Testimony has begun in the obstruction of justice trial of former state Rep. Thomas Wright.
Prosecutors called as their first witness State Bureau of Investigation agent Johnnie Umphlet, who began investigating Wright in May 2007. Umphlet testified about campaign finance reports that Wright has filed since 2000.
Also Monday afternoon jurors heard brief opening statements from Wake County District Attorney Colon Willoughby and Wright's attorney, Doug Harris.
Willoughby said he will call on jurors to determine that Wright's failure to disclose campaign contributions deprived the public of information about the Wilmington Democrat's campaign dealings.
Harris asked jurors to question whether Wright's conduct is even a crime.
State Rep. Thomas Wright told two agents with the State Bureau of Investigation that he pocketed $8,900 intended for a charitable foundation he was starting, according to testimony Wednesday.
SBI Special Agent-in-Charge Johnnie Umphlet testified before a House panel about two interviews that he and another agent conducted with Wright in September and October, David Ingram reports.
During those interviews, they asked Wright what he did with three corporate checks made out to the Community's Health Foundation.
"He advised that he deposited those checks into his personal bank account," Umphlet testified, "as a payment for his services in trying to get the foundation started, that he had done a lot of work and put
in a lot of hours trying to get the foundation started, and had put in a lot of sweat equity."
Wright told the agents he did not have a log of his work, but that he had made phone calls, traveled and incurred other expenses, Umphlet said.
One of Wright's attorneys, Irving Joyner, questioned the authenticity of the checks and of the letters bearing Wright's name that requested the donations. He also asked Umphlet about his process for taking and transcribing notes.
Joyner attempted to ask Umphlet about a "$50,000 slush fund" that he said Wright might have had access to. Senior Deputy Attorney General William Hart, a lawyer for the House panel, objected to the question, and Rep. Rick Glazier, a Fayetteville Democrat and the panel's chairman, ruled that the question was not relevant.
Rep. Thomas Wright pocketed $8,900 in corporate checks intended for a nonprofit, calling the money "sweat equity," according to papers filed Tuesday at the legislature.
On Oct. 5, the Wilmington Democrat was interviewed by SBI Special Agent Johnnie Umphlet about checks totaling $8,900 from Anheuser-Busch, AstraZeneca and AT&T to the Community's Health Foundation, which Wright ran.
Wright admitted that he received, signed and deposited the checks into his personal bank account, according to Umphlet.
"He called his reimbursement 'sweat equity,' " according to a witness list.
Other potential witnesses include an IRS employee and a Wilmington doctor. (Char-O)