2/26/2007
Bribery trial of
Miss. tobacco lawyer, two state judges starts
by John O'BrienJACKSON, Miss. - An attorney
who represented the State of Mississippi during the landmark 1998
tobacco settlement went on trial Monday, accused of bribing two
judges.
Paul Minor, appointed by then-Attorney General Mike
Moore, reportedly earned $71 million in the settlement with tobacco
companies that provided Mississippi with more than $3 billion. He
has also served as the president of the Mississippi Trial Lawyers
Association.
Monday, the trial of Minor, former Circuit Judge
John Whitfield and former Chancery Judge Wes Teel began. Minor is
accused of using campaign contributions and loans to influence the
two former judges' decisions.
They were acquitted of some
corruption charges in 2005, but a jury did not agree unanimously on
others. Minor was found not guilty on extortion, bribery and four
mail fraud counts, while racketeering, wife fraud and two bribery
counts went unresolved.
Whitfield was cleared on a wire
fraud charge, and bribery and mail fraud charges went unresolved.
The jury also failed to reach verdicts on Teel's bribery, wire fraud
and mail fraud charges.
Supreme Court Justice Oliver Diaz was
acquitted on all charges pertaining to him. It was alleged that
Minor funneled hundreds of thousands of dollars to Diaz'
ex-wife.
U.S. District Judge Henry Wingate is
presiding.
Filed Under:
State
AGs
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