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Sen. Ted Stevens Found Guilty in Corruption Case

by: Matt Apuzzo and Jesse J. Holland  |  The Associated Press

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Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens has been convicted of felony corruption charges days before Election Day 2008. (Photo: Al Grillo / AP)

    Washington - Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens was convicted of seven corruption charges Monday in a trial that tainted the 40-year Senate career of Alaska's political patriarch.

    The verdict, coming just days before Election Day, adds further uncertainty to a closely watched Senate race. Democrats hope to seize the once reliably Republican seat as part of their bid for a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate.

    Stevens, 84, was convicted of all seven charges he faced of lying about free home renovations and other gifts he received from a wealthy oil contractor. Jurors began deliberating Wednesday at noon.

    Stevens faces up to five years in prison on each count when he is sentenced Jan. 26, but under federal sentencing guidelines, he is likely to receive much less prison time, if any.

    The monthlong trial revealed that employees for oil services company VECO Corp. transformed the senator's modest mountain cabin into a modern, two-story home with wraparound porches, a sauna and a wine cellar. Stevens never paid for VECO's work.

    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 said he believed that covered everything.

    Stevens asked for an unusually speedy trial, hoping he'd be exonerated in time to return to Alaska and win re-election. He kept his campaign going and gave no indication that he had a contingency plan in case of conviction.

    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 Stevens 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, who are hoping to capture a filibuster-proof Senate majority, have jumped at the chance to seize the once reliably Republican seat. They 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 deal.

    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. Stevens relied on Allen to oversee the renovations, he said, and his friend deceived him by not forwarding all the bills.

    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.

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Comments

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Couldn't have happened to a

Couldn't have happened to a nicer guy.

Why not some jail time? Two

Why not some jail time? Two years, four? Why should he get away with theft when a twenty year old grabbing a car off the street could get more serious time. Can he be a Senator from jail?

What people need to realize

What people need to realize is that this is only the tip of the iceberg and the first time that Ted was caught in the hen house. His statement that he paid every bill he received makes clear that he knew he was receiving work and goods for free. He just believed like Palin that he was entitled to whatever he could get as a public servant. Just more pigs at the trough.

How is it a convicted felon

How is it a convicted felon can't get a job at Burger King yet a felon can serve in Congress!?! What's that about? I'm curious?

It is astounding to me that

It is astounding to me that a convicted felon can still run for Congress. In many states convicted felons can't even vote and he can stay in office. Something is very wrong with this picture. OBAMA/BIDEN, Ready, Able and Experienced. VOTE EARLY!!

Seems like he'll join all

Seems like he'll join all the other theives in Washington D. C.

The common pop can get a

The common pop can get a lifetime of prison persecution for stealing a loaf of bread, believe it or not. 5 years per count with 7 counts puts Stevens out of the picture for the rest of his life, unless, of course, they go easy on his 35 years and reduce it because he was a Senator. Palin, his protege, more than likely, will be right behind Stevens, because it appears she has a problem with corruption, as well.

Jail time! Lots of it.

Jail time! Lots of it.

Isn't it nice to know that

Isn't it nice to know that being a felon won't stop you from being in Congress? I bet I wouldn't have been hired at the one-room library I work at now if I'd been a felon, but I could still run for Congress!

Who thinks Bush won't pardon

Who thinks Bush won't pardon all the Republican lawbreakers lucky enough to be found guilty while the Lawbreaker In Chief is still in office?

So...a convicted felon can

So...a convicted felon can serve in the US Senate but, in 15 states, felons who have paid their debt to society are not allowed to vote. Isn't that special! So, would Teddy be allowed to speechify and vote on senate bills from the hoosegow?

Sorry, it seems very penny

Sorry, it seems very penny ante compared to trillions that Repub criminals have stuck America with, or the turnstyle pay to play system scumbag Delay set up. AK is Repub state with deep incestuous corruption - how did this prosecution ever get off ground?

One down 99 to go

One down 99 to go

They All Look Alike to Me!

They All Look Alike to Me!

What, no Shackles? No Leg

What, no Shackles? No Leg Irons? No Media Black Out? No All Black & Under Privileged Jury? Hey! Equal Rights Man!

hoping there's more to

hoping there's more to follow - I don't believe most pols are steadfastly ethical.

Felons can't vote So how is

Felons can't vote So how is he going to serve in the senate if he can't vote? and yes, there is a law stating Felons aren't allowed in Congress-it's what got that Republican who ran a red light and killed someone out of Congress.

Do the crime-Do the time!

Do the crime-Do the time! Why does it take so long to convict these slimy robber barons? How long had he been in office? Forty some years....Before Alaska was even a state?....So, this country had, a month or so ago, an Iraq Veteran Against the War, a legal demonstration, guarateed in our Constitution and got his head mauled by a police officers horse. IS ANYBODY OUT THERE?????? DO THE CRIME-DO THE TIME!....

Some people might think

Some people might think "well, this is just an old guy so let him go." Ted Stevens has been one of those Senators standing firm in the way of progress in developing a new energy policy for this country, voting predictably for anything that benefits oil companies. We should throw the book at him. His crime is worse than the money he took: 1. On June 10, 2008 Stevens voted to help block the Senate from proceeding to The Renewable Energy and Job Creation Act which would have extended tax incentives to increase renewable energy production and proposes alternative energy solutions including encouraging the production and use of wind and solar energy. [Roll Call Vote #147, 6/10/2008] 2. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, Stevens has received $418,590 in contributions from political action committees representing oil and gas companies. [Center for Responsive Politics] 3.In the year following the March 24, 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill, which dumped 11 million gallons of oil into Prince William Sound, Stevens refused to decline campaign contributions from Exxon. Since 1994, Stevens received $13,000 from the company since 1984. [Anchorage Daily News, "Oil PACs Donate to Young, Stevens," 2/11/1990] 4. On September 10, 2003, Stevens voted against adding $300 million to the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) contingency fund. [Roll Call Vote #336, S.AMDT 1595, September 10, 2003] For more, way more see http://www.retireted.com/ted-in-the-news/memo-ted-stevens-on-energy/

Given the political climate

Given the political climate in Alasak, it wouldn't suprise me if he actually wins his seat again.

Let me understand this.....a

Let me understand this.....a convicted felon can hold a seat in Congress but can not vote. Is that correct?

Imagine that--as a convicted

Imagine that--as a convicted felon you can be voted into the Senate while in many states you wouldn't be allowed to vote at all. Finally the explanation as to why criminals are attracted to government service--where else can they treated with such respect by otherss?

Long gone are the days of

Long gone are the days of the likes and stature of a Gruening. Alaska has for too long put up with the ilk of a Stevens and a Murkowski. It's kind of ironic that Alaska's brand of corrupt politics arrives on the national scene with the presidential election and, of all people...Palin. Well at least now the cat is out of the bag : the "Last Frontier" state is the last state able to hide its dirty laundry behind its northern star flag. Now it really is part of the "Lower Forty-Eight"!

It's about time, and may

It's about time, and may more Republican crooks get the same and preferably worse. What I don't get is how that greedy, immoral convicted felon is allowed to run for the Senate again? What's the matter with Alaska, that the people would allow this?