UPDATE: 4:50 p.m.: The third day of former U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown’s trial has concluded.

Prosecutors continued interviewing donors of One Door for Education, the bogus charity at the center of the fraud charges against Brown.

Marva Brown Johnson, a former vice president with the Orlando cable company Bright House Networks, discussed the tens of thousands in donations she directed the company to make to One Door at Brown’s request.

Prosecutors asked her the same questions they’ve asked other donors this week. They wanted to know did she think the money was going toward charitable causes, and would she have donated if she knew the money was flowing directly into Brown’s bank account?

Johnson, like all the other witnesses, answered no to both questions.

When the trial resumes Monday, jurors will for the first time hear testimony from a witness who has admitted guilt in the One Door conspiracy.

Carla Wiley, the former girlfriend of Simmons and president of One Door for Education, will be among the witnesses appearing Monday. Wiley and Ronnie Simmons, Brown’s former chief of staff, both pleaded guilty and agreed to testify in the case.

Prosecutors said they expect her testimony to be "lengthy.’

As the trial went late into the afternoon, attorneys expressed concern during a sidebar discussion about one juror not paying attention.

Judge Timothy Corrigan said he thought the jury was being attentive, although he noticed they were growing tired and "a little antsy" towards the end of the day.

UPDATE: 3:15 p.m.: An official with an Orlando real-estate company, which donated more than $90,000 to One Door for Education at former U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown’s request, testified how his 20-year friendship with the politician fell apart as her phone calls asking for money became more frequent.

Don Miller said he felt like his employer, Bob Picerne, was being "taken advantage of" by Brown.

"I just felt that phone calls for assistance were just coming too much, and Bob was a giving guy, so he’d probably never say no," Miller said.

Picerne testified on Thursday about donating money to One Door. He said Brown personally requested the money and told him it would go to charitable causes.

Miller said he met Brown shortly after she was elected to Congress around 1994 and that she was like a "mother" to him.

Update: 12:45 p.m.: Jurors heard testimony from local car dealer Jack Hanania about his private-jet trip with Brown to Washington, D.C., to watch the Jaguars play the Redskins from a luxury suite, which prosecutors say was paid for by a bogus charity, One Door for Education.

They also heard testimony from an official with a nonprofit that was supposed to benefit from a 2013 golf tournament fundraiser in Ponte Vedra, hosted and paid for by One Door, who said the group never received any money.

Stephen Bittel, the state Democratic chairman and mega-rich Miami real-estate developer, lent Brown his private jet to fly from Jacksonville to the football game. Hanania, the Jacksonville car dealer, accompanied Brown on the flight.

Bittel, who performed ankle raises outside the courtroom as he waited to be called to the stand, said he met Brown in 2011 shortly after his company began managing the Gateway Shopping Center in North Jacksonville. The company sold its interest in Gateway at the end of 2016.

Brown frequently held campaign events at the outdoor mall and fought in 2013 to stop Duval County elections officials from moving out. There’s no sign that has any bearing on Brown’s indictment.

Bittel said he donated $5,000 to One Door in 2014 after Brown requested money to help pay for a computer drive for disadvantaged students.

In Sept. 2014, Bittel said Brown asked him if she could use his private jet to fly several donors to Washington, D.C. He said she told him she was holding a fundraiser for One Door at the Jaguars-Redskins football game.

Bittel personally wrote an $11,000 check to cover the costs of the trip. He said he wouldn’t have donated to One Door or loaned his plane if he knew the event wasn’t a charitable fundraiser.

He said he also wouldn’t have loaned the plane if he knew Brown was flying, as he said he members of Congress are prohibited from flying on private aircraft.

One passenger on the plane was Hanania, who Brown invited after he wrote a $7,000 check to One Door. Brown personally asked him for the donation, and he believed the money was going to pay for scholarships.

Hanania said he didn’t believe the payment was to attend the game and wouldn’t have donated to One Door if he thought that was the case.

Prosecutors then switched gears and interviewed Brad Mims, the head of the Conference of Minority Transportation Officials.

