The judge ordered the jurors to return for further deliberations regarding his charge next week.

The verdicts against Mr. Napout and Mr. Marin partially resolved the trial in the United States’ case focused on FIFA, the governing body of international soccer that was thrown into chaos when allegations were announced in 2015. Several high-ranking soccer officials were accused of accepting bribes from marketing companies that wanted to obtain commercial rights to major competitions.

More than 20 defendants had pleaded guilty as a result of the investigation run by the Justice Department out of the Eastern District of New York in coordination with the F.B.I. and the Internal Revenue Service.

But the three officials who stood trial this month were in the minority, as they actively fought the mountainous evidence the government laid out.

The three men had spent the week pacing the fourth floor of the federal courthouse in Downtown Brooklyn as the jury deliberated. Mr. Napout, often linking arms with his children and wife, was alternately somber and jovial, reminiscing about Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd concerts he had attended; singing “When I’m 64” by The Beatles and miming guitar strums; and quoting “The Godfather.” His adult daughters spent afternoons with coloring books in the court’s cafeteria.

Mr. Burga quietly read the third book in a trilogy by the Spanish author Santiago Posteguillo, a novel about the fall of the Roman Empire.

“Killing time,” he said in Spanish. “I’m keeping my mind from falling asleep.”

Mr. Marin, 85 and the former governor of the state of São Paulo, sat in the spare courtroom and said little. Days before his own conviction, Mr. Marin’s predecessor as governor — Paulo Maluf, whom Mr. Marin served as deputy — had been jailed in Brazil for corruption.