Jury finds ex-Viking Voigt guilty of bank fraud

FILE - In this October 1971 file photo, Minnesota Vikings' Stu Voigt dives for a pass that fell incomplete during an NFL game against the Baltimore Colts in Minneapolis. Former Vikings tight end Voigt is charged in a federal indictment with conspiracy and fraud in an alleged Ponzi scheme, the U.S. Attorney's office said Wednesday, April 15, 2015. The government accuses Voigt, 66, and another man, Jeffrey Gardner, 61, of using a real estate scheme to defraud investors. (AP Photo)

MINNEAPOLIS — Former Minnesota Vikings tight end Stu Voigt has been found guilty of one count of bank fraud.

A federal jury reached the verdict Friday in a case that prosecutors said bilked investors out of millions of dollars. Voigt was acquitted of a second bank fraud count.

The Star Tribune reports Voigt’s business partner, Jeffrey Gardner, was convicted of multiple fraud charges.

Gardner was accused of using money invested in his Hennessey Financial LLC to pay prior investors and debts instead of financing real estate projects. Voigt was accused of defrauding a bank while he was its chairman by failing to disclose debts Gardner owed him while Gardner sought credit.

The men will be sentenced later. Voigt’s attorney didn’t return a message.

Voigt played for the Vikings from 1970 to 1980.

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