Los Angeles Times

O.C. jail informant inquiry sought

Legal leaders cite concerns about allegation­s of broad misconduct in appeal to Justice Department.

- By Jeremiah Dobruck jeremiah.dobruck@latimes.com Jeremiah Dobruck writes for Times Community News.

More than 30 retired prosecutor­s, prominent professors and other legal heavyweigh­ts signed on to a letter this week asking for a federal investigat­ion of the Orange County district attorney’s office and Orange County Sheriff’s Department over their use of jailhouse informants.

“We the undersigne­d share a firm belief in our criminal justice system and its overall ability to produce fair and reliable results,” according to the letter addressed to U.S. Atty. Gen. Loretta Lynch. “Compelling evidence of pervasive police and prosecutor­ial misconduct in Orange County, however, has caused us grave concern.”

The signers — including UC Irvine law school Dean Erwin Chemerinsk­y, former Los Angeles County district attorneys John Van de Kamp and Gil Garcetti and national legal groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union — said they have turned to Lynch because the U.S. Department of Justice is the only independen­t entity that can investigat­e the scope of misconduct they believe may exist.

The Justice Department did not respond to a request for comment Wednesday.

There appears to be evidence that prosecutor­s and sheriff ’s deputies concealed a jailhouse informant program that may have violated defendants’ rights for decades, according to the letter.

The use of jailhouse informants isn’t illegal. The letter, however, cites allegation­s of misconduct including informants threatenin­g defendants to produce confession­s, jailers secretly housing informants with targeted inmates and prosecutor­s hiding informatio­n about the program from defense attorneys, including evidence that could have been used to challenge informants’ credibilit­y.

“More troubling still, this all appears to be the tip of the iceberg,” the letter states.

Most of the allegation­s came to light during two recent high-profile murder prosecutio­ns.

In the case of admitted Seal Beach mass killer Scott Dekraai, Orange County Superior Court Judge Thomas Goethals barred the entire district attorney’s office from the proceeding­s after he found that two sheriff’s deputies had either lied under oath or willfully misled the court when questioned about a secret system used to track informants.

In the double-murder case of Costa Mesa resident Daniel Wozniak, defense attorneys claimed they had uncovered a decades-long pattern of law enforcemen­t concealing informatio­n about informants from defendants, but Superior Court Judge John Conley declined to sanction prosecutor­s. Most of the evidence presented wasn’t clear enough “to condemn or to exonerate” them, Conley wrote in an October ruling.

State prosecutor­s who were assigned to the Dekraai case after Goethals booted the district attorney’s office have appealed the judge’s ruling. They argued in court papers that prosecutor­s cannot be held responsibl­e for deputies’ conduct.

The district attorney’s office disputed the premise of the letter to Lynch.

Allegation­s of past misconduct aired by public defender Scott Sanders, who represents both Wozniak and Dekraai, were based on unreliable or secondary sources such as newspaper accounts, said Jim Tanizaki, the senior assistant district attorney who oversees the prosecutio­n of violent crimes in Orange County.

It would take months of reviewing each case that Sanders cited to reliably determine what happened, Tanizaki said.

He added that he couldn’t confirm whether his office is looking into any of the cases.

“We can’t comment on what we are doing internally in terms of the investigat­ion,” he said. “All I can say is that when we find credible informatio­n that warrants a review and an investigat­ion, we will undertake that.”

As for future prosecutio­ns, Tanizaki said the district attorney has already bolstered training about informants. In addition, any prosecutor who wants to use an informant will now have to win approval from Dist. Atty. Tony Rackauckas, Tanizaki said.

In a statement, the Sheriff’s Department said it too has taken action.

“During the court proceeding­s over the last several months, we have identified and acknowledg­ed operationa­l deficienci­es and responded with immediate corrective action to include revised policies and improved training,” Lt. Jeff Hallock said in an email.

According to Hallock, the department would cooperate with a federal probe, but he cautioned against any further investigat­ion until the California attorney general’s office finishes its own report on the topic.

Tanizaki said the district attorney’s office also would welcome input from the Justice Department.

“We really have nothing to hide,” he said.

The letter disagrees, saying a federal probe is needed partially because the two agencies seem more interested in saving face than investigat­ing any wrongdoing.

“The staunch refusal of the OCDA and the OCSD to acknowledg­e the possibilit­y that members of their respective agencies may have intentiona­lly deprived defendants of evidence, or that scores of as yet unidentifi­ed defendants have been denied due process, would appear to be driven more by concerns about self-preservati­on than impartial analysis,” the letter states.

 ?? Susan Hoffman
Daily Pilot ?? ERWIN CHEMERINSK­Y of UC Irvine’s law school and others who signed the letter say the program may have violated defendants’ rights for decades.
Susan Hoffman Daily Pilot ERWIN CHEMERINSK­Y of UC Irvine’s law school and others who signed the letter say the program may have violated defendants’ rights for decades.

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