WASHINGTON, Oct. 27, 2008

Ted Stevens Guilty In Corruption Case

Alaska GOP Lawmaker Not Dropping Out Of Senate Race Despite Conviction On 7 Counts Related To Lying About Gifts

  • Play CBS Video Video Stevens Found Guilty Of Lying

    Senator Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, was found guilty on seven counts of lying to conceal more than a quarter million dollars worth of gifts. Stevens is up for reelection next week. Nancy Cordes reports.

    • Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, and his attorney Brendan Sullivan, leave federal court in Washington, Monday, Oct. 27, 2008, after a guilty verdict was returned by the jury at his trial.

      Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, and his attorney Brendan Sullivan, leave federal court in Washington, Monday, Oct. 27, 2008, after a guilty verdict was returned by the jury at his trial.  (AP)

    • Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, leaves Federal Court in Washington, Monday, Oct. 27, 2008, while the jury continued deliberations inside at his trial.

      Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, leaves Federal Court in Washington, Monday, Oct. 27, 2008, while the jury continued deliberations inside at his trial.  (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

    • This artist's rendering depicts a scene from the trial of Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, at the U.S. District Court in Washington, Oct. 23, 2008.

      This artist's rendering depicts a scene from the trial of Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, at the U.S. District Court in Washington, Oct. 23, 2008.  (AP Photo/Dana Verkouteren)

    • With his fate in the hands of a jury, Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, returns to the U.S. District Court in Washington, Oct. 23, 2008.

      With his fate in the hands of a jury, Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, returns to the U.S. District Court in Washington, Oct. 23, 2008.  (AP Photo/J.Scott Applewhite)

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(CBS/AP)  Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens was convicted of seven corruption charges Monday in a trial that threatened to end the 40-year career of Alaska's political patriarch in disgrace.

The verdict, coming barely a week before Election Day, increased Stevens' difficulty in winning what already was a difficult race against Democratic challenger Mark Begich. Democrats hope to seize the once reliably Republican seat as part of their bid for a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate.

Stevens says he's not dropping out of his Senate race despite being convicted. He accused the Justice Department of unconscionable behavior in his prosecution and asked Alaskans and Senate colleagues to stand by him as he appeals the conviction. In a statement released by his Senate office, Stevens asserted his innocence and said he would appeal.

Stevens, 84, was convicted of all the felony charges he faced of lying about free home renovations and other gifts from a wealthy oil contractor. Jurors began deliberating last week.

Visibly shaken after the verdicts were read - the jury foreman declaring "guilty" seven times - Stevens tried to intertwine his fingers but quickly put his hands down to his side after noticing they were trembling. As he left the courtroom, Stevens got a quick kiss on the cheek from his wife, Catherine, who testified on his behalf during the trial. He declined to talk to reporters waiting outside.

Stevens faces up to five years in prison on each count when he is sentenced, but under federal guidelines he is likely to receive much less prison time, if any. The judge originally scheduled sentencing for Jan. 26 but then changed his mind and did not immediately set a date.

"If he does get a prison sentence, it almost certainly won’t be a very long one and it wouldn’t surprise me, given his age and record in Congress, if he were given less than what Martha Stewart got when she lied to authorities," said CBS News legal analyst Andrew Cohen. "She got six months in prison and six months house arrest. I would be shocked if Stevens gets close to that."

The month-long trial revealed that employees for VECO Corp., an oil services company, transformed Stevens' modest mountain cabin into a modern, two-story home with wraparound porches, a sauna and a wine cellar.

The Senate's longest-serving Republican, Stevens said he had no idea he was getting freebies. He said he paid $160,000 for the project and believed that covered everything.

He had asked for an unusually speedy trial, hoping he'd be exonerated in time to return to Alaska and win re-election.

"Coming just eight days before the election, this is big blow for Stevens’ hopes of winning re-election," said CBSNews.com senior political editor Vaughn Ververs. "And it’s one more piece of really bad news for a Republican Party on the ropes in this campaign year as Democratic hopes for a 60-seat, filibuster-proof majority in the Senate just got a big boost."

Fast Fact

The Senate's longest-serving Republican, Stevens said he had no idea he was getting freebies.

Despite being a convicted felon, he is not required to drop out of the race or resign from the Senate. If he wins re-election, he can continue to hold his seat because there is no rule barring felons from serving in Congress. The Senate could vote to expel him on a two-thirds vote.

"Put this down: That will never happen - ever, OK?" Stevens said in the weeks leading up to his trial. "I am not stepping down. I'm going to run through, and I'm going to win this election."

Democrats have invested heavily in the race, running television advertisements starring fictional FBI agents and featuring excerpts from wiretaps.

Stevens' conviction hinged on the testimony of Bill Allen, the senator's longtime drinking and fishing buddy. Allen, the founder of VECO, testified that he never billed his friend for the work on the house and that Stevens knew he was getting a special deal.

Prosecutors played secret phone recordings in which the 84-year-old senator suggested Allen lay low, per his lawyer's advice, reports CBS News correspondent Nancy Cordes.

