Jesse Jackson Jr............ D.O.N.E

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He's been MIA for a couple of weeks now getting treatment for "mental exhaustion."

Any bets on what the real story is? Is he hiding from investigators? Is divorce imminent? Has he time traveled into the distant future?
Jackson is also being investigated for allegedly directing Raghuveer Nayak, a political donor and friend, to pay for air fare and travel accommodations for a woman Jackson calls a "social acquaintance."
Nayak last week was indicted by a grand jury on different fraud charges related to outpatient medical clinics.
Public deserves to know why Jackson’s MIA

Because only a very few people know where U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. is these days, and they’re not saying, we are left to play a version of “Where’s Waldo?”
For all those who voted for Jackson, they unfortunately are left with questions for which answers are hard to get.
In a brief statement last week, Jackson’s staff said he was on a medical leave for “exhaustion” and asked that all “respect his family’s privacy.” Nothing about when he would return.
We have no way to know if the congressman is ill or “exhausted” in the way the Betty Ford Clinic defines exhaustion. As for privacy, you give up much of that when you’re a congressman, especially when you can’t perform your duties.
Jackson was on leave for two weeks before anyone in his office thought to mention it. In fact, his office strangely continued to issue news releases as if he were still on the job rather than missing votes in the House.
What’s up with that? Why the secrecy?
Jackson’s life has been complicated, if not stressful, in recent years. There’s that alleged bribery scheme to land a U.S. Senate seat, a messy congressional ethics investigation and a dalliance with a D.C. restaurant hostess/bikini model that has shaken his marriage.
And Jackson departed for wherever shortly before the feds indicted his alleged Senate-seat intermediary, Raghuveer Nayak, a family friend and top Democratic Party fundraiser, in an unrelated payoff scheme.
Coincidence?
Given all that, maybe we’d escape, too. Or crumble under its weight. But what we have is a mystery wrapped inside an enigma and possibly cloaked in a load of baloney.
Jackson’s employers, the people of the 2nd Congressional District, like to check in with the hired help now and then. Whatever his malady, they deserve the truth. Deception and secrecy are unacceptable.
The public may completely understand his need for support, but he has to tell them what’s wrong.
So many questions dangling tantalizingly in the air. But it’s not the questions that are Jackson’s problem. It’s the answers.

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http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/OTUS...takes-mystery-leave-absence/story?id=16651890
 

Jesse Jackson Jr. Resigns,
Facing Illness
and Inquiry​



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MrMr. Jackson at the Democratic National Convention in Denver in 2008. Mr. Jackson resigned
his House seat on Wednesday.


The New York Times
By MONICA DAVEY
November 21, 2012


CHICAGO — Representative Jesse L. Jackson Jr. resigned from Congress on Wednesday, ending the political career of a son who rose on the name of his father, the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr., and was once widely expected to outshine him.

Mr. Jackson, 47, has been treated for bipolar disorder, and cited ill health as his reason for leaving. He also acknowledged in a resignation letter a continuing federal criminal investigation into the possible misuse of campaign funds and said, for the first time publicly, that he was cooperating with investigators.

“For 17 years I have given 100 percent of my time, energy and life to public service,” Mr. Jackson, a Democrat, wrote in the letter to Speaker John A. Boehner. “However, over the past several months, as my health has deteriorated, my ability to serve the constituents of my district has continued to diminish. Against the recommendations of my doctors, I had hoped and tried to return to Washington and continue working on the issues that matter most to the people of the Second District. I know now that will not be possible.”

The timing of the resignation — 15 days after voters re-elected Mr. Jackson a 10th time to represent a district on Chicago’s South Side and southern suburbs — irked some here, who thought he should have made a decision before Election Day, rather than creating the need for a special election to replace him.

Around the nation, Mr. Jackson’s colleagues in Congress and in his own offices expressed sadness over his departure, but few seemed truly surprised. Mr. Jackson, who was once spoken of as a future candidate for the Senate or for mayor of Chicago or even president, disappeared from public view in June, seeking medical treatment in Minnesota and Arizona.

