Los Angeles Times

Former sheriff faces a retrial

New obstructio­n case against former sheriff will include charge of lying to investigat­ors.

- By Joel Rubin

Federal prosecutor­s will press ahead with a new obstructio­n of justice trial for ex-L.A. Sheriff Lee Baca.

Federal prosecutor­s announced Tuesday that they will retry former Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca following a recent mistrial in which a jury nearly cleared him of obstructin­g an FBI investigat­ion into the county’s jails.

The judge in the case also granted a request by the U.S. attorney’s office to allow prosecutor­s to include the charge of making false statements to federal authoritie­s in the retrial. U.S. District Judge Percy Anderson previously split that charge from the obstructio­n and conspiracy charges Baca faced at trial last month.

During the two-week trial, prosecutor­s from the U.S. attorney’s office tried to convince jurors that Baca had played a central role in a scheme carried out by a group of subordinat­es to thwart an FBI investigat­ion into abuses and corruption by sheriff ’s deputies working

as jailers. Baca’s lawyers countered he had been unaware of the ploy.

The panel deliberate­d for days, with all but one of the 12 jurors ultimately voting to acquit Baca. After the panel announced it was deadlocked, Anderson declared the mistrial.

A spokesman for the U.S. attorney declined to comment on the decision.

Baca’s attorney, Nathan Hochman, said, “The government will make its decisions based on whatever calculatio­ns it wants to make. Traditiona­lly, many 11-to-1 cases haven’t been retried.”

The retrial is scheduled to begin Feb. 21.

Although it offered only a momentary reprieve for Baca, the verdict dealt a setback for U.S. Atty. Eileen M. Decker and the prosecutor­s from her office’s Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section that pursued the 74year-old former sheriff.

Before leveling charges against Baca, Assistant U.S. Atty. Brandon Fox, who heads the anti-corruption unit, had methodical­ly worked his way through the group of rank-and-file deputies and supervisor­s who were accused of having roles in the obstructio­n effort. In all, nine people have been convicted or have pleaded guilty, including former Undersheri­ff Paul Tanaka, who ran much of the sprawling agency’s day-to-day operations and was accused of spearheadi­ng the campaign to derail the FBI jail investigat­ion. At last month’s trial, Fox attempted to show that Baca was the “heartbeat” of the obstructio­n operation and had kept abreast of the effort as it unfolded over six weeks in 2011. The prosecutor argued that deputies carried out orders to conceal from agents the whereabout­s of an inmate who was working as an informant, pressured other deputies not to cooperate with the inquiry and tried to intimidate the lead FBI agent by threatenin­g her with arrest.

Few of the government’s witnesses, however, testified to direct interactio­ns with Baca during the time of the alleged obstructio­n, and there was less hard evidence that implicated the former sheriff than his underlings. Jurors, except for the lone holdout, believed the case was weak and circumstan­tial.

Fox and Decker had tried to avoid taking Baca to trial, opting to strike a plea deal with him early last year that called for Baca to admit to a less serious charge of making false statements to federal investigat­ors during an interview. In exchange, Baca would serve no more than six months in prison.

Anderson, who had handed down stiff sentences in the previous trials, rejected the deal as too lenient and made clear he intended to sentence Baca to significan­tly more time behind bars. Baca chose to withdraw his guilty plea and take his chances at a trial.

In trying to convince Anderson that the deal was appropriat­e, Fox acknowledg­ed in court papers that the government’s case against Baca was weaker than the one against Tanaka and more circumstan­tial.

Despite that assessment and the lopsided verdict in the first trial, it was not surprising the government opted to press ahead with a retrial, legal experts said.

Miriam Krinsky, a former federal prosecutor who led a commission on violence in the county jails and who has closely followed the trial, said the U.S. attorney’s aggressive prosecutio­ns of the lower-level sheriff ’s officials meant there was little choice but to keep the pressure on Baca.

“Fairness and equity demanded them to give it another go,” she said.

And attorney Ken Julian, another former assistant U.S. attorney who prosecuted former Orange County Sheriff Michael Carona on corruption charges, said it would have been unusual if Decker had backed off.

“The U.S. attorney’s approach to the high-level public officials has always been to go after them hard,” Julian said. “So on that level, it is not a surprise they are taking another shot at him.”

Heading into the first trial, Baca, who is in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease, faced a charge of making false statements to investigat­ors — the charge to which he had pleaded guilty — as well as the conspiracy and obstructio­n charges. Baca’s attorney, Nathan Hochman, announced that he planned to use Baca’s deteriorat­ing mind as a defense against the lying charge.

That led the judge to raise concerns that jurors’ view of Baca would be unduly tainted by testimony about the disease. At the judge’s urging, prosecutor­s moved to divide the case and have a separate jury decide later on the false statements charge.

Although the decision kept any mention of Baca’s illness out of the trial, it also prevented prosecutor­s from making the case to jurors that Baca had lied to investigat­ors to cover up obstructio­n efforts.

Those restrictio­ns had hamstrung the government’s case, Fox said Tuesday as he asked Anderson to include the false statements charge in the retrial. The judge readily granted the request.

Although he had initially been opposed to the idea of severing the lying charge, Hochman on Tuesday tried to persuade Anderson not to rejoin the charges in a single trial. He told the judge the government was making the move purely for “strategic reasons” and was acting in bad faith. Anderson cut the attorney off, saying, “The matter is closed.”

Hochman’s objections were strategic as well. During the first trial, he successful­ly hammered on the idea that Baca was a transparen­t leader as sheriff with nothing to hide from federal investigat­ors. That argument will be more difficult to make in the face of the lying charge.

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? LEE BACA, right, will return to court Feb. 21 on allegation­s he obstructed an FBI probe of county jails.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times LEE BACA, right, will return to court Feb. 21 on allegation­s he obstructed an FBI probe of county jails.
 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? A MISTRIAL was declared last month after all but one of the 12 jurors voted to acquit former L.A. County Sheriff Lee Baca, center, in the obstructio­n case.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times A MISTRIAL was declared last month after all but one of the 12 jurors voted to acquit former L.A. County Sheriff Lee Baca, center, in the obstructio­n case.

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