US | William Jefferson Supreme Court Stands Pat on FBI Raid of Rep's Office Separation of powers violated, appeals ruled By Nick McMaster Posted Mar 31, 2008 1:24 PM CDT Copied U.S. Rep. William Jefferson, D-New Orleans, talks to the media after voting in New Orleans in this Dec. 9, 2006, file photo. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File) The Supreme Court declined today to hear an appeal of a ruling that the FBI violated separation-of-powers law in a 2006 raid on the office of Rep. William Jefferson, the New York Times reports. Though the raid itself was not unconstitutional, an appeals court found, the FBI went too far in allowing agents to look through the Louisiana Democrat's documents. The Bureau—which brought charges including bribery, racketeering and conspiracy against Jefferson—was forced to return the documents, but kept hard drives and other materials seized in the same raid. Jefferson has denied allegations he accepted bribes to secure business deals in Africa; lawmakers of both parties roundly criticized the White House for allowing the raid. Read These Next Tugboat captain charged after horrific accident killed 3 campers. Trump notched a presidential first on Wednesday. The Supreme Court looks set to buck Trump on birthright citizenship. Many Oracle employees got an unwelcome email. Report an error