HOUSTON
Jurors in the trial of former Texas Southern University president Priscilla Slade said they could not decide if she misspent school funds to lavishly decorate her homes, resulting in a mistrial.
The jury deliberated for four days before telling state District Judge Brock Thomas in a note Friday that “to continue deliberating would be of no benefit.” The jurors had told Thomas in three previous notes that they were deadlocked.
“We have agonized over this,” jurors said in their final note. “We have re-examined the evidence, some parts over and over, some parts line by line, in more detail than we ever expected or cared to, to thoroughly fulfill our duty. However, we cannot arrive at a unanimous verdict without doing violence to our consciences.”
After reading the note in court, Thomas asked defense attorney Mike DeGeurin if he wanted to ask for a mistrial.
“I think it’s clear the jury has worked as hard as they can beyond what they probably thought they would have to do,” Thomas said. “I don’t see a purpose at this time to continue.”
Slade was president of TSU, the state’s largest historically Black university, for more than six years. She could have been sentenced to life in prison if convicted of misapplication of fiduciary property with a value over $200,000, though the jury could have opted for a lesser charge.