The Death of Cross-Examination
Western Ideas Work
The Newest 'Late Show' Outrage Is Even More Asinine, and We Learn AOC's...
Who Taught Teachers’ Unions to Stop Teaching?
Was Climate Change the Greatest Financial Scandal in History?
They'll Never Learn
No Space for Homan on Locating Missing Migrant Children
Remembering Ed Crane
Rubio Follows in Reagan's Footsteps
Blowing the Big Moment Is Only Human, Scientists Discover
Restore Upward Mobility by Restoring the Dream of Home Ownership
California’s Gasoline Prices Aren’t a Jones Act Problem — They’re a California Policy...
AI Companies Aren’t Our Masters, Yet
Is ‘Hate Reading’ Fueling Transgender Violence?
Jesse Jackson: A Worthy Opponent and Unlikely Friend
Tipsheet

366: The Number of Days the Ex-First Lady of Virginia Will Spend in Jail

366: The Number of Days the Ex-First Lady of Virginia Will Spend in Jail

Maureen McDonnell, wife of former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (R), is on the fast track from penthouses to prison cells.

On Friday a U.S. District judge sentenced McDonnell to spend 12 months and one day in jail, after finding her guilty on eight counts of public corruption.

Advertisement

According to the Associated Press:

Prosecutors had asked for an 18-month sentence. Defense attorneys requested probation and 4,000 hours of community service.

Former Gov. Bob McDonnell, convicted of 11 counts, was sentenced to two years in prison last month. He is free on bond while he appeals the convictions to the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which will hear arguments May 12.

A jury in September found the McDonnells guilty of taking more than $165,000 in gifts and loans from Star Scientific Inc. CEO Jonnie Williams in exchange for promoting his company's nutritional supplements — primarily the tobacco-derived anti-inflammatory Anatabloc. Among the gifts were about $20,000 in designer accessories and clothing for Maureen McDonnell and a $6,500 Rolex watch she gave her husband for Christmas.

Advertisement

Related:

CORRUPTION VIRGINIA

The judge agreed to allow McDonnell to remain free on bond while she appeals the convictions.

The former first lady pleaded for a light sentence, saying she had already been punished for the crime in many ways:

"My marriage is broken, my family is hurting and my reputation is in shatters."

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement