A U.S. court found on Tuesday a former bank executive guilty of bribery and of “corruptly using” his position to give millions of dollars in risky bank loans to former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort in exchange for a high-ranking position in the presidential administration. It took a Manhattan jury reportedly less than two hours of deliberations to decide that Stephen Calk, the former chairman and CEO of The Federal Savings Bank, was found guilty of one count of financial institution bribery, which carries a 30-year maximum prison sentence, and one count of conspiracy to commit financial institution bribery, which carries a 5-year maximum sentence.