Oroville Mercury-Register

Feds: Orange County misused jail snitches

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SANTA ANA >> The U.S. Justice Department said Thursday that the sheriff’s department and prosecutor­s in Orange County, California, ran an extensive jailhouse informant program for years that violated the rights of criminal defendants.

The federal agency, which began investigat­ing the allegation­s in 2016, issued a lengthy report detailing Orange County authoritie­s’ use of the informants from 2007 to 2016 and their failure to release informatio­n, as required by law, about incriminat­ing statements gathered by the informants to lawyers for the accused.

The report said the district attorney’s office had failed to conduct a full probe of the scandal that rocked the county of 3 million people and said it should “establish an independen­t body to conduct a more comprehens­ive review of past prosecutio­ns involving custodial informants.”

Orange County, which saw a number of criminal cases upended once the allegation­s came to light, stopped using the informants in 2016, the report said.

“The failure to protect these basic constituti­onal guarantees not only deprives individual defendants of their rights, it undermines the public’s confidence in the fundamenta­l fairness of criminal justice systems across the county,” Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke said in a statement.

The report comes years after the allegation­s of prosecutor­ial conduct arose in the case of a man who killed eight people in a 2011 shooting in a hair salon.

Scott Dekraai pleaded guilty to the murders but was spared the death penalty over authoritie­s’ use of an informant to cull informatio­n from him while he was represente­d by a lawyer — which was unearthed when his attorney flagged that the informant had also been involved in another high-profile case.

In a separate instance, a gang member charged with a 2004 killing took a plea deal and a shorter prison sentence after an earlier conviction was set aside over concerns that prosecutor­s had failed to share critical evidence.

Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said he has cooperated with the federal investigat­ion since taking office four years ago and that he led his own probe that found veteran prosecutor­s were negligent in the Dekraai case. He said much of the informant activity was hidden from prosecutor­s, preventing the proper disclosure of informatio­n.

“This report confirms exactly what we already knew,” Spitzer said in a statement. “I have made it unequivoca­lly clear that I refuse to accept the ‘winat-all costs’ mentality” of the prior administra­tion.

The sheriff’s office didn’t immediatel­y reply to a message seeking comment.

Assistant Public Defender Scott Sanders, who represente­d Dekraai, said the federal report shows that county agencies are still not doing enough to protect the rights of the accused.

Authoritie­s can use jailhouse informants but can’t have them deliberate­ly elicit informatio­n from defendants once they are represente­d by lawyers. In addition, prosecutor­s are required to turn over evidence to defense attorneys that could be seen as favorable to their clients.

 ?? MARK RIGHTMIRE — THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER, FILE ?? Scott Dekraai is led to his seat beside his attorney Scott Sanders, right, in Orange County Superior Court in Santa Ana on Aug. 18, 2017. Dekraai, a Southern California mass killer, will be spared the death penalty amid a long-running scandal over authoritie­s’ use of jailhouse informants.
MARK RIGHTMIRE — THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER, FILE Scott Dekraai is led to his seat beside his attorney Scott Sanders, right, in Orange County Superior Court in Santa Ana on Aug. 18, 2017. Dekraai, a Southern California mass killer, will be spared the death penalty amid a long-running scandal over authoritie­s’ use of jailhouse informants.

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