By this month, some leaders in Chicago, including Mayor Rahm Emanuel, had publicly suggested that Mr. Jackson needed to address his constituents, one way or another. Even on Wednesday, there was no official announcement of the resignation, only the letter. Mr. Jackson’s whereabouts was undisclosed. He did make private phone calls on Wednesday to tell some colleagues of his decision, and several described those talks as sorrowful. “He sounded in so much pain,” Representative Bobby L. Rush of Illinois said.

Still looming is the criminal inquiry into Mr. Jackson’s use of campaign funds.

“I am aware of the ongoing federal investigation into my activities and I am doing my best to address the situation responsibly, cooperate with investigators and accept responsibility for my mistakes, for they are my mistakes and mine alone,” Mr. Jackson wrote in his letter. “None of us is immune from our share of shortcomings or human frailties and I pray that I will be remembered for what I did right.”

While Mr. Jackson did not cite the investigation as a reason for his departure, legal experts said his resignation might help lawyers argue for leniency, given that he has already paid a significant penalty: his job. A statement issued by his lawyers, including Dan K. Webb, a former United States attorney from Chicago, suggested that talks with prosecutors were under way. “We hope to negotiate a fair resolution of the matter, but the process could take several months,” the lawyers said.

Gov. Pat Quinn of Illinois pledged to set a date for a special election swiftly. By law it must take place within 115 days of that date. Already, numerous people appeared to be eyeing the seat. “Every other African-American politician I talk to on the South Side is thinking about running,” said Laura Washington, a political analyst here.

Some in Chicago have suggested that another member of the Jackson family — perhaps Mr. Jackson’s wife, Sandi, an alderman, or Mr. Jackson’s brother, Jonathan — may seek the job, but that remained uncertain on Wednesday. A spokesman for Mr. Jackson and his father did not return phone calls.

Colleagues praised Mr. Jackson’s tenure, noting his efforts to build a third airport in the Chicago area, his success in bringing nearly a billion dollars for projects in his district and his drive for an increase in the minimum wage.

“His service in Congress was marked by his eloquent advocacy for his constituents’ views and interests,” Representative Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic leader, said in a written statement.

Even before Mr. Jackson took a medical leave from Congress in June, his political star had fallen. In late 2008, he sought an appointment to fill the Senate seat that was being vacated by Barack Obama. As part of an inquiry into actions by former Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich of Illinois, now in prison for trying to sell that appointment, authorities said they learned that a friend of Mr. Jackson had offered campaign contributions to the governor if Mr. Jackson got the Senate job. A House ethics investigation opened, though Mr. Jackson denied wrongdoing.

On Nov. 6, Mr. Jackson won 63 percent of the vote in his Democratic-leaning district, though he had held no campaign appearances for months and was undergoing treatment at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota on Election Day.

No victory party was held. Instead, Mr. Jackson spoke optimistically of his return to Congress in a statement.

“Once the doctors approve my return to work, I will continue to be the progressive fighter you have known for years,” his statement read. “My family and I are grateful for your many heartfelt prayers and kind thoughts. I continue to feel better every day and look forward to serving you.”



Jennifer Steinhauer and Michael S. Schmidt contributed reporting from Washington, and Steven Yaccino from Chicago.



http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/22/us/jackson-jr-to-resign-house-seat.html?pagewanted=all



 
Isn't this like a waste of campaign funds and time? Why did he even run for reelection if he wasn't ready? This just seems selfish to me.

Sent from my S3
 
Isn't this like a waste of campaign funds and time? Why did he even run for reelection if he wasn't ready? This just seems selfish to me.

Sent from my S3

Great questions! But, I'm just tickled black to have your comments in this forum. :)
 
Great questions! But, I'm just tickled black to have your comments in this forum. :)

I use to post from time to time years back. I read a lot over here though, so I guess I'm a "lurker" in these parts. Lol

I'll try to participate more. :)

Sent from my S3
 
I use to post from time to time years back. I read a lot over here though, so I guess I'm a "lurker" in these parts. Lol

I know.

