Crime | Ted Stevens Judge Sends Stevens Jury Home, May Declare Mistrial Prosecutors withheld FBI reports on witness By Nick McMaster Posted Oct 2, 2008 11:34 AM CDT Copied Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, middle left, and VECO Corp. CEO Bill Allen, back left, bring in a King Salmon, in this image introduced as a government exhibit, (AP Photo) A federal judge sent the jury in Ted Stevens’ Washington corruption trial home today as he considers declaring a mistrial for the Alaska senator, the AP reports. Stevens’ lawyers claimed that prosecutors attempted to withhold FBI reports about the government’s key witness, former oil exec Bill Allen, that they say would’ve helped their defense. Prosecutors said withholding the files was a honest mistake, but judge Emmet Sullivan was livid: "Why shouldn't I dismiss the indictment?" he told the prosecutors before sending the jury away. The defense had earlier requested a mistrial when it was revealed that the prosecution had sent a witness helpful to the defense back to Alaska, but Sullivan did not grant it. Read These Next University does 180 on professor fired for Charlie Kirk post. News outlets parse the fatal shooting in Minneapolis. Christian author Philip Yancey admits to a long-term affair. Snow is sinking boats in Alaska. Report an error