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McDonnell Trial: ‘Facts Spoke for Themselves,' Juror Says

Northern Virginia Reporter David Culver spoke with jurors who decided the guilty verdicts at the corruption trial of former Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell and his wife Maureen.

Kathleen L. Carmody said she voted for Bob McDonnell and thought he was "terrific for Virginia'' as governor -- but as a juror in McDonnell's corruption trial, she was compelled to convict him.

"The facts spoke for themselves,'' she told The Associated Press in an interview Thursday, not long after she and fellow jurors found McDonnell guilty on 11 of 13 counts. McDonnell's wife, Maureen, was convicted of nine of 13 charges.

"The reading of the verdict was very difficult. The verdict, I believe, was true, but the emotion in the courtroom was very hard to watch," Carmody said.

The case derailed the career of the onetime rising Republican star. Bob McDonnell's attorney, Henry Asbill, said his client did not receive a fair trial and will appeal. Asbill reiterated his previous statement that prosecutors sought to criminalize routine political behavior.

"I have no idea what the jury deliberated about,'' Asbill said. "There are a lot of things about the case that [you] can sit back and think about but it's hard to tell when the die was cast.''

Maureen McDonnell's attorney, William Burck, declined to comment.

McDonnell and his wife now face up to 20 years in prison on each count, although a presentencing report by the federal probation office will result in a lighter recommendation. Sentencing was scheduled for Jan. 6.

An ashen Bob McDonnell, who wept as the verdicts were read, was mobbed by TV cameras before being whisked from the federal courthouse in a blue Mercedes.

"All I can say is that my trust remains in the Lord,'' he said quietly.

Carmody said she had a "lump in her throat" as she watched the McDonnell family's teary reaction.

"When the verdicts were read, you could not be human and not feel sorry, or empathy or compassion for the McDonnell family,'' she said.

"We all feel bad,'' added fellow juror Robin Trujillo. "Their lives are going to be turned upside down. It wasn't easy at all, but we have to follow the law, and the law and the facts fit together.''

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The McDonnells' defense strategy depended in large part on convincing jurors that their marriage itself was a fraud and they were unable to speak to each other, let alone conspire to accept bribes. They left the courtroom separately - first Bob and then Maureen, who hugged one of her daughters and wept loudly on the way out.

The McDonnells were convicted on nearly all the counts involving doing favors for wealthy vitamin executive Jonnie Williams in exchange for hundreds of thousands of dollars in gifts and loans they admitted taking.

Maureen McDonnell also was convicted of obstructing justice after the scandal broke, by returning designer clothes Williams had bought for her during a New York shopping trip, along with a handwritten note suggesting they had agreed Williams could give the dress to his daughters or to charity.

