Conviction of ex-US House leader DeLay tossed

Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay talks to reporters Thursday as he leaves a lunch meeting on Capitol Hill. A Texas appeals court tossed the criminal conviction of DeLay on Thursday, saying there was insufficient evidence for a jury in 2010 to have found him guilty of illegally funneling money to Republican candidates.
Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay talks to reporters Thursday as he leaves a lunch meeting on Capitol Hill. A Texas appeals court tossed the criminal conviction of DeLay on Thursday, saying there was insufficient evidence for a jury in 2010 to have found him guilty of illegally funneling money to Republican candidates.

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - A Texas appeals court tossed the criminal conviction of former U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay on Thursday, saying there was insufficient evidence for a jury in 2010 to have found him guilty of illegally funneling money to Republican candidates.

The Texas 3rd Court of Appeals said prosecutors failed to prove that the money being laundered was illegally obtained, which the court said was required for a money laundering conviction. Prosecutors alleged that DeLay illegally channeled $190,000 in corporate donations though his political action committee and into Texas legislative races, where corporate money is barred.

"The fundamental problem with the State's case was its failure to prove proceeds of criminal activity," the court wrote in a 2-1 decision.

Justices on the appeals court suggested that even jurors appeared confused during deliberations, based on questions they asked about whether the charge required that the money be illegally obtained in the first place.

DeLay was meeting with religious conservatives in Washington when he learned of the court's ruling.

"We were all basically on our knees praying and my lawyer calls and says, "You're a free man,'" the former Texas congressman said. "It's a really happy day for me and I just thank the Lord for carrying me through all of this."

State prosecutors said they would appeal to Texas' highest criminal court.

"We are concerned and disappointed that two judges substituted their assessment of the facts for that of 12 jurors who personally heard the testimony of over 40 witnesses over the course of several weeks and found that the evidence was sufficient and proved DeLay's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt," the Travis County district attorney's office said in a statement.

DeLay was found guilty by a jury in Austin of money laundering and conspiracy to commit money laundering. Prosecutors said the money he funneled to local candidates helped Republicans take control of the Texas House, enabling them to push through a DeLay-engineered congressional redistricting plan that sent more Republicans to Congress in 2004, strengthening his political power.

DeLay, whose heavy-handed style while holding the No. 2 job in the U.S. House earned him the nickname "the Hammer," was sentenced to three years in prison. His sentence had been on hold during the appeals process.

Prosecutors alleged that DeLay accepted $190,000 in corporate donations to his Texas-based political action committee, then sent that money to an arm of the Washington-based Republican National Committee. The RNC then sent the same amount of money to seven Texas House candidates in 2002. Under state law, corporate money cannot be given directly to political campaigns.

During a three-week trial, prosecutors said DeLay conspired with two associates to pull off the scheme. After 19 hours of deliberations, jurors agreed.

But in a 22-page opinion, the appeals court said the prosecution "failed in its burden to prove that the funds that were delivered to the seven candidates were ever tainted." The court called the evidence "legally insufficient" to support a money laundering charge.

The lone dissent was Chief Justice Woodie Jones, the only Democrat on the six-member appeals court.

Writing for the majority opinion, Justice Melissa Goodwin wrote that the deficiency of the state's case was made clear by the confusion revealed by jurors during deliberations.

Before convicting DeLay, the jury asked whether a crime could be considered money laundering if the money wasn't illegally obtained in the first place. Goodwin said the answer is no, but rather than jurors being told that, the trial judge simply referred them back to the wording of the charges.

"The jury's questions to the trial judge ... point to the lack of evidence showing that the funds involved in the transaction were the proceeds of criminal activity," Goodwin wrote.

DeLay did not shy from the spotlight during his legal fight. He was a contestant on ABC's hit television show "Dancing with the Stars" in 2009, and he runs a consulting firm in suburban Houston.

Late Thursday afternoon, DeLay was spotted on the floor of the U.S. House where he once yielded power. He told a reporter that when his conviction was overturned, some lawmakers had wanted to him to come by.

"Now that I'm acquitted, I can step out and stir things up," DeLay joked. When asked what he could now do that he couldn't do after being convicted, he said he could travel to Canada and get a concealed weapons permit.

DeLay said earlier Thursday that the case and conviction hadn't been a burden.

"I'm not saying it was easy to go through," DeLay said. "On the other hand, if you read the ruling (it says) this is an outrageous criminalization of politics. ... In the ruling they say I should have never even been charged, much less indicted."

DeLay's attorney, Brian Wice, said he was confident DeLay would win again if prosecutors pursue an appeal.