Jack Abramoff Faces Sentencing on Corruption Charges

Washington D.C., USA Abramoff faces up to 11 years in prison for trading expensive meals, golf junkets, luxury sports tickets and other gifts for political favors. But because he became the key FBI witness in his own scandal, he and the government are asking for much less time.

"I have been thinking about this moment literally for years," Abramoff wrote a federal judge Wednesday.

He said even he is shocked to look back on what his career had become. But he said he was "not a bad man" and pleaded for leniency.

"It is hard to see the exact moment that I went over the line but, looking backwards, it is amazing for me to see how far I strayed and how I did not see it at the time," Abramoff wrote. "So much of what happens in Washington stretches the envelope, skirts the spirit of the rules, and lives in the loopholes. But even by those standards, I blundered farther than even those excesses would allow."

Abramoff is already serving a nearly six-year prison sentence for a fraudulent Florida casino deal.

Prosecutors are seeking a sentence of less than four years for the Washington case. Defense lawyers say he deserves even less time. Since pleading guilty in 2006, Abramoff has provided the Justice Department evidence that helped send Rep. Bob Ney, R-Ohio, and former Deputy Interior Secretary J. Steven Griles to prison.

Abramoff said his cooperation has been extensive. Not only did he confirm what prosecutors knew, he said he also offered new leads and tips, pointed them in different directions and spent countless hours meeting with investigators. Several Capitol Hill aides and powerful political figures have pleaded guilty because of his cooperation.

"My efforts do not even the balance, but they are a good down payment on what I still must do," Abramoff wrote.

He said he has spent the first two years in prison reflecting on his actions.

"I see that my crimes all had the same cause -- my shortsighted and selfish view that the ends could justify the means," he wrote. "I am not a bad man (although to read all the news articles one would think I am Osama bin Laden), but I did many bad things."

U.S. District Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle has wide discretion when it comes to handing down a sentence. She has been lenient at times in the case but has shown little patience for defendants who arrive in her courtroom with excuses. Abramoff will get an opportunity to speak in court.



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