Darlene Wink, an aide to then-Milwaukee County Executive (now-Governor of Wisconsin) Scott Walker was given a one-year probation sentence for doing campaign work for Scott Walker's 2010 campaign for Governor of Wisconsin on county time.
Wink had faced up to one year in prison, however Milwaukee County Assistant District Attorney Bruce Landgraf did not seek prison time for Wink as part of a plea deal.
Here's the story from the Wisconsin State Journal:
Darlene Wink, 62, was one of six people who faced criminal charges stemming from a long-running secret investigation. The probe looked into activity by Walker's former aides and associates after Walker, a Republican, became the county executive in May 2010, six months before he was elected governor. Walker has not been charged with wrongdoing.
Wink wrote hundreds of emails related to campaign events, including invitations to a campaign fundraiser, said Bruce Landgraf, the assistant district attorney. He also said she did the work on her personal laptop, which would not have been subject to open-records laws.
Wink pleaded guilty last year to two misdemeanor counts of political solicitation by a public employee. She faced up to one year in prison and a $2,000 fine, but as part of a plea deal Landgraf agreed not to seek prison time.
Landgraf noted that Wink had a clean criminal record and that she also cooperated with prosecutors in two other cases.
"I think it's fair to say Ms. Wink did everything we asked of her," he said.
Keep in mind that, while Scott Walker himself has yet to be charged with any crime as part of the John Doe probe, Walker is the only incumbent governor of a U.S. state to have a criminal defense fund and has NOT been cleared of wrongdoing and has NOT been granted immunity in the John Doe probe.