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No dictionaries allowed in Edwards trial

Wednesday, April 26, 2000 | 2:34 a.m.

BATON ROUGE, La. - Federal marshals removed two books, including a dictionary with the word "extortion" highlighted, from the room where jurors are deliberating the racketeering case against former Gov. Edwin Edwards.

Edwards and his six co-defendants are accused of taking part in or aiding a series of extortion plots involving the licensing of riverboat casinos.

U.S. District Judge Frank Polozola called the jurors back into the courtroom Tuesday to tell them that they were to base their decisions on the definitions contained in the 96 pages of instructions he read them before they got the case Monday afternoon.

"Under no circumstances can you bring any other materials except what I have provided to you," Polozola said.

The jurors had sent a note to the judge, asking if they could have a dictionary.

A second book also was removed. It was not clear when the books were taken into the deliberation room, nor was it clear what the second book was, although Polozola made a point of telling jurors that they could not have a dictionary or a thesaurus.

"Keep in mind that the law that I give to you is the only law that you are to consider," Polozola told jurors before sending them back for more deliberations shortly after noon.

Edwards, his son Stephen, state Sen. Greg Tarver, state gambling board member Ecotry Fuller and three other men have been on trial since Jan. 10. The jury got the case Monday afternoon.

Jurors are expected to begin deliberations about 8 a.m. today, but they will quit early, at 2 p.m., so one of the jurors can take his wife to a doctor's appointment. The jurors also decided they will cut their lunch break from one hour to 30 minutes from now on.

While in open court, Polozola also answered another written question from jurors: "Do you become part of the conspiracy if you except extortion money along with others?"

It was unclear whether the question writer meant to write "accept" rather than "except."

Polozola responded by reading several definitions of conspiracy from his earlier instructions. Those included the passage: "A 'conspiracy' is an agreement between two or more persons to join together to accomplish some unlawful purpose. It is a kind of 'partnership in crime' in which each member becomes the agent of every other member."

Jurors filed back into open court around 5 p.m. Tuesday so Polozola could dismiss them for the day. Peter Strasser was the lone attorney at the prosecution table while each defendant, minus Bobby Johnson who is recovering at home from heart bypass surgery, and their attorneys stood at the defense table.

Only one attorney from each side is required to show up at the courthouse when the jurors are dismissed for the day. The defendants are not required to attend.

When he left the courthouse, Edwards refused requests from reporters to talk about the case, citing the gag order, but said he spent the day doing chores. He did some housekeeping, got his car fixed and "went and cashed a check before they freeze my accounts," Edwards deadpanned.

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