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Stevens Trial

J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press

Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, and his daughter Beth, arrive at federal court in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 24, 2008, for his trial on corruption charges. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

More coverage on "The Alaskan of the 20th Century," his political corruption trial, and the failed bid for another re-election to the U.S Senate.

Stevens jury set to hear witnesses Thursday

WASHINGTON - The newly impaneled jury that will determine whether Sen. Ted Stevens is guilty of lying on his financial disclosure forms will hear its first witnesses Thursday in his corruption trial.

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First, prosecutors will outline their case against the 84-year-old Republican from Alaska. They're expected to call three witnesses. Stevens' lawyers also will have an opportunity to outline their defense, including shortcomings they hope to highlight in the government case against the senator.

Stevens was charged in late July with taking more than $250,000 in home repairs, labor and furnishings from a defunct oil-services company, Veco Corp., and Bill Allen, its former chief executive, and failing to report the gifts on his annual Senate disclosure forms.

The gifts he's accused of accepting include renovations to his home that lifted it from its foundation, added a lower story and doubled its size.

Among the first witnesses jurors will hear from Thursday is John Hess, a Veco engineer whose initials are on the renovation plans filed with the Municpality of Anchorage's building department. Stevens called the home, an A-frame in the resort community of Girdwood, his "chalet" in correspondence that will likely be entered as evidence against him in the case. Veco, according to the Stevens indictment, paid for the design work.

Today, after a day and a half of jury selection, lawyers for Sen. Ted Stevens and federal prosecutors agreed on a jury pool of 16, which includes four alternates.

The jury is made up of nine black women, three black men, two white women and two white men - a mix that reflects the population of Washington, D.C., which is more than 56 percent black.

It's a far different jury from what Stevens likely would have faced in Alaska, had he been successful in moving the trial to his home state. In Anchorage, U.S. Census figures show, the population is about 72 percent white, 6.5 percent black and about 8 percent Alaska Native.

The D.C. jury also is reflective of the city's professional class - 39 percent of the population has at least a four-year degree. In Anchorage, that number is closer to 29 percent.

There's a third-grade teacher with 21 kids in her classroom, a woman who is the receptionist for a trade association, a young man who works in the gift shop at a journalism museum, a man who oversees the operating rooms at a hospital, a woman who keeps the books for the D.C. National Guard, another woman who compiles criminal justice reports on wiretapping, and a man who works in drug counseling.

Half of the jurors previously served on juries in federal or D.C. courts; one man was a grand juror.

Stevens is balancing his trial, his Senate duties and a campaign against Democratic challenger Mark Begich, Anchorage's mayor. Opening statements in the trial, which is expected to last three to four weeks. Stevens, who was indicted in late July, asked for the expedited schedule so there is a potential for the trial to wrap up before the Nov. 4 election.

Allen, 71, is expected to be the star witness in Stevens' trial, the culmination of four years of inquiry into corruption in Alaska politics. Allen, who's pleaded guilty to bribing state lawmakers in Alaska, has not yet been sentenced. But his courtroom testimony and secret recordings and videos of conversations were key to the Justice Department's seven successful convictions.

Allen and Veco vice president Rick Smith pleaded guilty in May 2007 to providing more than $400,000 in bribes to public officials in Alaska.

The Justice Department also won convictions of three former Alaska state representatives, all on bribery charges: Tom Anderson, Pete Kott and Vic Kohring. One other state representative, Bruce Weyrauch, is awaiting trial, as is current state Sen. John Cowdery.

In the same investigation, Jim Clark, onetime chief of staff to former Alaska Gov. Frank Murkowski, pleaded guilty in March to one count of conspiracy and agreed to cooperate with the federal investigation. Former Anchorage lobbyist Bill Bobrick also pleaded guilty in May 2007 to felony public corruption charges.

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