Current:Home > FinanceEx-Honolulu prosecutor and five others found not guilty in bribery case -WealthRoots Academy
Ex-Honolulu prosecutor and five others found not guilty in bribery case
View
Date:2025-04-16 08:52:19
HONOLULU (AP) — A jury found Honolulu’s former top prosecutor not guilty Friday in a bribery case that alleged employees of an engineering and architectural firm bribed him with campaign donations in exchange for his prosecution of a former company employee.
A U.S. grand jury indicted former Honolulu Prosecuting Attorney Keith Kaneshiro and five others in 2022. The indictment alleged that Mitsunaga & Associates employees and an attorney contributed more than $45,000 to Kaneshiro’s reelection campaigns between October 2012 and October 2016.
The firm’s owner, Dennis Mitsunaga, who was ordered jailed during the trial because of witness tampering allegations, was also found not guilty after nearly two days of deliberation, Hawaii News Now reported.
He was ordered released after the verdict.
The jury also found the other four defendants not guilty.
The former employee targeted with prosecution had been a project architect at Mitsunaga & Associates for 15 years when she was fired without explanation on the same day she expressed disagreement with claims the CEO made against her, court documents say.
Kaneshiro’s office prosecuted the architect, but a judge dismissed the case in 2017 for lack of probable cause.
“I feel vindicated,” Kaneshiro told reporters after the verdict. “But how am I going to get back my reputation?”
His attorney, Birney Bervar, told The Associated Press, “The first day I looked at this case I didn’t feel there was sufficient evidence of bribery.”
In January, a month before the trial was scheduled to begin, U.S. District Judge J. Michael Seabright, who had been presiding over the case, unexpectedly recused himself. U.S. Senior District Judge Timothy Burgess in Alaska stepped in to take over the case and traveled to Hawaii for the trial.
Burgess ruled in February that the trial wouldn’t be postponed further despite an investigation into allegations one of the defendants threatened Seabright, which prompted his recusal.
The trial began in March.
Prosecutors didn’t immediately comment on the verdict.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- AP Week in Pictures: Latin America and Caribbean
- Cover crops help the climate and environment but most farmers say no. Many fear losing money
- Texas Rangers beat Arizona Diamondbacks to claim their first World Series
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- A county lawmaker in New York is accused of slashing a tire outside a bar
- Senate sidesteps Tuberville’s hold and confirms new Navy head, first female on Joint Chiefs of Staff
- As his minutes pile up, LeBron James continues to fuel Lakers. Will it come at a cost?
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- 2 Mississippi men sentenced in a timber scheme that caused investors to lose millions of dollars
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- 2 Mississippi men sentenced in a timber scheme that caused investors to lose millions of dollars
- Colombia’s government says ELN guerrillas kidnapped the father of Liverpool striker Luis Díaz
- Bob Knight could be a jerk to this reporter; he also taught him about passion and effort
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- 'All the Light We Cannot See' is heartening and hopeful wartime tale
- Dolly Parton Reveals Why She Turned Down Super Bowl Halftime Show Many Times
- Indiana attorney general reprimanded for comments on doctor who provided rape victim’s abortion
Recommendation
Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
Maine mass shooting puts spotlight on complex array of laws, series of massive failures
Panama’s congress backtracks to preserve controversial Canadian mining contract
California jury awards $332 million to man who blamed his cancer on use of Monsanto weedkiller
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
AP Week in Pictures: Asia
New Study Warns of an Imminent Spike of Planetary Warming and Deepens Divides Among Climate Scientists
Why dozens of birds are being renamed in the U.S. and Canada