived 2012 09 06 at archive today Stephanie Grace Jefferson grip on SUNO isn t what it once was Archived 2009 08 12 at the Wayback Machine in Times Picayune June 2 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B5 SUNO advisor angers Jindal permanent dead link in Advocate Baton Rouge May 29 2009 p 15A a b Laura Maggi Mose Jefferson may need a new lawyer Fed prosecutors cite conflict of interest Archived 2012 09 04 at archive today in Times Picayune June 5 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B3 Lemann quoted in Michelle Krupa Ex N O official pleads innocent in Times Picayune June 6 2009 Saint Tammany Edition pp A1 A11 quote from Lemann appears on p A11 Mose Jefferson asks judge to dismiss case in Times Picayune June 8 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B2 web version Mose Jefferson wants case dismissed Lawyer calls case accident of birth Archived 2012 09 06 at archive today Laura Maggi Judge doesn t buy indigence plea in Times Picayune August 7 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B3 Letten s office had put the Loyola Avenue property on hold because of concerns over its potential forfeiture if involved in the felony counts associated with Mose Jefferson s brother William J Jefferson Laura Maggi Gill Pratt Jefferson push for August trial in Times Picayune June 18 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B3 web version Gill Pratt Mose Jefferson push to keep August trial date Laura Maggi Jefferson s request to delay trial denied School Board case set to start August 10 in Times Picayune Saint Tammany Edition p B3 web version Jefferson fails in bid to push back trial School Board case set to start August 10 permanent dead link accessed June 26 2009 Trial delay for Mose Jefferson denied permanent dead link in Times Picayune July 17 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B3 Trial delayed for Gill Pratt Jefferson kin in Times Picayune July 29 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B3 Michael Kunzelman Trial delay rejected for Mose Jefferson Archived 2011 06 04 at the Wayback Machine in Times Picayune August 5 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p A6 Fawer and Lemmon both quoted in Janet McConnaughey Judge won t move bribery trial from N O in Advocate August 9 2009 p 5B Cf Laura Maggi Mose Jefferson heads to court for first trial permanent dead link in Times Picayune August 10 2009 Metro Edition pp A1 A4 Laura Maggi Jury picked in Mose Jefferson case Judge snubs defense motion to move trial permanent dead link in Times Picayune August 11 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B1 See the Livingston Group Laura Maggi Mose Jefferson to take stand in his defense Archived 2009 08 25 at the Wayback Machine in Times Picayune August 12 2009 Saint Tammany Edition pp A1 A5 quotations are on p A5 Laura Maggi Payments called a favor not a bribe in Times Picayune August 19 2009 Saint Tammany Edition pp A1 A8 Lauri Maggi Lawyers hammer Jefferson on cash in Times Picayune August 20 2009 Saint Tammany Edition pp A1 A8 Amato s statements supportive of I CAN LEARN did not necessarily mean that he was sympathetic to Mose Jefferson whose associate Brooks Simms was often at odds with Amato until the school board unexpectedly ousted her as superintendent in a January 2004 evening meeting characterized by Shouting and cursing Brian Thevenot Final antics of School Board laid bare in Times Picayune August 23 2009 Metro Edition pp A1 A16 Ironically the Board members being unaware the meeting occurred on the same day after Brooks Simms had received the second payment from Mose Jefferson See also John P McCall Good riddance to old ways permanent dead link in Times Picayune August 25 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B4 James Gill wrote in his column the next morning A particularly supportive member one of Livingston s partners testified was none other than William Jefferson That was kind of Jefferson considering that he has nothing in common with Livingston dd Livingston s attorney was Jim Wright Influence peddling the legal way Archived 2009 08 26 at the Wayback Machine in Times Picayune August 21 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B7 Gill returned to the subject on the trial on August 26 2009 satirically claiming that Whether Brooks Simms and Mose Jefferson were once an item or not it must be admitted that they might have been made for each other James Gill A match not made in heaven permanent dead link in Times Picayune August 26 2009 Saint Tammany Edition p B5 Laura Maggi Mose Jefferson case goes to jury in Times Picayune August 21 2009 Saint Tammany Edition pp A1 A11 Mose Jefferson guilty of 4 of 7 bribery charges Archived 2011 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Laura Maggi Guilty on 4 counts In a split verdict Mose Jefferson is convicted in Times Picayune August 22 2009 Saint Tammany Edition pp A1 A6 The court deemed Mose Jefferson to have forfeited the 100 000 paid to Brooks Simms relative to counts 2 and 3 The charge in count 4 was dropped because at the time it was paid Brooks Simms had left the school board These and other details of the verdicts are set forth in Maggi s August 22 2009 article Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mose Jefferson amp oldid 1116400126, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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