NEW YORK -- It seemed as if Anthony Weiner had hit rock-bottom when he resigned from Congress in 2011.
"Bye-bye, pervert!" one heckler shouted as the Democrat quit amid revelations he had sent graphic pictures of himself to women on social media. Time has shown his self-destructive drama had only just begun.
Weiner, 53, is set to be sentenced today for sending obscene material to a 15-year-old girl in a case that may have played a role in costing Hillary Clinton -- former boss of Weiner's wife, Huma Abedin -- the presidential election.
Federal prosecutors have asked for a sentence of slightly more than two years behind bars because of the seriousness of the crime, in which Weiner sent adult porn to the girl and got her to take her clothes off for him on Skype.
"The defendant did far more than exchange typed words on a lifeless cellphone screen with a faceless stranger," prosecutors wrote to the judge. "Transmitting obscenity to a minor to induce her to engage in sexually explicit conduct by video chat and photo -- is far from mere 'sexting.'"
But Weiner's attorneys contend he is a changed man who has learned his lesson, calling his compulsive sexting a "deep sickness" best treated without time behind bars.
The memo also suggested Weiner himself was a victim of the scandal, saying the North Carolina high school student initiated contact with him because she "hoped somehow to influence the U.S. presidential election" and write a tell-all book.
Some legal observers doubt the wisdom of the defense in questioning the girl's motivations.
The strategy "is fraught with peril since an attack on a victim can be read by the judge as undermining the defendant's claim that he has accepted full responsibility," said Robert Mintz, a former federal prosecutor.
He added he expects Weiner to get jail time, "given the nature of the charges and the lack of any real mitigating factors here."
The sentencing will be the latest chapter in the downfall of Weiner, a once-promising politician and half of an up-and-coming Washington power couple.
The trouble began in 2011, when an explicit photo of Weiner, then a congressman representing part of New York City, sent from his Twitter account became public.
He first claimed his account had been hacked but later resigned after admitting he'd had explicit online contact with at least a half-dozen women.
Weiner tried to resurrect his career by running for mayor in 2013 and surged to the lead in the polls.
But again, more racy online messages, where he used the moniker "Carlos Danger," surfaced to doom his candidacy and open the door for the then-little-known Democrat who would go on to win, Bill de Blasio.
His downfall in that campaign was captured in the behind-the-scenes documentary "Weiner," which featured a scene of Weiner and his wife alone in a conference room staring at each other in what a New York Times review called "the longest and most painful onscreen marital silence this side of an Ingmar Bergman film."
In the end, the most significant effect of Weiner's woes may have been on the 2016 presidential contest.
More than any other factor, Clinton has blamed her loss on FBI director James Comey's decision to reopen an investigation into her private email server in the campaign's final days.
Comey's decision came after FBI agents investigating Weiner's sexual misdeeds discovered her emails had been forwarded to Weiner's laptop, apparently by his wife.
In a matter of days, the FBI concluded there was nothing new in the emails, but Clinton has said the damage was done.
Some political analysts suggested the issue may have been a factor in tilting the election in Donald Trump's favor, particularly across Midwestern battlegrounds such as Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
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