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Photo of former Va. Gov. Bob McDonnell in a Ferrari convertible. This photo was sent by former Va. First Lady Maureen McDonnell to CEO Jonnie Williams.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Email chain between Bob McDonnell and his sister, Maureen McDonnell, about their troubled real estate partnership. Read the full document here.
Email chain regarding MoBo, the real estate partnership owned by Bob McDonnell and his sister, Maureen. Read the full document here.
NBC7
Email chain regarding MoBo. Read the full document here.
Other photos of McDonnell in the Ferrari have been entered into evidence.
Other photos of McDonnell in the Ferrari have been entered into evidence.
Other photos of McDonnell in the Ferrari have been entered into evidence.
Another driver takes a picture of McDonnell in the Ferrari.
Defense lawyers introduced into evidence a letter signed by most of the governor's mansion staff about Maureen McDonnell's behavior toward staff, characterizing it as a possible mass resignation. Former Secretary of the Commonwealth Janet Kelly testified the grievances in the letter were accurate and fair. Read the full document here.
Page 2 of the letter from staffers. Read the full document here.
"We had loans of 20000 and 50000 from a third party to the LLC...." Bob McDonnell wrote in an email to Brenda Chamberlain, bookkeeper for MoBo Realty. Read the full document here.
A bank statement shows a $20,000 check from Jonnie Willams' Starwood Trust. Prosecutors in the corruption trial of former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell and his wife Maureen turned to the issue of the couple's undisclosed loans and debts on Day 13 of the trial.Read the full document here.
Brenda Chamberlain, bookkeeper for MoBo Realty, was the first witness to take the stand on Day 16 of the trial as the defense began presenting its case. The defense tried to show no attempt to hide $70,000 in loans to MoBo, as Chamberlain testified she was given full access to the accounts and could see the loans. But during cross-examination, the government showed Williams wasn't named, only his Starwood Trust, which made the loans to MoBo. Chamberlain testified she never spoke to anyone with Starwood.<a href="https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/1283639-429-1.html" target="blank"Read the full document here.
Page 2 of an email from Bob McDonnell to Brenda Chamberlain, bookkeeper for MoBo Realty. Read the full document here.
McDonnell posing with a bottle of Anatabloc, the supplement marketed by Star Scientific, Inc.
The McDonnells appear at a fashion show to raise money for cancer research. Maureen McDonnell invited CEO Jonnie Williams and his wife to attend as her guests, signing the invitation, "XOXO!!"
The McDonnells appear at a fashion show to raise money for cancer research. Maureen McDonnell invited CEO Jonnie Williams and his wife to attend as her guests, signing the invitation, "XOXO!!"
Checks to the MoBo real estate company. Read the full document here.
Getty Images
The McDonnells appear at a fashion show to raise money for cancer research. Maureen McDonnell invited CEO Jonnie Williams and his wife to attend as her guests, signing the invitation, "XOXO!!"
The McDonnells appear at a fashion show to raise money for cancer research. Maureen McDonnell invited CEO Jonnie Williams and his wife to attend as her guests, signing the invitation, "XOXO!!"
Getty Images
Handwritten thank-you note from Maureen McDonnell to Jonnie and Celeste Williams thanks them for "the beautiful outfits you adorned me in". Read the full document here.
CEO Jonnie Williams said he gave this Rolex to Va. Gov. Bob McDonnell at Maureen McDonnell's request. Jurors passed the watch among themselves.
Text from McDonnell to Williams. Read the full document here.
Text from McDonnell to Williams asks "if you could extend another 20k loan for this year." Read the full document here.
Williams responded: "Done." Read the full document here.
Government evidence shows messages between Bob McDonnell and Jonnie Williams. Read the full document here.
Charles James describes the McDonnell’s reaction in the courtroom to multiple guilty verdicts being read: “They dipped their heads, they were silent, and then the sobbing began.”

While several witnesses described the first lady's relationship with Williams as inappropriate and flirtatious, none suggested it was physical, and Williams testified that his dealings with both McDonnells were all business.

Prosecutors said the McDonnells turned to Williams in desperation because they were grappling with $90,000 in credit card debt and annual losses of $40,000 to $60,000 on family-owned vacation rentals in Virginia Beach. Williams said he wrote the first $50,000 check to Maureen after she complained about their money troubles and offered to help his company.

Virginia has among the nation's weakest political ethics laws and McDonnell repeatedly stressed that he did nothing to violate them. But this case was federal, and both prosecutors and FBI officials said the verdicts send a message that state laws provide no shelter from corruption prosecutions.

"The FBI will engage, and engage vigorously to any credible allegation of corruption,'' said Adam S. Lee, special agent in charge of the Richmond's FBI bureau.

Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe and Attorney General Mark Herring, both Democrats who were elected as the scandal developed, have imposed strict gift bans and ethics policies on their own staff, and called for tougher rules than the ethics reform that passed the General Assembly earlier this year.

"We have a long way to go to restore the public's trust,'' Herring said in a statement. "It should be crystal clear that the people of Virginia deserve real ethics reform.''

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