San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

USING 1 LAWYER FOR CASE QUESTIONED

County hires same person to represent defendants with conflictin­g stories

- BY KELLY DAVIS

In February 2018, Frankie Greer had a seizure and fell from the top of three jail bunks, suffering a serious brain injury.

A year later, Greer’s family filed a lawsuit against the nurse who had assessed him during the jail’s intake process, the two deputies responsibl­e for assigning him to the top bunk and the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department, which employs all three.

The County of San Diego outsourced the entire case to one private attorney despite there being multiple defendants with conflictin­g stories: The nurse says she properly alerted housing deputies that Greer had a seizure disorder and needed a bottom bunk; the housing deputies claim she entered the alert into part of the jail’s informatio­n management system that they could not access.

This leaves the attorney hired by the county with an impossible, and potentiall­y unethical, task: defending two parties who blame each other for wrongdoing. Under California rules for practicing law, it’s unethical for one lawyer to represent people whose stories are at odds.

And this is not a new issue for the county. It faced an almost identical scenario in a 2002 lawsuit filed by the family of Marshawn Washington,

who suffocated to death after being hogtied by jail deputies. Judge Larry Burns ruled then that county counsel could not represent both the jail nurse, who had failed to report to deputies that Washington had respirator­y problems, and the deputies who had restrained him.

Burns wrote in his ruling that “statements made by the correction­al officer and nurse defendants raise a very real prospect that one group of Defendants may attempt to shift the blame to the other, thus rendering it impossible for any at

torney to effectivel­y represent both groups in the same proceeding without compromisi­ng the rights of either.”

Like in the Washington case, plaintiffs are asking a judge to disqualify the defense attorney hired by the county to preserve the integrity of the case.

“When you have three defendants and they’re pointing at each other and the nurse says, ‘I did everything right, it’s on the deputies,’ and the deputies are saying the nurse didn’t do her job, how can you properly represent all three of those people?” said attorney Eugene Iredale, who is representi­ng Greer.

Normally in a lawsuit with multiple defendants and conflictin­g accounts, the county would hire multiple outside attorneys, Iredale said.

Initially, county lawyers were assigned to the lawsuit. But in February 2020, the county outsourced the entire case to Carrie Mitchell of the law firm Mcdougal, Love, Boehmer, Foley, Lyon & Mitchell.

Mitchell did not respond to the San Diego Union-tribune’s request for an interview. County spokesman Michael Workman did not respond to questions asking why the case was outsourced, saying only that having Mitchell represent multiple clients “is a potential issue.”

“It will be decided by the court,” he said.

Iredale and his co-counsel, Julia Yoo, recently filed a motion asking a judge to disqualify Mitchell, arguing that the conflictin­g stories among defendants harms the integrity of the case.

“Because there is an actual conflict between Nurse Germano and the deputies that cannot be waived at trial, defense counsel must be disqualifi­ed from representi­ng any of the parties,” Yoo wrote in the motion.

Mitchell has until July 27 to file a response, Yoo said.

Court records reveal the challenge Mitchell faces should the case go to trial. In deposition­s, the housing deputies maintain they did nothing wrong.

But in a request for admissions — a legal document that requires one party in a civil case to admit to allegation­s by answering a series of questions — filed last month, Mitchell denied that Germano failed to properly document Greer’s condition.

And an expert hired by Mitchell to review all records tied to Germano’s actions said the nurse followed jail policy: She put in a “stat” order for Greer’s anti-seizure medication and made a note for the deputies to assign Greer to a bottom bunk, per jail policy for anyone prone to seizures.

“RN Germano, as required by policy, entered the informatio­n into the (jail informatio­n management system) to alert correction­al staff of Mr. Greer’s need for a lower bunk,” Katheryn Wild, an expert in jail health care, wrote in a report.

According to court

records, once Greer realized he had been assigned to a top bunk, he told deputies he needed to be moved to another cell, but his request was denied. Less than 24 hours later, he fell 6 feet from the top bunk, striking his head on the concrete floor. He was in a coma for several weeks and when he woke up, he did not recognize family or friends, according to court records. Now 62, he is permanentl­y disabled and in an assisted-living facility.

Attorney David Carr, an expert in legal ethics, said the California Rules of Profession­al Conduct, which set the standards for practicing law in the state, allow an attorney to represent more than one client in a case, “but almost always requires the informed written consent of the jointly represente­d clients,” especially if the clients have taken adversaria­l positions, such as in the Greer case.

The San Diego Uniontribu­ne asked how much the county has paid Mitchell so far, but Workman did not respond. Yoo said she did not want to guess at what the law firm has billed, but said it is likely a significan­t sum.

“What I can tell you is that the county has litigated this case so aggressive­ly and needlessly that I would not be surprised if the taxpayers were saddled with a very large price tag,” she said.

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