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Judge Declares Mistrial in Abramoff-Related Case Against Former Lobbyist
Kevin Ring is only the second person implicated in the Abramoff scandal to fight the criminal charges at trial rather than cutting a plea deal with prosecutors
The Associated Press
October 16, 2009
A judge declared a mistrial Thursday in the case of a former lobbyist caught up in the Jack Abramoff affair, the biggest setback in the government's long-running prosecution of the influence-peddling scandal.
The jury deadlocked over allegations that Kevin Ring lavished thousands of dollars worth of tickets and meals on employees of then-Republican Reps. John Doolittle of California and Ernest Istook of Oklahoma and on Justice Department officials in return for congressional appropriations and other assistance for Abramoff's clients.
The panel of seven women and five men also was unable to reach a verdict on another count, on Ring's part in arranging a job that paid $96,000 to Doolittle's wife. On Tuesday, jurors said they had reached a verdict on that count, although they did not disclose what it was. In two more days of deliberating about the case, the jurors' agreement on that count came undone.
Ring, who declined to comment as he left the courtroom after the mistrial was declared, is a former aide to Doolittle. The ex-congressman, who has not been charged, was named by the government as an unindicted co-conspirator in the case.
The protracted criminal investigation has sent Abramoff and former Republican Rep. Bob Ney of Ohio to prison and led to guilty pleas by 15 other people.
Ring's lawyers called no witnesses to the stand, instead making their case by eliciting testimony on cross-examination that was favorable to Ring from prosecution witnesses who were longtime associates of the lobbyist.
"It sounds sinister to talk about meals and tickets, near in time to when folks are being asked to take official actions," one of Ring's lawyers told the jury in closing arguments. "It is the way lobbying works, it is the way politics works. ... This is not a sign of a bribe. This is not the sign of a corrupt relationship."
During deliberations, the jurors asked the judge whether there was a legal limit on the dollar value of meals and tickets lobbyists could provide public officials. There wasn't, said U.S. District Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle.
Ring is only the second person implicated in the Abramoff scandal to fight the criminal charges at trial rather than pleading guilty and cutting a deal to cooperate with prosecutors in exchange for the possibility of a reduced sentence. The other was David Safavian, the Bush administration's former chief procurement officer, whose convictions were overturned following a trial in 2006. Safavian was convicted again in a retrial and faces sentencing Friday.
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