The government doesn't know that I know that it installed a program in this forum that keeps track of visitors, lurkers and readers. It also doesn't know that I have been able to access the program, so I can tell who lurks when where and how. Neither does the government know that the "mind reading" component of its program doesn't work as well as it thinks. But, damn :( . . . guess I just told em.


I'll try to participate more. :)

Sent from my S3

See :hmm:, the government's program didn't know that.

But, I'm looking forward to it ! ! !

enjoy your holidays . . .

 
I know.

The government doesn't know that I know that it installed a program in this forum that keeps track of visitors, lurkers and readers. It also doesn't know that I have been able to access the program, so I can tell who lurks when where and how. Neither does the government know that the "mind reading" component of its program doesn't work as well as it thinks. But, damn :( . . . guess I just told em.




See :hmm:, the government's program didn't know that.

But, I'm looking forward to it ! ! !

enjoy your holidays . . .


Hilarious!!!!! And thanks and same to you!

Sent from my S3
 
So the issue is not money, the issue is that we should be held to a higher standard.

A higher standard??? How did we get to this point?

My point is if he knew he wasn't well why run for reelection, and he's been ill for a while, I almost view it as he played the game of let him see if he can win, and once he did, then he decided to step down, and I'm going to end it there.

Sent from my S3
 
Jesse Jackson Jr. ruins once-promising career for a taste of the good life Read more

Jesse Jackson Jr. pleads guilty to misusing campaign funds, says 'tell everybody in Chicago I know I let them down'
Once a fast-rising politician from Chicago's South Side, Jesse Jackson Jr. became a symbol of entitlement run terribly amok when he pleaded guilty to misusing campaign funds. His story is a cautionary note on the perils of hubris and the fragility of success.

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WASHINGTON — On a chill if sunny winter's day, Jesse Jackson Jr. reminded the world of the perils of being born on third base and thinking you've hit a triple.

A symbol of entitlement run terribly amok, the former congressman pleaded guilty Wednesday to grossly misusing campaign funds. The juxtaposition of his pain with the far more upbeat reality of a former constituent, Barack Obama, provided its own cautionary note on the perils of hubris and the fragility of success.

Fresh from re-election and golf with Tiger Woods, President Obama is cool, confident and riding high. On Wednesday, he gave interviews at the White House to local TV anchors and sat down with his new Secretary of State, John Kerry.

Meanwhile, the 47-year-old preppie who was once the most prominent politician on Chicago's South Side sat solemn and forlorn in the nearby federal courthouse, his career in flames and personal life in likely disarray. A student of the Civil War, he might have equated his ignominy with General Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox.

RELATED: JESSE JACKSON JR. AND WIFE PLEAD GUILTY TO CAMPAIGN FUND SCHEME

The juxtaposition of Jackson and Obama forced the reminder that, not too long ago, Jackson was the black Chicago politician on a national fast track, long before anybody even knew Obama's name.

He won a special election to Congress in 1995, defeating rivals who included a state senator whose decision to run prompted Obama, an attorney and political neophyte, to go for her seat. As I listened to a federal judge detail the charges against Jackson, replete with buying reversible fur coats and Bruce Lee memorabilia, I couldn't help remember how Jackson's win signaled what many figured was a new era in Chicago and even national politics.

The son of a potent political and cultural figure, civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson, he became a source of worry to Chicago's powerful Daley family, who feared him as a potential challenger to Mayor Richard M. Daley.

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And there was speculation of a similar order in the nation's capital, as noted Thursday by Mike Flannery, a Chicago TV political reporter and longtime Jackson family observer. Especially in his early Capitol Hill years, some foresaw that Jesse Jackson Jr. could be the first-ever African-American speaker of the House of Representatives.

RELATED: JACKSON JR. CHARGED WITH MISUSING $750K IN CAMPAIGN FUNDS

After all, he was very bright, disciplined, articulate and able to cultivate young talent as he began building what seemed to be an emerging political machine in a South Side district long on poverty and violence, and short on hope. He was in a very safe Democratic district, took care of business and wound up on the very influential House Appropriations Committee, dispenser of seven- and eight-figure largess.

