Bonds found guilty of obstruction of justice.
SAN FRANCISCO -- Baseball home-run champion Barry Bonds was convicted by a federal jury in San Francisco today of one count of obstructing justice in 2003 testimony before a grand jury. The jury in the court of U.S. District Susan Illston was unable to reach a verdict on three other counts in which Bonds was accused of lying to the grand jury. Illston declared a mistrial on those counts. Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Parrella declined in court to say whether prosecutors will retry Bonds on those charges.
The verdict came on the jury's fourth day of deliberations. Illston scheduled a status conference on May 20 to discuss setting a sentencing date for Bonds, who is 46.
Maximum sentence for Federal Obstruction of Justice (felony) is 10 years in prison, three years of supervised release. Defense attorney Dennis Riordan said Bonds' attorneys will file a motion by that date asking for a new trial.
The grand jury was investigating the distribution of performance-enhancing drugs by the Burlingame-based Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative, or BALCO.
In the counts on which the jury could not reach a verdict, Bonds was accused of lying when he said he never knowingly received steroids or human growth hormone from his trainer, Greg Anderson, and never received any kind of injection from Anderson.
Bonds is one of 11 people who were charged either with illegal distribution of drugs or with lying in connection with the BALCO probe.
Two other sports figures who were convicted of lying received sentences of home detention.