A jury in Akron, Ohio, has declared itself deadlocked in the corruption trial of former FirstEnergy CEO Chuck Jones and senior vice president Michael Dowling, accused of bribing a future utility regulator in a $60 million scheme that previously sent former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder to prison for 20 years. The impending mistrial motion underscores the complex legal battles surrounding corporate political spending and its lasting impact on state governance and consumer energy costs.
The impasse in the six-week trial of Jones and Dowling halts a high-profile prosecution that has become a symbol of Ohio’s ongoing struggle with political corruption. Jurors told Summit County Common Pleas Judge Susan Baker Ross they could not agree on verdicts for charges including felony corruption, bribery, conspiracy, and aggravated theft. The judge will now consider a motion for a mistrial, potentially opening the door to a retrial or plea negotiations.
This case is a direct offshoot of the sprawling FirstEnergy bribery scandal that exploded in 2020, centered on House Bill 6—a $1 billion bailout for two nuclear plants affiliated with the utility giant. The bill was passed after a secret campaign funded by FirstEnergy, which later admitted to underwriting the entire $60 million scheme through a non-prosecution agreement in 2021. The scheme involved funneling money through a dark money group to elect allies of then-Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder, who then pushed the bailout and defended it via a dirty-tricks campaign against a citizen referendum.
The $60 Million Scheme: A Recap of Convictions and Suicides
The scandal has already produced severe consequences for its architects. Householder was sentenced to 20 years in prison for racketeering in 2023, the longest sentence ever for a state-level public corruption case in Ohio history. Lobbyist and former Ohio Republican Party Chair Matt Borges received a five-year sentence. Two political operatives initially charged pleaded guilty, and a dark money group admitted in court to serving as a conduit for the cash. The alleged recipient of the $4.3 million payment from Jones and Dowling, Sam Randazzo—who was set to become chair of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO)—died by suicide in 2021 before he could be charged. Another lobbyist facing criminal charges also died by suicide.
The Trial That Divided Jurors: Evidence and Arguments
Prosecutors argued that Jones and Dowling bribed Randazzo to secure regulatory and legislative favors, most critically his work championing House Bill 6. The defense countered that the $4.3 million was a legitimate legal settlement for services Randazzo provided to FirstEnergy. The trial featured damning text messages: after a key meeting with then-Gov.-elect Mike DeWine and others, Randazzo texted Dowling a list totaling “4,333,333” for 2019-2024, to which Dowling replied, “Got it, Sam… Cool condo.” Jones later texted, “We’re going to get this handled this year, paid in full… Hurricane Chuck may show up on your doorstep!”
The highest-profile witness was U.S. Sen. Jon Husted, a former Ohio lieutenant governor, who testified about the December 2018 dinner with DeWine, Jones, Dowling, and lobbyist Josh Rubin. Rubin had advised the executives on lobbying DeWine for PUCO appointments and cautioned against mentioning a subsequent meeting with Randazzo. The defense painted Randazzo as “a thief” and “a con man,” while prosecutors insisted Jones and Dowling were “savvy grown men who knew exactly what they were doing.”
Why This Deadlock Matters: Broader Implications for Corporate Power
The jury’s deadlock does not erase the scandal’s established facts but highlights the difficulty of securing convictions in complex white-collar crime cases where intent and legal boundaries are fiercely contested. For Ohio residents, the unresolved case prolongs uncertainty about the true cost of House Bill 6, which has contributed to higher utility rates and entrenched corporate influence over energy policy. The impasse also tests public faith in the justice system’s ability to hold powerful executives accountable, especially when key witnesses like Randazzo are unavailable.
This trial is a critical test of the corporate bribery paradigm: can prosecutors prove that payments disguised as settlements are indeed bribes? The outcome will influence how utilities and other regulated industries navigate political contributions and lobbying nationwide. With FirstEnergy having already admitted guilt in the broader scheme, the focus on individual executives like Jones and Dowling represents a final effort to assign personal criminal liability at the highest levels.
What’s Next: Mistrial, Retrial, or Plea Deals?
Judge Baker Ross will hear arguments on a mistrial motion in the coming weeks. If granted, prosecutors could retry Jones and Dowling, though a second trial faces hurdles given the first jury’s deadlock. Alternatively, plea deals remain possible, though both men have maintained their innocence. The case’s resolution will signal whether Ohio’s corruption crackdown extends to the boardroom or stalls at the executive suite.
Regardless of the verdict, the scandal has already reshaped Ohio’s political landscape, leading to reforms in utility regulation and campaign finance scrutiny. For consumers, the legacy is a $1 billion bailout that continues to affect electricity bills, while for watchdog groups, it’s a stark reminder of the need for vigilance against regulatory capture.
The deadlock in this trial is more than a legal formality; it’s a moment of reckoning for how America prosecutes the fusion of corporate money and political power. As Ohio grapples with the aftermath, the nation watches to see if the pillars of accountability can withstand the weight of a $60 million scheme.
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