He didn't have his dad's charisma but he was more polished, if always less genuine than the international figure with whom frictions always existed, in part due to the pain often caused his mother by the father's roaming ways. It was not inconceivable that he one day could face off for power in the Democratic caucus against Rahm Emanuel, then a North Side congressman who envisioned himself as the first Jewish speaker of the House.

But as the years wore on, he blew it. He got a reputation as not especially hard working or effective in bringing home the bacon to his beleaguered district. He played his cards wrong with the Daley clan, who isolated him. Congressional colleagues felt that he didn't "deliver," as opposed to the maniacally focused Emanuel, who moved on to be Obama's chief of staff and now mayor of Chicago.

As Flannery puts it, there was an arrogance found in the prep and law school graduate that became increasingly apparent, one that perhaps morphed with bonafide self-delusion and even mental illness underscored by his brazen and crazy purchases with campaign monies.

RELATED: REPORT: JACKSON JR. SIGNS PLEA DEAL FOR JAIL TIME

First came his zealous attempt to lobby for Obama's U.S. Senate seat after Obama was elected President in 2008. The criminal trials of former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich put a spotlight on Jackson contributors suggesting big money for the governor if he tapped Jackson as replacement. Jackson wasn't prosecuted but was tainted.

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Then came word of an extramarital affair with a Washington bikini model and waitress, followed by the criminal probe of his campaign fund, a diagnosis of having bipolar disorder and his November resignation from Congress.

His tragic crash played out Wednesday in a doubleheader of family melancholy. First, he pleaded guilty, later telling me to "tell everybody in Chicago I know I let them down." Four hours later, his wife Sandi, now a former Chicago alderman, pleaded guilty to related tax charges. Each will be sentenced in four months, with the former congressman surely doing prison time.

Jackson's parents and three siblings were all there. The famous father, himself a spectator or mourner at so many tragedies, was stoic as he viewed what was perhaps the most personally painful tragedy of all.

RELATED: JACKSON JR. COULD BE GOING BEHIND BARS

A family's innate self-confidence and sense of being an American elite was surely fractured. The most vivid example was the former congressman’s wife, seemingly both a co-conspirator and collateral damage in the husband's weird spending. She could not maintain his reserve.

At her proceeding, she briefly cried as a prosecutor told the judge that she had demonstrated "willful intent to violate the law." Those few words were so spare and so unambiguous.

The second hearing was done when the irrepressible father startled me with a poke in the shoulder as I was crouched low and looking at my iPhone. "How you doin', man?" he asked.

I shook his hand and answered that I was well. But there was no need to ask about him. Not on this day.

James Warren is the Daily News Washington bureau chief.

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/pol...tting-chicago-article-1.1269426#ixzz2LYx6eKJd
 

He should of quit politics and opened a 10,000 seat mega church with ATM’s in the aisles, if he wanted some easy bling $$$$$$$



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Jesse Jackson Jr. & wife Sandra

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department filed fraud and conspiracy charges on Friday against former Representative Jesse L. Jackson Jr., saying that he used about $750,000 in campaign money for personal expenses. Mr. Jackson’s wife, Sandra Stevens, was also charged with one count of filing false tax returns. Under federal sentencing guidelines, Jesse Jackson Jr. faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison,a fine of up to $250,000 and other penalties, his wife faces three years in prison.
The money was used for a $43,350 men’s solid gold Rolex watch, $10,105 on Bruce Lee memorabilia, $11,130 on Martin Luther King memorabilia and $22,700 on Michael Jackson items, including $4,600 for a "Michael Jackson fedora", $5,150 worth of fur capes and parkas, and $9,588 in children’s furniture.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chi-jackson-charges-20130215,0,319725.story
 
I'd been done graduated college by the time his dumb ass get out.

What an idiot.... he was livin' it up wasn't it? :lol:

Sent Collect from the Fulton County Correctional Facility using pay phone.
 
Damn....and he had the nerve to drop dime on cat who was selling his seat for a million dollars while living in a glass house.:smh:



*two cents*
 
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