Stevens juror admits lying about father's death

Published: November 3, 2008 

WASHINGTON -- Juror No. 4 in Sen. Ted Stevens' federal corruption trial, otherwise known as Marian Hinnant, didn't leave to attend her father's funeral in California, as she told the judge at the time.

Instead, Hinnant had a plane ticket to see the Breeders' Cup at Santa Anita Park outside Los Angeles and didn't want to miss it, she told the judge today when he ordered her to court to find out why she'd left town and lost contact with him, forcing him to replace her just hours before the jury found Stevens guilty last week.

"I just wanted to go to the Breeders' Cup," she told reporters outside the courthouse in a rambling and incoherent interview.

Stevens, 84, is fighting for his political life, with a challenge by Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich, a Democrat. Since a jury found Stevens guilty on seven counts of failing to report more than $250,000 in gifts, he has continued to maintain his innocence. Relying on the technical definition of "conviction," which doesn't take effect until sentencing, Stevens has been telling supporters that he is not a convicted felon.

He has vowed to appeal on grounds that prosecutors engaged in rampant misconduct.

"This is another sad chapter in a trial that has been plagued by unusual occurrences," Stevens said in a statement Monday. "The facts that emerged today further demonstrate what we've dealt with in Washington, D.C., during the course of this trial.

The jurors did have several problems, beginning their first day of deliberations, when they sent the judge a note asking to go home early because they were stressed and needed "clarity." The second day, they sent out a note saying that one of the jurors was disruptive and prone to violent outbursts and asking that she be removed from the jury. The judge lectured them on being civil and let them go home early.

But that evening, he heard from Hinnant, who told him she needed to go tend to her father's funeral. He suspending deliberations for a day while he determined what to do, but then lost contact with her over the weekend. He brought in an alternate juror on Monday, and within hours, they'd come to a unanimous verdict of guilt on all seven counts.

Hinnant said she wasn't the disruptive juror but that "there was one lady in there in the room one time that was always mad. I mean that's what kept us from finishing up the deliberations so fast."

In Washington on her way from the courthouse to the Metro, Hinnant told reporters that she would have found the Alaska senator guilty had she remained on the jury.

"He didn't do anything any other congressman or senator or governor or president has not done," she said. "He was guilty but these other ones are just as guilty if not more guilty."

Hinnant, a petite woman who works as an Avis car rental agent at Union Station, was wearing her red Avis uniform Monday in court. Although diminutive, the 52-year-old woman has distinctive appearance, dominated by a teased mass of long blond hair. She was wearing heavy eyeliner that was emphasized by her black-framed glasses.

Her lawyer, federal public defender A.J. Kramer, tried to keep her from saying much in court, telling the judge only that "her state of mind was such that she had to go to California."

"She apologizes to the court. In fact, her father did not die," Kramer said. "The story about her father was just one that popped into her head."

Hinnant cut in, however, and in a thick drawl gave a rambling, incoherent and completely baffling monologue about her former employers in the horse-racing industry in Kentucky. She mentioned drugs, wiretaps and horse racing but made little sense.

"I'm not the one who was selling the drugs; I'm not the one who was doing the drugs," she said, a comment that baffled nearly everyone in the courtroom.

She said she felt a bit guilty about leaving behind her responsibilities but that she really wanted to attend the Breeders' Cup.

"I didn't think they would go this long," she said of the four-week trial. "And I needed to go to California, I wanted to go to Breeders' Cup. I worked in the horse industry."

Bizarre as Hinnant's story is, though, it's unlikely her lies to the judge could be grounds for overturning the verdict or an appeal, said Mike Seidman, a professor of constitutional and criminal law at Georgetown University Law Center. The judge acted on the information he had at the time, not information he gleaned later.

Seidman puts it in the annals of the weird jury stories all lawyers occasionally confront.

"Sometimes I think it's a miracle that any jury trial ever comes to a conclusion," he said.

It also is unlikely that Hinnant's presence would have changed the verdict. The juror herself said that that fellow jurors should have come to a verdict sooner, but they were "slow in finishing it up" because some were "messing around." She also said several times that she thought Stevens was guilty -- although she also said she thought that universally, politicians are "all guilty."

U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan let her go, saying that he was going to "accept Mr. Kramer's representation that you were not able to (deliberate) and for reasons that were serious to you."

He added: "I'm convinced you were not able to deliberate."

Order Reprint Back to Top

Top Jobs

View All Top Jobs

Find a Home

$1,450,000 Anchorage
4 bed, 5 full bath. Unmatched architecture & panoramic views...

Find a Car

Search New Cars
Ads by Yahoo!