Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

DA calls Kane’s claim ‘frivolous’

- By Carl Hessler Jr. chessler@21st-centurymed­ia. com @MontcoCour­tNews on Twitter

NORRISTOWN >> Montgomery County prosecutor­s maintain embattled Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane’s claim that she is the victim of “selective and vindictive prosecutio­n” is frivolous and not a basis on which to dismiss the alleged perjury charges she’s facing.

“In her most recentlyfi­led pretrial motion, defendant asserts a selective and vindictive prosecutio­n claim. In doing so, she writes yet another chapter in her wearied feud with individual­s not employed by either the Montgomery County or Bucks County district attorney’s offices,” Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin R. Steele wrote in court papers filed on Monday. “In short, defendant’s selective and vindictive prosecutio­n claim is frivolous.”

Steele argued Kane’s claim is frivolous “because there have been five independen­t determinat­ions of probable cause.” Steele cited the grand jury presentmen­t recommendi­ng criminal charges against Kane; the supervisin­g grand jury judge’s approving the presentmen­t; former District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman’s conclusion, after her office’s own investigat­ion, that criminal charges were warranted against Kane; and a district court judge moving the charges to trial after two preliminar­y hearings.

Steele has asked county Judge Wendy Demchick-Alloy to deny Kane’s requests for a dismissal of the perjury charges lodged against

her last year and for an evidentiar­y hearing on her claim.

It’s unclear when Demchick-Alloy might rule on the matter. Kane faces trial Aug. 8 on charges of perjury, obstructin­g administra­tion of law, abuse of office and false swearing in connection with allegation­s she orchestrat­ed the illegal disclosure of confidenti­al investigat­ive informatio­n and secret grand jury informatio­n to the media and then engaged in acts designed to conceal and cover up her alleged conduct.

Last week, Kane, through her lawyers, filed papers alleging two former prosecutor­s in her office, Frank G. Fina and E. Marc Costanzo, instigated the investigat­ion against her after they became “incensed” by Kane’s review of their work in two high-profile cases, including the investigat­ion of former Pennsylvan­ia State University coach Jerry Sandusky. Kane’s lawyers alleged Fina and Costanzo in May 2014 sent a letter to county Judge William R. Carpenter “to report the release of grand jury informatio­n” and suggested an investigat­ion.

“Attorney General Kane was singled out for investigat­ion and subsequent prosecutio­n in this case as a result of the initiative of prosecutor­s with personal antagonism towards Attorney General Kane…,” Gerald L. Shargel, Kane’s lead defense lawyer, wrote in court filings. “Such selective and vindictive prosecutio­n is unconstitu­tional, and, as a result, the charges in this case should be quashed in their entirety.”

But Steele argued under a selective prosecutio­n claim the only decision subject to review is the “charging decision,” which was made by Ferman as the former district attorney. Steele argued Fina and Costanzo had no role in the decision to file charges against Kane.

“Because Fina and Costanzo had no role in the charging decision in this case, the claim fails as a matter of law,” Steele wrote.

Steele maintained Kane “alleges a grand conspiracy orchestrat­ed by two prosecutor­s,

who are not even prosecutin­g her.”

“Consequent­ly, any action of Fina and Costanzo in relaying informatio­n to Judge Carpenter is not a part of the charging decision and is another reason her motion lacks merit,” Steele wrote.

With the charges against Kane, prosecutor­s allege the 49-year-old first-term Democrat orchestrat­ed the release of secret informatio­n about the 2009 Investigat­ing Grand Jury No. 29 to Christophe­r Brennan, then a reporter at The Daily News, in order to retaliate against a former state prosecutor, Fina, with whom she was feuding and who she believed provided informatio­n

to The Inquirer to embarrass her regarding a sting operation he was in charge of and which she shut down.

Kane also is accused of lying to the 35th statewide grand jury in November 2014 to cover up her alleged leaks by lying under oath when she claimed she never agreed to maintain her secrecy regarding the 2009 grand jury investigat­ion.

County prosecutor­s allege they discovered evidence that Kane signed a so-called “secrecy oath” on her second day in office on Jan. 17, 2013, promising her secrecy for statewide investigat­ing grand juries one through 32. The oath compelled Kane to maintain the secrecy of all matters occurring before past and present statewide grand juries, prosecutor­s alleged.

Kane, who is not seeking re-election, has claimed she did nothing wrong and has implied the charges are part of an effort to force her out of office because she discovered pornograph­ic emails being exchanged between state employees on state email addresses.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Montgomery County prosecutor­s maintain embattled Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane’s claim that she is the victim of “selective and vindictive prosecutio­n” is frivolous and not a basis on which to dismiss the alleged perjury charges she’s facing.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Montgomery County prosecutor­s maintain embattled Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane’s claim that she is the victim of “selective and vindictive prosecutio­n” is frivolous and not a basis on which to dismiss the alleged perjury charges she’s facing.

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