"They point out that, what's her name, that woman, uh, who went to jail - Martha Stewart - she didn't go to jail because she did something wrong, she went to jail because she lied about a conversation she had with somebody," Stevens was heard saying in the tape.

Stevens spent three days on the witness stand, vehemently denying that allegation. He said his wife, Catherine, paid every bill they received.

Living in Washington, thousands of miles away, made it impossible to monitor the project every day, he said. Stevens relied on Allen to oversee the renovations, he said, and his friend deceived him by not forwarding all the bills.

Prosecutors used a barrage of witnesses to question how Stevens could have been in the dark about VECO's work on the project. VECO employees testified to seeing Stevens at the house. One left him a company business card. Stevens sent thank you notes to others.

View Justice Department documents in the Ted Stevens corruption trial
Stevens' conviction is the highlight of a lengthy FBI investigation into Alaska corruption, but prosecutors noted that it is not the end. Stevens' longtime Republican colleague, Rep. Don Young, remains under investigation for his ties to VECO. Stevens' son, Ben, a former Alaska lawmaker, is also under investigation.

Stevens is a legendary figure in Alaska, where he has wielded political influence since before statehood. His knack for steering billions of dollars in federal money to his home state has drawn praise from his constituents and consternation from budget hawks.

There was no immediate word on Stevens' campaign plans. His spokesman, Aaron Saunders, did not immediately return a message seeking comment on whether Stevens would stay in the race.

In Alaska, the Democratic Party issued a statement calling for Stevens to resign immediately. "He knew what he was doing was wrong," the party said. "But he did it anyway and lied to Alaskans about it."

GOP Vice Presidential Candidate and Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, chided Stevens for falling prey to the "corrupting influence" of big oil.

"The verdict shines a light on the corrupting influence of the big oil service company up there in Alaska that was allowed to control too much of our state," Palin said Monday in a statement. "And that control was part of the culture of corruption that I was elected to fight. And that fight must always move forward regardless of party affiliation or seniority or even past service."

Stevens is the sixth senator convicted of criminal charges. The last previous one was Republican David Durenberger of Minnesota, who was indicted in 1993 on charges of conspiring to make fraudulent claims for Senate reimbursement of $3,825 in lodging expenses. He later pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges and was sentenced to one year of probation and a $1,000 fine.

The jurors left the court without comment.

Said U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan: "The jurors have unanimously told me that no one has any desire to speak to any member of the media. They have asked to go home and they are en route home."

The jurors had been shuttled to and from the proceedings each day by court officials.



© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 373 Comments
by garys21121 October 29, 2008 5:10 PM EDT
Hey, A Picture Is Worth A Thousand Words
www.garyinthemorning.com
Reply to this comment
by jtleseth October 29, 2008 2:55 AM EDT
wilkerson
Reply to this comment
by david1737 October 28, 2008 4:10 PM EDT
First Palin-abuse of power.

Now Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens-guilty on all seven counts.

Republicans know how cheat!

Enough is enough!!
Reply to this comment
by shoebox119 October 28, 2008 2:37 PM EDT
Posted by mroutside12

We won''''t call you a right wing conspirator, we will call you an irrelevant right wing neocon-derthal, so afraid of Mr. Obama that you are moved to post irrelevant people''''s names as a comment to an article about the guilty verdict of a corrupt GOPer.

So what if Mr. Obama knows Rezko, knowing someone who has been convicted of anything is not the same as being convicted of anything yourself.

Posted by brianbwb

_______

Personally, mroutside12''s comments are so laughingly archaic, I wouldn''t bother lowering myself to a level that warrants even responding to such drivel.
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 October 28, 2008 2:08 PM EDT
Posted by mroutside12

We won''t call you a right wing conspirator, we will call you an irrelevant right wing neocon-derthal, so afraid of Mr. Obama that you are moved to post irrelevant people''s names as a comment to an article about the guilty verdict of a corrupt GOPer.

So what if Mr. Obama knows Rezko, knowing someone who has been convicted of anything is not the same as being convicted of anything yourself.
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 October 28, 2008 2:04 PM EDT
"Can anyone tell us why a convicted felon is allowed to run for Senate?" Posted by CaribouBarbi

For the humor of it.

Lets see, a senator who, as a convicted felon, cannot get a security clearance, cannot have a passport, and in several states cannot vote.

Not only that, but his vote on national issues could be challenged in court by states that forbid felons to vote, every bill he votes on can be sent for court challenges, creating a train wreck that prevents bills from becoming law.

The senate would be best served by removing him from office, and it appears they will have the two thirds majority to make it happen.
Reply to this comment
by skysoldier75 October 28, 2008 1:50 PM EDT

The charges against Stevens were brought by the US Justice Department, which is headed by an Attorney General appointed by Bush, a Republican.

Stevens was found guilty by unanimous agreement by a jury of his peers - both Republicans and Democrats - on every single count; all seven of them.

To blame ANY aspect of this trial on "liberals" or "Democrats" is simply absurd.

Stevens made his own bed. Now he''ll just have to sleep in it.

To allow him to continue to run for US Senate after being found guilty of political corruption, and while those convictions still stand, is an embarrassment for both Alaska and the nation as a whole.
Reply to this comment
by shoebox119 October 28, 2008 1:16 PM EDT
... the people love the republican party and will show up in droves to send your Osama guy back to whence he came. President McCain, get used to it.

