Tired of ads? Subscribers enjoy a distraction-free reading experience.
Click here to subscribe today or Login.

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) — The perjury trial of Pennsylvania’s attorney general is set to be a gossip-filled political affair with a list of potential witnesses and topics including judges, journalists and former top aides to the embattled Democrat.

Jurors were being questioned Monday for the expected one-week trial of outgoing Attorney General Kathleen Kane, whose four-year term has been rocked by petty feuds, political intrigue and a pornographic email scandal.

Kane, 49, is charged with leaking secret grand jury information to a Philadelphia reporter to embarrass enemies and then lying about it under oath.

Kane, the first woman and first Democrat elected to the post, denies wrongdoing and says she’s a victim of a “good old boys” network in state politics.

Once a rising star in the state Democratic party, Kane has instead seen her first term marred by scandal and a dizzying rate of turnover among her top aides.

Kane nonetheless appeared confident seated at the defense table Monday beside a five-person legal team led by New York trial lawyer Gerald Shargel, perhaps best known for winning an acquittal for mob boss John Gotti. Her twin sister, a senior lawyer on her staff, sat in the front row.

The list of witnesses and trial topics read to the jury pool includes a Supreme Court justice who stepped down over the pornographic email scandal; the NAACP official at the center of the long-dormant probe leaked to the press; and the special prosecutor whose investigation of the leak led to Kane. In addition to the felony perjury charges, she is charged with several misdemeanors, including obstruction, official oppression and conspiracy.

More than 100 potential jurors were being questioned Monday at the Montgomery County Courthouse in suburban Philadelphia.

Kane remains on the job even though she lost her law license after her arrest, when an ethics board accused her of “egregious conduct” based on the lengthy indictment.

Kane did not run for re-election to the $159,000-a-year post, but remained defiant even as prosecutors added more charges to the case.

“You can arrest me two times, you can arrest me 10 times. I’m sure this isn’t the end of the game,” Kane said. “But I will not stop until the truth comes out, and I will not stop until the system operates the way it’s supposed to.”

Kane’s attorneys have argued that she only authorized the release of nonsecret information relating to the 2009 grand jury probe of the NAACP official, who was never charged. And she denied that she was sworn to secrecy about those prior investigations, according to the arrest warrant.

“I was a stay-at-home mom at the time. … None of us were sworn into that grand jury,” she testified, according to the arrest affidavit.

However, prosecutors said they found a signed oath to the contrary during a search of her Harrisburg offices.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane walks into the courtroom on the opening day of her trial at the Montgomery County Courthouse Monday, Aug. 8, 2016, in Norristown, Pa. An ethics board accused Kane of “egregious conduct” amid criminal charges she leaked grand jury material to a newspaper to embarrass enemies and then lied about it under oath.
https://www.timesleader.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/web1_111786227-70622eff928c4d03921d26e29756d8fb-1.jpg.optimal.jpgPennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane walks into the courtroom on the opening day of her trial at the Montgomery County Courthouse Monday, Aug. 8, 2016, in Norristown, Pa. An ethics board accused Kane of “egregious conduct” amid criminal charges she leaked grand jury material to a newspaper to embarrass enemies and then lied about it under oath. Bill Fraser | Bucks County Courier Times via AP

By AP