A Republican strategist locked in a bitter two-year feud with Rand Paul's top media consultant told BuzzFeed News he is sorry for his "immature choices" after being found guilty last week in criminal court.

Nick Everhart was convicted of one count of unauthorized use of cable or telecommunications property for enlisting a colleague to illegally retrieve materials from a company computer after being fired. He was found not guilty on a second count, and could get as much as 12 months in prison when he is sentenced in Delaware County, Ohio.

Everhart was fired from the Republican advertising firm Strategy Group in 2013 after engineering a dramatic religious intervention with CEO Rex Elass. In a statement to BuzzFeed News he maintained that he didn't mean to commit any crimes, and only wanted to retrieve family photos from his work computer. The company says he was trying to steal files.

"My intent was not to break the law. If I thought retrieving photos of my kids would lead to any of this, I would have let those memories go," Everhart said in the statement, apologizing for the way his "immature choices" have hurt his loved ones.

Everhart, who still faces two counts each of perjury and evidence tampering, also blamed his former boss and mentor for allowing "irrational resentment" to fuel a vendetta against him.

Reached by BuzzFeed News, Elsass, who works for Paul's presidential campaign, said, "I maintain a compassion for Nick Everhart but justice is necessary for my heart, my family, faith, life's work, and the employees and families who suffered. May God have mercy and grace on all of us."

Elsass added, "I cooperated with prosecutors and justice was served. My prayer is that Nick will be able to repair his heart and go on with life. The conviction and pending charges speak for themselves."

Alex Tornero, a Strategy Group creative director who worked with Everhart for six years, also called BuzzFeed News to say his former colleague had been determined in his final weeks at the firm "to destroy Rex and take the company for himself."

"He thought a lot of the success the company had was due to him, and it made him do a lot of crazy stuff and dishonest things," Tornero said.

But in his statement to BuzzFeed News, Everhart said his confrontation with Elsass in 2013 was born out of concern for "the personal well-being of Rex and the long-term stability of the firm."