Posted by gop_will_win

_______

Get used to a name that will never come to be? Don''t make me laugh. Obama has all but cinched the election and the GOP has only themselves to blame. George W. Bush took the reins in 2001 when the GOP was at the height of its power and popularity. Look around now... the ashes you see smoldering are all that remains of the Republican party, thanks to Bush and Company.

Face the facts. The Republican Party has abandoned its conservative principles in favor of a few, but vocal extremists'' agenda that mostly focus on social issues. Once upon a time your party preached small government and fiscal responsibility. In eight years, your party has doubled the National Debt, from $5 trillion to $10 trillion. Congratulations... not even the Democrats spend money that fast.
Reply to this comment
by shoebox119 October 28, 2008 1:15 PM EDT
... the people love the republican party and will show up in droves to send your Osama guy back to whence he came. President McCain, get used to it.

Posted by gop_will_win

_______

Get used to a name that will never come to be? Don''t make me laugh. Obama has all but cinched the election and the GOP has only themselves to blame. George W. Bush took the reins in 2001 when the GOP was at the height of its power and popularity. Look around now... the ashes you see smoldering are all that remains of the Republican party, thanks to Bush and Company.

Face the facts. The Republican Party has abandoned its conservative principles in favor of a few, but vocal extremists'' agenda that mostly focus on social issues. Once upon a time your party preached small government and fiscal responsibility. In eight years, your party has doubled the National Debt, from $5 trillion to $10 trillion. Congratulations... not even the Democrats spend money that fast.
Reply to this comment
by truthhonor October 28, 2008 1:12 PM EDT
Can anyone tell us why a convicted felon is allowed to run for Senate?

Posted by CaribouBarbi

Mainly because of republican tradition
Reply to this comment
by cariboubarbi October 28, 2008 1:08 PM EDT



Can anyone tell us why a convicted felon is allowed to run for Senate?



Reply to this comment
by jclark7613 October 28, 2008 12:50 PM EDT
Yes he is probably guilty but the prosecution didn''t turn over evidence and just to many thing went wrong during the trial. It should have been a mistrial. I would still prefer the democrat running for his job to win but fare is fare......and there must not be any good lawyers in Alaska because in New York it would have been a mistrial long ago.
Reply to this comment
by gop_will_win October 28, 2008 12:48 PM EDT
Same old tired GOP cr@p. When they lose the file a lawsuit and have votes suppressed so they can win.When one of them gets caught committing a crime and is found guilty its a Democratic witch hunt and tampered evidence.
Why don''''t you all admit the GIG is up you have been finally caught and the American people are tired of your $hit and will not put up with it any longer.
We will run you all out on a rail and anyone else that you send in that resembles the Corrupt GOP party will be run out also.


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Posted by obiden08
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You are wrong liberal, the people love the republican party and will show up in droves to send your Osama guy back to whence he came. President McCain, get used to it.
Reply to this comment
by jameslouiky October 28, 2008 12:33 PM EDT
You notice how they didn''t name the other four? Bets as to what party they belong to?

Stevens is the sixth senator convicted of criminal charges. The last previous one was Republican David Durenberger of Minnesota,
Reply to this comment
by mcdonaj3 October 28, 2008 12:28 PM EDT
Politicians like Stevens claim to be experts on virtually any subject, yet when caught committing crimes, their defense is I know nothing!
Reply to this comment
by gop_will_win October 28, 2008 12:28 PM EDT
You are more of an Idiot than I first suspected.
How do you get innocent out of taped conversations where he was told to write a check for $160,000 then they would copy it and send it back to him to give the illusion to investigators that he paid.

Let me guess you sent money to a fund to bail out the Neo-Nazi''''s that wanted to assinate Obama.


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Posted by obiden08
===========================
It was all fake evidence. Liberals will stop at nothing to jail all those who oppose them.
Reply to this comment
by jameslouiky October 28, 2008 12:23 PM EDT
If Democrats were spinning this it would be clearly obvious to them, that he was framed by vast left wing conspiracy. That Stevens actually bought these renovations on a 5 year no interest payment plan that has gone terribly wrong.

That this is just an example of the lefts unending smear campaign and out right lies and distortions to defame a man of the people.

"Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens was convicted of seven corruption charges Monday in a trial that threatened to end the 40-year career of Alaska''s political patriarch in disgrace."

Reply to this comment
by jameslouiky October 28, 2008 12:14 PM EDT
Thanks god for this otherwise the MSM would have had to do another story about Pailin''s shoes of McCain picking his nose or something even more petty to find something to slam republicans.
Reply to this comment
by gop_will_win October 28, 2008 12:09 PM EDT
Apparantly the partisan witch hunt fooled this jury and has railroaded an innocent man to jail.
Reply to this comment
by krescera October 28, 2008 11:56 AM EDT
Like Democratic Representative William Jefferson of Louisiana, Ted Stevens too could contest and win another term as a Senator.Voters these days are more sympathetic to all kinds of criminals.
Reply to this comment
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