The rise and fall of John Edwards
03:30 - Source: CNN

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NEW: The jury, which asked to see all exhibits, will reconvene Friday morning

John Edwards is accused of accepting illegal contributions during presidential campaign

If convicted, he could face up to 30 years in prison and a $1.5 million fine

Greensboro, North Carolina CNN  — 

Jurors in John Edwards’ corruption trial went home Thursday, after their fifth day of deliberations, without a verdict – leaving the former Democratic presidential candidate in limbo for yet another day.

Earlier in the day, the eight-man, four-woman jury had asked to review another 20 exhibits in the case. That prompted Judge Catherine C. Eagles to say, “If you would like, we could send back all of the exhibits.”

When the foreman responded, “Sounds like a great idea,” the judge ordered the court record to reflect that at least six jurors nodded affirmatively that they would like all of the exhibits.

After four weeks of testimony, deliberations began last Friday. Jurors had also requested Monday and Tuesday to see several exhibits relating to various counts against Edwards, who was the 2004 Democratic vice presidential nominee.

Edwards himself spent part of Wednesday a few blocks from the courthouse at NewBridge Bank Park, where he and his daughter Cate watched part of the 2012 Atlantic Coast Conference championship baseball tournament.

CNN affiliate WRAL showed video of the one-time U.S. senator from North Carolina purchasing his ticket and sitting in the stands, as well as one man displaying his game ticket that Edwards autographed for him.

The jury weighing his fate will reconvene at 9:30 a.m. Friday to continue its efforts to reach a decision on Edwards, who is charged with accepting illegal campaign contributions, falsifying documents and conspiracy to receive and conceal the contributions. The charges carry a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison and a $1.5 million fine.

Prosecutors said Edwards “knowingly and willingly” accepted almost $1 million from two wealthy donors to hide former mistress Rielle Hunter and her pregnancy, then concealed the donations by filing false and misleading campaign disclosure reports.

Defense attorneys argued that Edwards was guilty of nothing but being a bad husband to his wife, Elizabeth, who died in 2010. They also argued that former Edwards aide Andrew Young used the money for his own gain and to pay for Hunter’s medical expenses to hide the affair from Edwards’ wife.

Neither Edwards nor Hunter testified during the trial. The affair occurred as Edwards was gearing up for a second White House bid in 2008, and he knew his political ambitions depended on keeping his affair with Hunter a secret, Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Higdon told jurors in closing arguments.

“There is no question it would destroy the campaign of John Edwards,” Higdon said.

Prosecutors argued that Edwards knowingly violated campaign finance laws by accepting the large contributions from Rachel Mellon and Fred Baron that went to support Hunter. Edwards “knew these rules well,” Higdon said, and should have known that the contributions violated campaign finance laws.

Edwards accepted $725,000 from Mellon and more than $200,000 from Baron, prosecutors said. The money was used to pay for Hunter’s living and medical expenses, travel and other costs to keep her out of sight while Edwards made his 2008 White House run, prosecutors say.

Defense attorneys argued that the donations cannot be considered campaign contributions.

Prosecutors said Edwards manipulated Young and others to help keep his affair out of public view. Young testified that he allowed Hunter to move in with him and his wife at Edwards’ request after newspapers began looking into a possible affair within the Edwards campaign. Young initially claimed to be the father of Hunter’s baby girl and testified that Mellon was already funding Hunter’s living expenses when he called Baron to complain about the situation.

Baron offered to help out, telling Young to write up Hunter’s expenses so that Baron could reimburse them, the aide testified.

Neither Baron nor Mellon appeared to know that the other was reimbursing Young for the same expenses, raising questions about whether and how much Young may have profited from the situation. Young acknowledged during the trial that he had used some donations for his own personal benefit, including paying for the construction of a home.

Another former Edwards aide, speechwriter Wendy Button, testified that Edwards knew Baron was supporting Hunter and her child in 2009. And defense lawyer Abbe Lowell urged jurors to focus on Young’s role in the case, saying he was a biased and unreliable witness with a financial and legal interest in the outcome.

“There is nothing he won’t lie about, nothing,” Lowell said.

Young, the author of a tell-all book about the Edwards scandal, testified under an agreement with the government in hopes that he will not be prosecuted. Prosecutors agreed that Young made several mistakes over the years, including keeping some of the money, failing to confront Edwards earlier about his behavior and falsely claiming paternity for Edwards’ child with Hunter.

But David Harbach of the U.S. Justice Department’s public integrity section told jurors in a rebuttal argument that Lowell was merely trying to distract jurors from focusing on the charges against Edwards.

“The defense is overplaying their hand,” Harbach said.

CNN’s Adam Reiss and Ted Metzger in Greensboro contributed to this report.