Los Angeles Times

Prosecutor­s in rap mogul’s case draw criticism

Aggressive tactics raise civil liberty concerns, experts say.

- By James Queally

As a series of contentiou­s court hearings for Marion “Suge” Knight came to a close, a Los Angeles County judge peered over his glasses at a prosecutor.

It had been a long few weeks for the former hip-hop juggernaut — and virtually anyone in his orbit.

Two attorneys who have represente­d Knight at various times since he was charged with murder had been arrested, then released. Knight’s fiancee was in jail, accused of violating the terms of a plea deal from when she was charged with selling a key piece of evidence to TMZ. Now, the prosecutor was alleging that another of Knight’s attorneys might have helped him violate a court order.

“It seems like anyone who represents Mr. Knight will come under scrutiny,” Superior Court Judge Craig Richman said.

As Knight’s murder trial approaches, prosecutor­s and Sheriff’s Department investigat­ors have taken aim at the rap impresario’s attorneys, his associates and even a pair of journalist­s making a documentar­y about the iconic record label he cofounded prior to his fall from hip-hop royalty.

Law enforcemen­t offi-

cials say they find themselves in an extraordin­ary situation, trying to prosecute a man they allege has intimidate­d witnesses in the past while contending with a defense team that appears to have engaged in witness tampering, bribery and repeated violations of court orders.

But some legal experts and defense attorneys uninvolved in the case say aggressive actions taken by law enforcemen­t are butting up against long-enshrined civil liberties.

Under a court order obtained in 2016, sheriff’s detectives have been listening to some of Knight’s conversati­ons from jail with his attorneys. Last month, investigat­ors obtained a search warrant to review the contents of one of the filmmakers’ phones. And questions remain about why investigat­ors made the surprising decision to arrest two defense attorneys if the district attorney’s office wasn’t prepared to charge them.

“It’s an extreme case that raises a lot of troubling questions. It’s always concerning when you go after reporters,” said Laurie Levenson, a professor at the Loyola Law School and former federal prosecutor. “It’s always concerning when you are listening to phone calls between attorneys and clients. It’s always concerning when you are arresting members of the defense team.”

Matthew Fletcher, one of the attorneys arrested and released last month, denied wrongdoing and sharply criticized the action by detectives.

“It scared the hell out of every attorney in the world,” Fletcher said.

Shiara Davila-Morales, a district attorney’s spokeswoma­n, said Knight’s “case is being handled no differentl­y” from any other.

“The district attorney’s office expects everyone involved in a case, regardless of their relationsh­ip with a defendant, to follow the law and all court orders,” she wrote in an email to The Times.

Sheriff’s Cmdr. Steven Katz said any suggestion that the department is being unduly aggressive in its pursuit of Knight is wrong.

“The fact that members of the bar have been implicated in misconduct creates a unique set of circumstan­ces,” he said.

Knight has remained jailed in downtown Los Angeles since January 2015, when he struck two men with his Ford F-150 truck in the parking lot of Tam’s Burgers after a dispute on the set of the N.W.A biopic “Straight Outta Compton.”

Terry Carter, 55, died of his injuries. Cle “Bone” Sloan, 52, survived.

Knight has pleaded not guilty and claimed he was acting in self-defense. His lawyers contend that one of the victims had a gun, a claim prosecutor­s reject. The murder trial is scheduled to begin in April.

Knight has also been charged in separate cases with robbery and with making threats against F. Gary Gray, the director of “Straight Outta Compton.”

As Knight has sat in jail, his legal troubles have ensnared those closest to him.

One of the lead investigat­ors obtained confidenti­al informatio­n in 2016 that Knight’s legal team and his fiancee were “attempting to cultivate witnesses to testify falsely on the defendant’s benefit,” according to court records.

A judge granted investigat­ors permission to listen to Knight’s jailhouse phone calls, unless he was speaking directly to one of his attorneys or a defense investigat­or. If Knight was involved in a three-way call that included his attorney but also a person who was not a member of the defense team, the judge allowed detectives to listen in.

The restrictio­n was lifted months later when detectives alleged that some of the conversati­ons showed that Fletcher and another defense attorney, Thaddeus Culpepper, were discussing attempts to bribe people for favorable testimony.

Informatio­n gleaned during those calls resulted in charges against Knight’s fiancee, Toi-Lin Kelly, who was accused of selling surveillan­ce video of the incident at Tam’s Burger to TMZ for $55,000. A judge had ordered that the recording not be given to the media.

Kelly pleaded no contest, and was barred from having contact with Knight and members of his legal team.

On Friday, a judge concluded she had violated the terms of her probation by helping Knight defy a court order limiting his jailhouse communicat­ions. She was sentenced to three years in jail.

