TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Federal prosecutors in the Andrew Gillum corruption case are moving to dismiss charges against the former Florida mayor and his political mentor.

In a Monday morning filing in U.S. District court, the government “respectfully moves that this court dismiss the indictment against the Defendants Andrew Gillum and Sharon Lettman-Hicks.”

The government did not comment on the move, which came after the Tallahassee Democrat, part of the USA TODAY Network, reported that jurors overwhelmingly favored acquitting the two and urged prosecutors to drop the case.

Charges against Gillum, the 2018 Democratic nominee for governor and former Tallahassee, Florida mayor, and his longtime advisor, Lettman-Hicks, involved the misuse of campaign funds. And after five days of deliberations earlier this month, jurors found Gillum not guilty of lying to the FBI about gifts he had received from undercover FBI agents in New York.

Before the move is official, U.S. District Judge Allen Winsor must issue an order completely dismissing the case.

“Andrew Gillum had the courage to stand up and say I am innocent. And that is finally being recognized,” his defense attorneys David Oscar Markus, Margot Moss and Katie Miller said in a statement. “We want to thank the hard-working jury who did their job and explained to the government why it should drop the case. Andrew has endured a lot over the past few years and now can resume his life and public service.”

ANDREW GILLUM CASE:Former Florida mayor not guilty of lying to FBI, jury deadlocks on other charges

Jury: Andrew Gillum not guilty of lying to FBI

The acquittal, partial mistrial, and outright dismissal marked a major defeat for the government and its long-running and costly Operation Capital Currency investigation, which saw undercover FBI agents posing as crooked developers descend on Tallahassee starting in 2015.

On May 4, after a nearly three-week trial, jurors acquitted Gillum on a single count of making false statements but couldn’t reach a verdict on 18 other conspiracy and wire fraud counts against both defendants. Several jurors later anonymously announced that the 12-person panel voted heavily in favor of acquittal but that two “biased” jurors prevented a unanimous decision.

Federal prosecutors faced distinct tactical disadvantages were they to proceed with a retrial.

“Retrials can be quite complicated,” Daniel Richman, a professor at Columbia Law School and former federal prosecutor in New York, said days before the dismissal. “Defendants not only gain comprehensive knowledge of the government’s case, but they gain material with which to impeach them in the second case.”