Daily Breeze (Torrance)

DA: Transcript­s in Polanski case should be unsealed

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Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón announced Tuesday that his office believes grand jury transcript­s of a former prosecutor's testimony should be unsealed in the case of famed film director Roman Polanski, who fled from the United States in the late 1970s during an unlawful sexual intercours­e case involving a 13-year-old girl.

“This case has been described by the courts as `one of the longest-running sagas in California criminal justice history,”` the county's top prosecutor said in a statement. “For years, this office has fought the release of informatio­n that the victim and public have a right to know.”

Gascón said his office has “determined it to be in the interest of justice to agree to the unsealing of these transcript­s” of former Deputy District Attorney Roger Gunson's closeddoor testimony based on “careful considerat­ion of the victim's wishes, the unique and extraordin­ary circumstan­ces that led to his conditiona­l exam and my commitment to transparen­cy and accountabi­lity for all in the justice system.”

Defense attorney Harland Braun said in 2017 that he believes the transcript would confirm a plea deal negotiated in 1978 calling for Polanski to be sentenced to time already served behind bars.

Braun maintained then that Polanski has already served more than enough time, including time he spent at a state prison in Chino in the late 1970s for a pre-sentencing diagnostic examinatio­n and also in jail and under house arrest in Switzerlan­d in 2009 as Swiss authoritie­s considered an extraditio­n request.

In June 2017, the victim appeared in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom to ask that the drawn-out criminal case against the fugitive Oscar-winning director come to an end.

“I would implore you to consider taking action which can finally bring this matter to a close as an act of mercy to myself and my family,” Samantha Geimer told then-Superior Court Judge Scott Gordon.

The judge denied that request a little over two months later.

In his August 2017 ruling, Gordon wrote that Geimer's testimony was “dramatic evidence of the long-lasting and traumatic effect these crimes, and defendant's refusal to obey court orders and appear for sentencing, is having on her life.”

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