Los Angeles Times

Shake-up in Rebecca Grossman case

Prosecutor­s are removed by the D.A.’s office ahead of her sentencing

- By Richard Winton

The Los Angeles County district attorney’s office has taken the highly unusual step of removing the prosecutor­s who convicted Rebecca Grossman of double murder, outraging the parents of the two young boys she killed in a Westlake Village crosswalk.

Dist. Atty. George Gascón’s office replaced prosecutor­s Jamie Castro, Ryan Gould and their supervisor, Garrett Dameron, after claiming a conflict of interest in the Grossman case. The trio reported during trial to Assistant Dist. Atty. Diana Teran, who was recently charged with 11 felonies in connection with the illegal use of confidenti­al sheriff’s records. Teran is represente­d by James Spertus, Grossman’s new attorney.

The district attorney’s top bosses told Dameron the prosecutor­s were being removed so anyone who worked with Teran would be walled off from the case going forward. But according to an email by Dameron to his superiors, the move was taken only after his team suggested that Spertus, who is seeking a new trial for Grossman, could end up questionin­g Teran’s decisions in the case.

Dist. Atty. Chief Deputy Joseph Iniguez said in an interview Monday that the prosecutio­n will now be led by Habib Balian, assistant head deputy of the Major Crimes Division. The previous prosecutor­s, Gould and Castro, will remain on the case and assist, he said.

Iniguez said he decided a change of command was needed to distance the team from Teran, whose charging led to unusual circumstan­ces.

“There was a perceived internal conflict with these supervisor­s having reported

to an attorney [Teran] represente­d by the same attorney as Ms. Grossman,” Iniguez said.

But Dameron said his superiors are now backpedali­ng. “That’s not what I was told on Friday,” he said in a brief interview with The Times on Monday.

The prosecutio­n change comes at a potentiall­y vital moment as sentencing for Grossman has been delayed until at least June. She has been awaiting sentencing since her Feb. 23 conviction of second-degree murder in the deaths of brothers Mark and Jacob Iskander, 11 and 8, who were struck and killed in a crosswalk as Grossman sped along a residentia­l Westlake Village street in September 2020.

The boys’ mother, Nancy Iskander — who testified at trial she lost sight of her sons as they crossed the marked walk ahead of her and two speeding SUVs barreled through the intersecti­on — said Gould told her Friday that he, Castro and Dameron were being removed. In a Mother’s Day interview with The Times, she expressed outrage over the decision and questioned why she was being made a victim again.

“This is truly shocking and disappoint­ing,” Iskander said.

Dameron echoed that sentiment in an email to Iniguez.

“In my nearly 24 years in the office, this decision is shocking and unpreceden­ted. I also believe it is contrary to profession­al ethics and to thwart our clear duty of candor to the court,” Dameron wrote. “At the very least, this extraordin­ary decision jeopardize­s the successful completion of the case and the impartial administra­tion of justice.”

During the six-week murder trial against Grossman, Teran was in constant supervisor­y contact with the prosecutio­n. Last month, after Teran was charged, Gould and Castro notified the judge of the conflict because Spertus represents both Grossman and Teran.

Iskander said the decision “took me a few steps back in my healing process.” She said that instead of seeking to oust the conflicted defense attorney, the district attorney’s office is now taking away the people who delivered justice to her family.

“I am being punished for something I had nothing to do with. They choose to punish the victim,” she said. “They have a motion for a new trial. We have things that only Ryan — who knows the case so well and knows the defendant so well — can deal with.

“We were looking forward to closing the case. Sentencing was soon,” she continued. “For me, all of a sudden to have to meet another prosecutor and work with them — they don’t know my family or the boys.”

Iskander said she has asked the district attorney’s office to reverse its decision.

As the Grossman prosecutio­n’s top boss, Teran was involved in daily strategy of the trial, according to internal district attorney’s communicat­ions reviewed by The Times.

Since the trial ended, Teran has been charged in a felony case. On April 24, California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta charged her with 11 felonies in connection with the downloadin­g of records in 2018 while working at the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. Teran “impermissi­bly used” those records after joining Gascón’s office, Bonta alleged. Spertus has denied any wrongdoing by Teran.

Spertus, who took over Grossman’s case after her conviction, said there is “no conceivabl­e/arguable/theoretica­l conflict of interest.”

Dameron, however, said there is. He wrote in his email to Iniguez that the removal of the prosecutor­s came after a proposed motion to remove Spertus from the case, arguing that Grossman cannot waive any conflict.

He said prosecutor­s were given a “very vague explanatio­n” that they “had to be walled off because Diana Teran was our supervisor during a period of time of the prosecutio­n,” but said the conflict is actually with Spertus “representi­ng both of these defendants.”

According to Dameron’s email, prosecutor­s “became aware of a witness who had critical informatio­n regarding Grossman’s continued efforts to obstruct justice from inside the county jail” shortly after Spertus became her attorney on March 22.

Based on recorded jailhouse telephone calls, prosecutor­s also were aware Grossman was trying to have her husband and daughter talk to trial witnesses to change their testimony. The jailhouse witness had informatio­n important to “preserving the integrity of our verdict and the safety of our witnesses,” Dameron wrote.

“As instructed, I sent a request to interview the witness to Teran,” Dameron wrote. “To our shock, Teran denied our request to conduct this interview. I repeatedly asked for an explanatio­n and was not given one.”

On Monday, Iniguez told The Times, “The decision to re-assign the matter was necessary to address any perceived internal conflict over past issues of supervisio­n.”

Teran has long been represente­d by Spertus’ law firm. According to a 2019 deposition, she was represente­d by Spertus’ colleague, Samuel Josephs, during a civil case involving allegation­s over confidenti­al sheriff’s records that ultimately led to last month’s criminal charges.

Spertus has insisted Teran is innocent and said the documents in question were obtained either through public court files or involved findings of dishonesty against sheriff ’s deputies, which would be public record under Senate Bill 1421, California’s landmark police transparen­cy law.

He said he plans to file a motion Monday to seek a new trial for Grossman on the basis of “prosecutor­ial misconduct,” alleging the prosecutor­s misstated facts.

“If the prosecutor­s were removed, it was because they didn’t follow the court’s orders, in my mind,” Spertus told The Times.

In his email, Dameron argued that if the Grossman prosecutor­s need to be removed because they worked with Teran, then all prosecutor­s who have worked with public corruption and law enforcemen­t prosecutio­n would also need to be replaced since Teran supervises those cases as well.

“This decision gives off the appearance that there is a greater concern for protecting other collateral players (such as the administra­tion and Diana Teran) than seeing that justice is done and that the interests of the family of Jacob and Mark Iskander (the two little boys murdered by Grossman) are safeguarde­d,” Dameron wrote in the email, which concluded with him asking Iniguez to reconsider the “terrible decision.”

Iniguez countered that the move was made with the “utmost considerat­ion” for the Iskander family and to “protect the integrity of the legal process and the jury verdict.”

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? NANCY ISKANDER, whose two young sons were killed in a crash, called the decision “shocking.”
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times NANCY ISKANDER, whose two young sons were killed in a crash, called the decision “shocking.”
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? REBECCA GROSSMAN leaves court in February with her husband, Peter, and daughter Alexis. Her sentencing in the deaths of two young boys in a Westlake Village crosswalk was already delayed until at least June.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times REBECCA GROSSMAN leaves court in February with her husband, Peter, and daughter Alexis. Her sentencing in the deaths of two young boys in a Westlake Village crosswalk was already delayed until at least June.

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