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![]() Now that he's facing the reality of his comeuppance, he and his wife beg for mercy. Too bad he didn't consider the circumstances when he was lying his face off to protect Jack Abramoff. A former top White House official was sentenced Friday to a year and a day in federal prison for obstructing justice and lying to officials and investigators about a lavish golf trip to Scotland and his ties to disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff. It was the second time that David H. Safavian, a former chief of staff at the General Services Administration, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Paul L. Friedman on a conviction stemming from a federal probe of Abramoff's illicit lobbying activities. In 2006, Friedman sentenced Safavian to 18 months in prison, but the underlying conviction was thrown out last year by an appeals court. Prosecutors elected to retry Safavian. In December, the 42-year-old was convicted on charges of lying to a GSA ethics officer, obstructing a GSA investigation into the 2002 golf trip and lying on financial disclosure forms about its costs. He was also convicted of making false statements to an FBI agent. He was acquitted of lying to a Senate committee. Safavian and his wife, Jennifer, begged Friedman for leniency during a hearing Friday in the District's federal court, saying their family had suffered enough without having to endure a prison sentence. They are bankrupt, Safavian will lose his law license and he will be barred from ever contracting with the government, they said. Jennifer Safavian said she was pregnant with their second child. They said they were worried about how their 6-year-old daughter would cope if her father was sent to prison. Safavian conceded that he had made mistakes and used poor judgment but said that he did not think he had broken any laws. "I beg you to take into account how what I have to go through will impact my family," he told the judge. Prosecutors urged Friedman to impose prison time, saying Safavian had "lied repeatedly" to officials and investigators from 2002 through 2005. "All of these lies were premeditated and designed to keep his unethical relationship with Jack Abramoff from becoming public," they wrote in court papers. His actions, prosecutors added, "are particularly damaging because they effectively undermine the trust the public should have in its government and high-level officials." Friedman said he agreed that a prison term was appropriate and that "a light bulb should have gone on" in Safavian's mind that his dealings with Abramoff were questionable. The judge said he would allow Safavian to wait until after his child is born to enter prison. The Justice Department's case centered on Safavian's ties to Abramoff, the once-powerful Republican lobbyist who is imprisoned for fraud. Abramoff and more than a dozen others have pleaded guilty in the scandal. The lengthy trial of one of his lobbying associates, Kevin Ring, ended in a mistrial Thursday after jurors deadlocked on eight corruption charges. Abramoff and Safavian worked together at a law firm in the 1990s. After Safavian took a top GSA job in 2002, Abramoff began asking him whether his clients could lease the Old Post Office in downtown Washington. Abramoff also requested help in leasing or purchasing a portion of the Naval Surface Warfare Center in White Oak for a Jewish school he supported. The GSA was trying to find ways to develop the properties. While helping Abramoff find ways to lease the properties, Safavian took the August 2002 golf trip with Abramoff and seven others to Scotland. Safavian's share for the trip, which included posh hotels and a private jet flight, came closer to $17,453 than the $3,100 check he gave Abramoff, prosecutors said. The jury found that Safavian lied to a GSA ethics officer whom he consulted about the propriety of taking the trip. He told the ethics officer that Abramoff did all his work on Capitol Hill. Safavian did not mention he was helping Abramoff in his quest for the GSA properties. In 2003, after receiving a tip, the GSA's inspector general opened an investigation into the golf trip. But the probe was dropped after Safavian told investigators that he had reimbursed Abramoff for his share of the costs and that the lobbyist had no business before the GSA. He also lied in 2005 to an FBI agent investigating the Abramoff lobbying scandal, the jury found. Safavian left the high-ranking GSA job in 2004 to become administrator of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy in the Office of Management and Budget at the White House. He was arrested in 2005. |
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