Trial is over money paid to her daughter, campaign consultant
McGuiness, a pharmacist and former drug store and boot business owner, was elected as the financial watchdog of Delaware government agencies in 2018. But in October, Attorney General Kathy Jennings’ Department of Civil Rights and Public Trust secured a grand jury indictment accusing her of two felonies and three misdemeanors.
Prosecutors say she hired her college-student daughter to a no-show job, gave her 2018 campaign consulting firm an illegal state contract, and intimidated employees who complained. If convicted of all counts, she faces zero to 13 years in prison.
In pretrial motions Thursday, Wood first sought to have the felony intimidation charge thrown out.
McGuiness looked on with a placid smile while Wood, a former top state prosecutor, argued that the indictment never identified a witness she allegedly intimidated, which he said is required under the law. “I’ve never seen an indictment this vague,’’ Wood said.
While the indictment said McGuiness got permission to review emails of employees who had complained about how she ran the office, Wood pointed out that doing so is permitted under state policy and that she did so well before she learned of the investigation into her in September. That occurred when prosecutors raided her office.
Denney countered that McGuiness “knew who the witnesses were” when she called a staff meeting in February and had employees declare in unison that matters within the auditor’s office are “confidential.”
Carpenter said he would rule on that motion at a later date, and would do the same with the defense motion to have the state provide detailed information about elected statewide officials and Cabinet secretaries who have hired “children, spouses, siblings” to state jobs in their departments in the last decade or so.
Wood pointed out that under state law and a ruling by Delaware’s Public Integrity Commission, “nepotism is not a crime in and of itself.”