The professional group, commonly referred to as COMTO, was to be the main recipient of a 2013 fundraising golf tournament held at TPC Sawgrass in Brown’s honor. The event’s proceeds were to go toward COMTO to provide scholarships for minority students pursuing careers in the transportation industry.

One Door paid $55,000 to host the event, prosecutors say.

Mims said there are no records that One Door contributed any money to COMTO or its local Jacksonville chapter.

Prosecutors also interviewed Tasha Cole, who leads fundraising for the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation. Cole said there are no records that One Door donated any money to her organization, which among other things provides scholarships.

Prosecutors have presented records showing One Door spent tens of thousands of dollars hosting private receptions held in conjunction with the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s annual event in Washington, D.C. They found no evidence that the receptions led to any scholarships.

UPDATE : 11 a.m.: For the third straight day, prosecutors spoke with more donors who gave checks to One Door for Education after former U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown personally asked for the money and said they would not have donated to the charity if they knew cash was flowing directly into Brown’s personal account.

The donors included local attorney and former Democratic state legislator Steve Pajcic and businessman John Baker.

Both Baker and Pajcic said Brown personally asked them to give money to One Door and told them it would be used for educational and charitable purposes for underprivileged students. Brown is accused of siphoning money from the charity to hold lavish events and fund raisers. Prosecutors say only $1,200 in scholarships were passed out.

Baker recalled "very well" an October 2012 meeting with Brown, where she told him that she recently started a new foundation, One Door for Education. He said he had a strong interest in donating to educational causes and agreed to donate after Brown told him it was going to help minority students.

Baker ended up donating $10,000 to the group and directed another $5,000 from the charitable foundation run by his then employer, Florida Rock and Tank Lines, Inc.

Among the causes he was asked to help: a trip to China for 22 local students.

In the letter seeking money for the trip, Brown said she was responsible for covering the entire cost of the trip. She said she was trying to raise $60,000.

Other witnesses said they received the same letter and gave tens of thousands of dollars toward the trip.

When prosecutors asked Baker, who wrote a $5,000 check toward the trip, if Brown ever told him she raised "far more" than $60,000 or if he ever received a refund, he said no.

Pajcic said Brown told him about One Door during a casual conversation at the River Club, a private dining club located at the top of downtown’s Wells Fargo building.

When Brown told him the group provided scholarships to disadvantaged students, he wrote the group a check for $15,000.

Pajcic said he wouldn’t have made the donation if he knew Brown was directly receiving money from the group or if the group would pay for Brown to hold luxury-box suite party at an NFL football game in Washington, D.C., soon after receiving his check.

"I realize charities have overhead," he said. "But I would have expected the bulk of it would have gone to that (charitable) purpose."

When asked if he considered cash deposits into Brown’s account as overhead, he said no.

Prosecutors also presented testimony and evidence they said shows that Brown was reimbursed for charitable expenses she didn’t actually make.

Jurors heard from a local school teacher who was one of several people who helped pay for 33 laptop in 2013 for students at Eugene Butler Middle School.

The teacher, Ingrid Burch, said she paid around $1,400. She said several other people accompanied her during the purchase and helped pay, but Brown wasn’t one of them.

This story will be updated throughout the day.

Original story: The chairman of Florida’s Democratic Party and a one-time candidate for governor will tell jurors in former U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown’s fraud trial Friday about donating to the sham charity she championed.

Stephen Bittel, a mega-rich real estate investor picked to run the party in January, gave One Door for Education $5,000 for a student computer drive and $10,000 to bring senior citizens to Washington for the 2013 presidential inauguration, court filings show.

Bittel is scheduled to discuss both donations Friday, the same day that Jacksonville attorney Steve Pajcic is supposed to talk about his law firm donating $15,000 to One Door in 2014. Pajcic was a six-term member of the Florida House of Representatives and the Democrats’ nominee for governor in 1986.

Prosecutors told U.S. District Judge Timothy Corrigan Thursday they also intend to call Jacksonville auto dealer Jack Hanania, who contributed $7,000, as well as several others slated for the trial’s third day.

Their testimony will follow a day when other big donors talked about writing checks to One Door after Brown, a 12-term congresswoman and Democratic power broker, asked them to.

Brown is charged with conspiracy, wire and mail fraud, and tax crimes.