Stone stood and braced himself with his fingers on the counsel table as the seven guilty verdicts were read. He showed no visible reaction, but he put on his glasses to look at the jurors as the nine women and three men were then polled individually at the defense’s request to confirm their agreement with the verdicts.

After the string of guilty verdicts, the prosecution urged U.S. District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson to have Stone, who has been free on bail, immediately taken into custody. Jackson, looking somewhat surprised, turned down the request. But she did take the unusual step of keeping Stone under the prohibitive restrictions in force for months, including a gag order that restricts him from speaking publicly or using social media to discuss his case.

As jurors filed out of the courtroom, the rest of those present stood, but Stone was slow to rise from his seat. Nearby, longtime Stone ally Michael Caputo, a former Trump campaign aide, sat pat in his seat, prompting a stir in the courtroom. When court officials finally told Caputo to get up, he turned his back on the jury as it left. A security officer quickly escorted Caputo out of the courtroom as the session continued.

“All the way out,” the officer said.

Security was tight in the courtroom as the verdict came in, with at least half a dozen deputy marshals and other officers on hand to maintain order, protect the jurors and take custody of Stone if the judge ordered that.

As Stone emerged from the courtroom, he raised his eyebrows and flashed a half-smile at reporters waiting for him in the hallway. A few minutes later, before leaving the courthouse in a black Honda SUV with a ride-share driver who appeared baffled by the swarm of TV cameras and reporters, Stone was asked whether had had any comment on the verdicts.

“None whatsoever,” he replied.

As the proceedings concluded, Stone’s daughter, Adria, fought back tears, embracing Stone’s wife, Nydia, in the first row of the spectator section. “He’s going to be alright,” Nydia Stone said.

Friday’s guilty verdicts represent the biggest victory for prosecutors in special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe since former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort was convicted on eight felony charges at a trial in Northern Virginia over a year ago. In the courtroom for Stone’s trial, there were ample signs of the case’s origins.

Two of the government prosecutors, Aaron Zelinsky and Adam Jed, previously served on Mueller’s staff. Several Mueller team veterans seemed keenly interested in the case, popping up in the courtroom gallery as spectators during opening and closing statements.

Stone’s fate now rests in part with Trump, who has the power to issue an election-season pardon or commutation to spare one of his longest-running political advisers any jail time. While the president has danced around the question for months, he tweeted about the verdict within minutes of it being read in open court.

“So they now convict Roger Stone of lying and want to jail him for many years to come. Well, what about Crooked Hillary, Comey, Strzok, Page, McCabe, Brennan, Clapper, Shifty Schiff, Ohr & Nellie, Steele & all of the others, including even Mueller himself? Didn’t they lie?” the president wrote, referencing a number of his longtime adversaries.

Before Stone’s verdict, a White House official said Trump had not been following the case because of the all-consuming impeachment inquiry in Congress.

“He’s preoccupied with his own fate,” the official said. The White House official also predicted that Trump would be unlikely to offer any relief for Stone until after the 2020 election to avoid any potential political damage from such a move.

Asked after the verdict whether Trump is considering a Stone pardon, White House deputy press secretary Steven Groves replied, “Not that I’m aware of."

The fact that Stone was not immediately jailed makes a Trump decision on a potential pardon less urgent, with Stone not likely to be sent to prison until February or later.

Still, pressure on Trump is likely to increase as that date nears.

The president's media boosters have been stumping for a pardon. On Fox News, Tucker Carlson recently encouraged Trump to pardon Stone, a plea that has echoed around the far-right mediasphere. Alex Jones, the conspiracy-minded host of InfoWars, said on his Thursday program that he’d gotten a note from Stone predicting his conviction and appealing to the president for a reprieve.

Jones’ proclamation prompted a brief exchange in court about whether the Stone outreach violated his gag order, which included a prohibition from making comments to the media about the case.

The judge seemed to struggle with whether or not to describe Jones, known for his overheated rants peddling debunked theories, as a member of the press. She eventually settled on “media figure.”