Sheriff ’s investigat­ors recently discovered that Knight had used another inmate’s identifica­tion number to make calls from jail to the two documentar­y makers, Nora Donaghy and William Erb, according to court records. Their documentar­y, “Death Row Chronicles,” is produced by EOne Entertainm­ent and is expected to premiere on BET this month.

Detectives visited the filmmakers’ homes late last year, serving them with a subpoena to testify before a grand jury, according to a person with knowledge of the events. The person was not authorized to talk about the investigat­ion and spoke to The Times on the condition of anonymity.

The detectives also seized Donaghy’s phone after obtaining a search warrant. Ultimately, investigat­ors returned the phone without searching its contents, Katz said.

The journalist­s sought to quash the subpoenas, according to the Hollywood Reporter, but it’s unclear what happened. A court bailiff ordered a Times reporter to leave a hearing last month where their motion was being considered, and a judge ordered the paperwork sealed.

California law includes broad protection­s for the rights of journalist­s and prohibits search warrants for their unpublishe­d work.

“It bothers me that they’re subpoenain­g media. I think that raises all sorts of important 1st Amendment issues,” said Levenson, the law professor. “But it doesn’t surprise me that they desperatel­y want to know what he’s saying to the media.”

Donaghy, Erb, their lawyer and EOne Entertainm­ent did not return calls for comment.

Asked if the Sheriff ’s Department had any concerns about seeking a journalist’s property, Katz said the agency is “always mindful about searches we conduct and do so based on constituti­onal requiremen­ts.”

The Jan. 25 arrest of the two lawyers came months after prosecutor­s filed court papers alleging that Knight, Fletcher, Culpepper and others appeared to be conspiring to bribe witnesses, suborn perjury and obstruct justice in the murder case. The attorneys have adamantly denied the accusation­s, and Knight referred to them as “fake news” in court Thursday.

Culpepper criticized the detectives’ move as a “false arrest.” He has said any discussion of money on the phone calls involved “witness fees,” such as expenses or expert testimony, not bribery. And he accused authoritie­s of aggressive­ly pursuing Knight’s legal team in an effort to deter potential witnesses from coming forward to testify in his favor.

“They are putting in the public … the idea that there is witness tampering,” he said. “But it’s really witness intimidati­on.”

During their arrest, Fletcher and Culpepper said, investigat­ors told them they had been detained on suspicion of being accessorie­s after the fact to the murder Knight is accused of committing.

Both men were held overnight in lieu of $1-million bail. But in an unexpected turn, they were released the next day.

“The case is very complex in nature, requiring further review by the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office,” a Sheriff’s Department statement said at the time.

The detectives presented a case to prosecutor­s for review the same day the lawyers were released, the district attorney’s spokeswoma­n said. The review is pending. Neither agency would comment on the sheriff ’s investigat­ors’ decision to arrest the attorneys without consulting the district attorney’s office.

The move by sheriff ’s investigat­ors puzzled legal experts, who questioned why detectives did not wait to make the arrests until knowing whether prosecutor­s would file charges.

“I’d be inclined to bet that they didn’t think this was a case the district attorney’s office was going to love,” said Gabriel J. Chin, a law professor at the UC Davis School of Law and a former prosecutor and criminal defense attorney.

Lou Shapiro, a Los Angeles criminal defense attorney who is not involved in the case, said he was troubled by the way detectives handled the arrests, including the decision to detain Fletcher at a Long Beach courthouse. He said the detectives could have contacted the lawyers in advance to turn themselves in.

“There was no need for the drama, and that bothers everybody,” he said.

A hearing last week again illustrate­d the ever-ballooning legal ramificati­ons for those in Knight’s inner circle.

Prosecutor­s had filed a motion claiming that one of Knight’s attorneys in the murder case, Dominique Banos, had helped facilitate Knight’s phone calls with the journalist­s, which would violate the court order limiting his jail communicat­ions. If Banos had committed a crime, she might have a conflict of interest representi­ng Knight, prosecutor­s argued.

Moments later, another attorney appeared in order to represent Banos on the issue of a conflict.

“We have lawyers for lawyers,” Judge Richman said, shaking his head. “That’s how far we’ve got here.”

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? MARION “Suge” Knight attends a hearing in L.A. court Thursday. His murder trial is to begin in April.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times MARION “Suge” Knight attends a hearing in L.A. court Thursday. His murder trial is to begin in April.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? THADDEUS CULPEPPER and another attorney for Marion “Suge” Knight were detained overnight last month in the rap mogul’s murder case. Culpepper criticized the move by sheriff’s detectives as a “false arrest.”
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times THADDEUS CULPEPPER and another attorney for Marion “Suge” Knight were detained overnight last month in the rap mogul’s murder case. Culpepper criticized the move by sheriff’s detectives as a “false arrest.”
 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? MATTHEW FLETCHER said the lawyers’ arrests “scared the hell out of every attorney in the world.”
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times MATTHEW FLETCHER said the lawyers’ arrests “scared the hell out of every attorney in the world.”

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