From September 9, 1996, to March 6, 1998, McDougal spent the maximum possible 18 months imprisonment for civil contempt, including eight months in
solitary confinement, and she was subjected to "
diesel therapy," described by McDougal as "the practice of hauling defendants around the country and placing them in different jails along the way." McDougal was shuffled from Arkansas to Los Angeles to the
Federal Transfer Center, Oklahoma City, and then on to the Pulaski County Jail in Little Rock, Arkansas. Following her release on March 7, 1998, for civil contempt of court, McDougal began serving the two-year sentence for her 1996 conviction. Soon afterward, the Independent Counsel indicted McDougal on criminal charges of contempt of court and
obstruction of justice. After serving four months on the Whitewater fraud conviction, she was released for medical reasons. After McDougal's release, her embezzlement trial in California began. In 1998, McDougal was acquitted on all 12 counts. A suit in 1999 against Nancy Mehta for
malicious prosecution was settled out of court. McDougal's trial for criminal charges of contempt of court and obstruction of justice began in March 1999. The jury deadlocked 7–5 on the charge of contempt of court and found her not guilty on the charge of obstruction of justice. In January 2001, in the final hours of his presidency, President Clinton granted McDougal a full
pardon. ==Recent life==