The charges against Stone carry a maximum potential prison term of 50 years, but he’s likely to be sentenced in accordance with federal guidelines that typically call for a much more lenient sentence for first-time offenders. Those guidelines are expected to call for Stone to spend a couple of years in prison, if convicted, legal experts said.

While Trump was quiet about Stone’s case as the trial played out, he was a bombastic commentator in the early days after the indictment. The president questioned in one tweet why the special counsel had targeted his longtime associate and not Clinton or the Russia investigators themselves.

Then he added , “Roger Stone didn’t even work for me anywhere near the Election!”

Stone holds a unique position in Trump world.

The two men have known each other since Ronald Reagan’s 1980 presidential campaign. Over the ensuing decades, Stone counseled Trump on four potential White House runs and represented him as a lobbyist for his gambling, airline and hotel businesses.

Stone wrote in one of his recent books that he knew about Trump’s 2016 intentions on New Year’s Day 2013, more than two years before the official announcement.

But the two have had their tumultuous moments. While Stone had a spot on Trump’s campaign at its start, they ended up parting ways in a “you’re fired-I quit” dispute that never quite reached a clear public resolution.

Despite the division, they remained in touch. Trump told Mueller’s investigators they spoke from “time to time during the campaign.” Prosecutors introduced evidence collected from phone records during Stone’s trial showing about 60 separate communications between the two men from February to November 2016.

In the Stone trial, prosecutors were unabashed about linking the defendant’s actions — both in 2016 and after — to Trump and the Trump campaign. Prosecutors even invoked Trump’s name dozens of times during the trial, an act Trump might view as insubordinate.

Stone’s trial also produced several notable revelations about Trump's campaign and WikiLeaks.

Many of the disclosures came from Rick Gates, the former Trump deputy campaign chairman who testified that he discussed forthcoming WikiLeaks disclosures with Stone in April 2016, earlier than the timeline laid out in the public portions of the Mueller report .

Gates recounted Stone’s request in June for Jared Kushner’s contact information so he could “debrief” the Trump son-in-law about WikiLeaks. And he detailed a July strategy meeting to go over a WikiLeaks response plan with campaign CEO Paul Manafort and senior aides Jason Miller and Stephen Miller.

Trump also got pulled into the mix. In a late July telephone conversation, the GOP nominee spoke to Stone about WikiLeaks. Gates, who pleaded guilty last year to conspiracy and false statement charges brought by Mueller, said he overheard Trump talking with Stone. After the phone call, Gates testified that Trump predicted more WikiLeaks releases.

“He indicated that more information would be coming out,” Gates said.

That was one of three conversations prosecutors raised involving Stone and Trump in which the topic appeared to center around WikiLeaks, highlighting an apparent contradiction in the president’s written response to Mueller on the same topic.

“I do not recall discussing WikiLeaks with [Stone], nor do I recall being aware of Mr. Stone having discussed WikiLeaks with individuals associated with my campaign,” Trump wrote the special counsel’s office.

Stone’s guilty verdict rippled across the political spectrum on Friday, with even some Trump allies basking in the outcome.

“Reunited and it feels so go[sic]. Stone and Manafort to re-open new ‘consulting’ firm behind bars,” Corey Lewandowski, the first Trump 2016 campaign manager, wrote on Twitter.

But it was Clinton’s 2016 campaign alumni, whose stolen emails were splashed across WikiLeaks, who seemed to truly rejoice.

“I was a victim of wikileaks and I am happy that there is some justice today,” wrote Neera Tanden, a former Clinton campaign policy adviser.

John Podesta, the former Clinton White House chief of staff, accused Stone in October 2016 with having “advance knowledge” of what WikiLeaks was doing. More than three years later, he welcomed Stone’s conviction with a quick social media post.

“Just about to take off on a long transatlantic flight in a middle coast seat. I think I will just sit back, relax, and enjoy it,” he wrote.

Gabby Orr contributed to this report.