JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — A judge has sentenced former U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown on Monday to five years in prison and a three-year supervised release for her conviction on fraud and other charges related to a purported charity for poor students that she used as a personal slush fund.
Brown's attorney said she will appeal the sentence. If Brown doesn't appeal, she'll head to prison in about a month.
Brown didn't say anything as she left the courthouse.
Watch video below of her leaving the courthouse.
A judge said what Brown did was shameless, especially since she stole money from what was supposed to be a charity helping underprivileged children.
Carla Wiley, president of One Door for Education, was sentenced to 21 months in prison and a three-year supervised release for her part in the case.
The 71-year-old Brown was in court at 10 a.m. in Jacksonville, a city in the Florida district she represented in Congress during her historic, nearly 25-year career.
Brown, a Democrat who was one of the first three African-Americans to be elected to Congress from Florida since Reconstruction, was facing life in prison.
A federal jury in May convicted her of 18 of the 22 charges against her, which included fraud, lying on her tax returns and on her congressional financial disclosures.
Prosecutors outlined a pattern of fraud by Brown and her top aide that included using hundreds of thousands of dollars from the One Door for Education Foundation for lavish parties, trips and shopping excursions.
Brown's former chief of staff, Elias "Ronnie" Simmons, and Wiley accepted plea deals and testified against Brown.
Federal prosecutors said the three used One Door to bring in more than $800,000 between 2012 and 2016, including a high-profile golf tournament at TPC Sawgrass. The Virginia-based One Door only gave out one scholarship for $1,200 to an unidentified person in Florida, according to court documents.
Simmons told jurors that his boss ordered him to take cash and checks from One Door's account on dozens of occasions and deposit the money into Brown's personal account.
Brown testified in her own defense, saying she was left in the dark about the details of One Door's money, and blamed the theft on Simmons.
Her attorneys argued for leniency at a hearing last month, saying Brown's community work should mitigate her crimes.
Associated Press contributed to this story.
Associated Press