Thirty-four charges, 10 people, one conviction.
The first trial to yield a guilty verdict in connection with Republican National Convention-related activities ended Friday when a six-member jury in Ramsey County District Court convicted Sean P. McCoy of public assembly without a permit. The charge is a misdemeanor.
District Judge Edward Wilson fined him $50.
The jury acquitted McCoy, 33, of Missoula, Mont., of fleeing police by means other than a motor vehicle. On Thursday, Wilson dismissed charges of unlawful assembly and obstructing traffic. Those charges also are misdemeanors.
Still, defense attorney Christopher Champagne said outside the courtroom that he felt as though he had failed his client.
"I just think it's a miscarriage of justice," Champagne said. "I apologize to my client. I feel I've failed him. We're talking about an innocent man."
McCoy said he was working as a street medic on Sept. 1, the first day of the convention, when he was arrested. He said he handed out water and sunscreen and helped move a protester in the wheelchair away from police after the protester had been sprayed with a chemical irritant.
Champagne said McCoy was "used as a scapegoat for the 200-plus people arrested that day."