Shurtleff, 56 served as Utah’s attorney general from 2001 to 2013. Swallow, 51, who served following Shurtleff, was his “hand-picked successor,” Shurtleff said, according to the complaint filed in a Utah district court. If convicted, the men could each face up to 30 years in prison.

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According to the documents, the gifts included $50,000 to Shurtleff’s reelection campaign from Jeremy Johnson, a man who invested in a bank that processed online poker transactions in violation of federal and Utah law, the use of a private aircraft and luxury houseboat of Johnson’s by Swallow, and about $120,000 from a man named Marc Jenson charged with, among other things, securities fraud, give to another man claiming to be a close friend of Shurtleff who said he could get access to the attorney general and influence various cases.

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Swallow and Shurtleff, both Republicans, are facing two counts of receiving or soliciting bribe, one count of unlawful acts, and one count of obstruction of justice, according to county records. Swallow is also charged with one count of false or inconsistent material statements and Shurtleff is charged with one count of witness tampering and one count of evidence tampering.

Gov. Gary Herbert (R) called the arrests “a black eye” for the state, regardless of “how the legal process plays out.”

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“This is a sad day for Utah,” Herbert said in a statement. “[T]his serves as a reminder that nobody is above the law and, if anything, public servants must be held to a higher standard.”

“This has been a complex, nuanced, multiple investigation … . Multiple leads continue to be investigated [and] the investigation remains active,” said Salt Lake District Attorney Sim Gill (D) said at a press conference, according to The Salt Lake Tribune.“We have filed what we think are appropriate and minimal charges. We could have filed more, but we chose at this time to just file what we did.”

Below are the full complaints: