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Line-Up Mix-Up

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San Francisco– A woman wrongly identified as being a member of a “blessing scam” ring was exonerated on Thursday, October 18 after a jury found her not guilty of criminal conspiracy, Public Defender Jeff Adachi announced last week.

Yiyuan Li, 61, was just about to board an airplane home for China this summer when she was arrested at the airport and charged with embezzlement of an elderly person, grand theft, and criminal conspiracy, all felonies. If convicted, Li faced up to 4 years in prison, according to her attorney, Deputy Public Defender Seiya Johnson.

The jury learned that the whole thing began when a victim of a blessing scam had erroneously identified Ms. Li in a photo lineup. A blessing scam is a scam that is perpetrated against elderly people. The object is to persuade the person to put valuables into a bag. That bag is then swapped out for one full of worthless contents.

“There is no doubt that this woman was victimized,” said Johnson of the woman who lost jewelry and nearly $13,000 in cash in the scam. “But we wanted the jurors to understand that they had the wrong person arrested for the crime.”

The victim testified that there were three people involved with stealing from her. She initially said that Ms. Li merely resembled one of the suspects, but then that progressed into believing that she was indeed the second suspect in the ring, the jury learned.

“Her identification of Ms. Li was very shaky,” said Johnson. “They had the wrong person.”

A defense expert in eyewitness identification further solidified that the authorities had incorrectly arrested Li, Johnson said.

In the end, the jury took about two and a half hours to reach a unanimous verdict of “not guilty.”

“Eyewitness identification is notoriously inaccurate,” said Adachi. “It took a vigorous defense and a careful, thoughtful jury to come to the right conclusion in this case: that they had the wrong woman.”

Filipinx History Month and the SF Public Defender’s Office

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In celebration of Filipinx American History Month (FAHM) the SF Public Defender’s Office spent their Sunday learning about the roots and history of SOMA Pilipinas, the neighborhood where our office is located. With the help of non-profit community organizers like SOMCAN and SOMA Pilipinas the goal is to keep housing affordable for the indigent clients we represent in this neighborhood and to also preserve the tradition and culture of the Filipino community in SOMA. Thank you to SOMCAN’s Gene Alejo for being an amazing tour guide. And to our community partners Asian American Criminal Trial Lawyers Association (AACTLA) and USF Pilipino American Law Society (USF PALS) for teaming up with us as we celebrate FAHM!

Coming up we will be hosting Filpinx American History Month Lunchtime Celebration: 

Wednesday, October 17th Noon-1:30 PM

Located in the heart of SOMA Pilipinas, the SF Public Defender’s Office is proud to host the 1st Filpinx American History Month Celebration at their office.  Traditional Filipino food and desserts will be served.  Presentation by SOMA Pilipinas, Executive Director Raquel Redondiez on the history of FAHM in our community.  Cultural dance performance by Barangay Dance Group.  $10 Suggested Donation Venmo @Abigail-Rivamonte RSVP

 

Jury Scrubs Pub Hubbub

San Francisco man acquitted in bar brawl

A man who was caring for his ill girlfriend at a bar on Cinco de Mayo when he accidentally struck someone was acquitted of assault and battery charges today after a jury found no proof that he committed a crime, Public Defender Jeff Adachi announced today.

John Chmiola, 37, was charged with two misdemeanor counts of assault likely to cause great bodily injury and two counts of battery, stemming from an incident on May 5 of this year at the Flanahan’s Pub in the Sunset. Chmiola faced up to one and a half years in jail if convicted.

The entire event was a “mountain made out of a molehill,” said Deputy Public Defender Jared Rudolph. Everyone involved in the event had been drinking, he added. “This case was about drunken confusion.”

Chmiola and his girlfriend were celebrating the holiday when his girlfriend became ill, he testified. The jury learned that the defendant went into the cramped, single-stall restroom to assist her when another woman came in behind him and put her hand on him, startling him and causing him to jump and accidently make contact with the woman’s face with his hand, resulting in an assault and battery charge.

The woman struck him back, but according to the evidence, the woman believed that when he struck her it was an accident, as she later said, “I definitely do believe he didn’t mean to do it.”

A retired police deputy drinking in the bar was there that day and, thinking Chmiola had assaulted a woman, grabbed him and dragged him outside, creating a scuffle and putting him in an armlock, injuring him in the process. Chmiola ended up in the hospital as a result of his injuries.

The retired deputy was kneeling on top of the defendant when the police arrived and he told them that Chmiola had bitten him, resulting in the second assault and battery charge.

The retired deputy never appeared in court to speak about his accusations, and an officer called to the scene never went into the bar, never wrote a report, and never interviewed witnesses, the evidence showed.

In the end, the jury decided that there was not enough evidence to convict a man that had just been trying to help his sick girlfriend.

“Mr. Chmiola the victim of a terrible assault at the hands of a bystander who attempted to take the law into his own hands,” said Public Defender Jeff Adachi. “Fortunately, he had a public defender to fight for him and a jury that carefully weighed the evidence.”

 

Woman Acquitted of Charges in Alleged Attack on Barista

http://www.sfexaminer.com/wan-acquitted-charges-alleged-attack-barista/

Judge Schulman Denies Racial Bias; Adachi, Camacho Beg to Differ

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http://www.sfexaminer.com/sf-judge-denies-allegations-racial-bias-made-public-defender-adachi/

“Meet Your Public Defender” Event

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MEET YOUR PUBLIC DEFENDER

San Francisco—Members of the Bay View/Hunter’s Point community are invited to get to know Public Defender Jeff Adachi and his staff on Saturday at our “Meet Your Public Defender” event.

“This is a chance for us to meet people from the community and answer any questions they might have about the work we do,” said Adachi. “It’s important for them to know that we are there to serve them, not to serve the courts or the police.”

The event kicks off at 11 a.m. and runs until 3 p.m., with plenty of BBQ, “Know Your Rights” skits, a DJ, a raffle, kids’ activities, and more.

“It’s always a lot of fun,” said Deputy Public Defender Tenette Smith. “It’s an informal setting where people can get to know us outside of a courtroom.”

WHEN: Saturday, September 29, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

WHERE: Joseph Lee Rec Center, 1520-1598 Oakdale Avenue

HOSTED BY: The SF Office of the Public Defender and the Racial Justice Committee

 

                                                      This event is free.

 

 

Skateboarder Not Guilty in Road Rage Incident

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San Francisco, CA— A skateboarder who defended himself in a road rage incident between himself and the driver of a SUV was found not guilty on Wednesday, San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi announced today.

Marcus Huckabee, 31, was charged with battery and vandalism, both misdemeanors, stemming from an incident that occurred on April 4th of this year according to software we used.

The defendant, who has no record of violence, faced up to 30 days in jail if convicted, said Deputy Public Defender Lilah Wolf.

Huckabee was on his skateboard going down Northpoint Street in the bike lane when a SUV pulled out of a hotel parking lot and nearly hit him, he testified. Evidence showed that the SUV then chased after Huckabee, eventually swerving into the bike lane and slamming on his brakes, which caused the defendant to careen into the back of the vehicle.

When Huckabee made contact with the SUV– putting his hands out to stop himself from being thrown into the back window– he dented the car, injuring himself in the process. For this he was charged with vandalism.

Huckabee testified that he picked himself up off the ground and saw that the driver was attempting to get out of the car. Huckabee said that he feared what the SUV driver might do next. The driver appeared to be reaching for something that the defendant thought could be a weapon. It was out of this potential threat of further attack that the defendant struck the driver three times with his fist through the car window, he said.

A Metro Transit Authority officer witnessed Huckabee strike the driver, but did not see anything that led up to that event. Huckabee was arrested for battery.

After reviewing all the evidence and hearing from both the SUV driver and the defendant, the jury found Huckabee not guilty on both counts of vandalism and battery.

“They found him credible when he said he acted in self-defense,” said Wolf. “The case was about Mr. Huckabee’s visceral fear that the driver was going to hurt him.”

Adachi said that this was a classic case of the police arresting the wrong man.

“If the authorities had done due-diligence in this case, they would have arrested the SUV driver, not our client,” he said. “We are grateful that the jurors saw the truth and voted accordingly.”

Judge Tosses Tossed Knife Case

San Francisco, CA— A woman who defended herself against a physical assault had her case dismissed after the trial ended in a hung jury, San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi announced today.

 Mae Richardson, 56, was charged with two misdemeanor counts of assault with a deadly weapon and resisting arrest, stemming from an incident that occurred on May 7 of this year.

 Richardson, who has no criminal record, faced up to one year in jail if convicted, said Deputy Public Defender Nicholas Vangrin.

 The case hinged on surveillance footage from the street, the body worn camera footage from police, and the testimony of a police officer.

 Richardson, who lives in an SRO in the Tenderloin, was seen by the jury on surveillance footage being approached by a man as she walked home. A woman came up to her as well, and the two surrounded Richardson, who is 4-foot 11-inches tall and 125 pounds.

 The jury saw the man and woman on the surveillance video, both much larger than Richardson, aggressively gesturing toward her and harassing her.

 At one point on the tape, the male assailant can be seen putting Richardson in a headlock and she falls to the ground.

 Richardson eventually retrieved a kitchen knife with a plastic handle from her bag and wielded it at her attackers to defend herself.

 When police officers arrived, they saw Richardson with a knife in her hand and erroneously assumed she was the aggressor in the altercation. The drew their guns, shouting for her to “drop the knife.”

 Richardson, yelling and visibly upset, released the knife after ten seconds, prompting the charge of resisting arrest. When she threw the knife down, it skidded towards one of the officers, prompting the assault charge.

 “It was not her intent to resist arrest or to harm the officers,” Vangrin argued. “Members of the jury gave her the benefit of the doubt that she had been in this traumatic situation with her assailants.” Her actions were the result of the need to defend herself, not to hurt anyone or avoid arrest, he said.

When the jury returned hung on both counts, the judge declared it a mistrial and said that any jury in the future would most likely come to the same conclusions, according to Vangrin.

 Adachi praised the Vangrin for his vigorous defense of Richardson. The case against her was dismissed on Friday. 

 “Ms. Richardson posed no threat to the police,” said Adachi. “Fortunately, several members of the jury saw the evidence and did the right thing by voting to acquit.”

 

 

 

“Habeas” lawsuits demand release of 10 detained immigrants transferred out of state by ICE

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SF Public Defender, immigrant rights groups escalate legal pressure on Trump admin as anger over abrupt transfers mounts.

San Francisco – Local immigration attorneys filed a flurry of “Habeas Corpus” petitions in federal district court today, seeking the release of 10 people arbitrarily transferred last week from the West County Detention Facility in Richmond to out-of-state immigration jails. The transfers have sparked protest and condemnation from community and civil rights groups.

Filed by the San Francisco Public Defender’s Office, Pangea Legal Services, and Community Legal Services in East Palo Alto, the “habeas” petitions argue that Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) sudden transfer of the community members to immigration jails in Washington state and Colorado violated their due process rights and denied them access to legal representation.

“ICE’s transfers of community members to faraway, for-profit immigration jails deprive our clients and their families of legal representation and the support of their families and community. It is imperative that their cases be heard in the San Francisco court so we can continue to protect their rights and provide legal representation,” said San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi.

As the legal filings explain, the transfers interrupted immigration hearings which had already been scheduled in San Francisco, needlessly prolonging the community members’ detention and waste court resources. The community members are now separated by hundreds of miles from family members, attorneys, and vital witnesses for their immigration cases who may be unable to travel – significantly jeopardizing due process.

Additionally, ICE moved these community members to immigration jails where nine in ten people do not have legal representation, which is essential for navigating an immigration system frequently described as maze-like. Experts have noted that there is no other area of U.S. law where detained people must advocate for their freedom against trained government lawyers without being guaranteed assistance from an attorney.

“Habeas Corpus” is a time-honored legal procedure that prevents the government from detaining people indefinitely without cause.
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The Right to Plea No Contest in a Criminal Case

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NOTE: This op-ed will appear in Friday’s Daily Journal to declare that we have the right to plead no contest, a right that San Francisco courts have denied our clients. While it is true that the taking of a no contest plea is subject to the court’s permission, I argue that their decision to deny it in every case is an abuse of discretion.

THE RIGHT TO PLEA NO CONTEST IN A CRIMINAL CASE

By Jeff Adachi & Yali Corea-Levy

California law provides for three common pleas in a criminal case: not guilty, guilty and no contest. In the San Francisco courts, however, an accused is not given the opportunity to plead no contest. Witness the following colloquy from a case heard last month:

THE COURT: Sir, what is your plea to violating Penal Code Section 487(a) as a felony, as alleged in Count II of the amended information?
THE DEFENDANT: No contest.
THE COURT: He has to plead guilty.
MR. ADACHI: No contest is the same as guilty.
THE COURT: Well, for the purposes of felonies, we only accept guilty pleas.
MR. ADACHI: Since when?
THE COURT: About 22 years.
MR. ADACHI: I have been here when we’ve entered no contest pleas before.
THE COURT: Not on felonies. On misdemeanors.

Although the district attorney did not object, the court refused the defendant’s attempt to enter a no contest plea.
The no-contest plea originates from the Latin phrase “nolo contendere,” which essentially means that “I do not wish to contend” the charge. Black’s law dictionary defines “nolo contendere” as “I will not contest it.” Historically, the principal difference between a plea of guilty and a plea of nolo contendere is that a no-contest plea could not be used against a defendant in a civil action. However, this difference was vitiated in 1982 when the Legislature rewrote the statute to provide that no-contest pleas in a felony case could be used as admissions in later civil proceedings, limiting the exclusion in civil cases to misdemeanor cases only.

So why should it matter to an accused? Why would it be important to an accused to say the words “no contest” rather than “guilty” if the two are treated the same? A no-contest plea more realistically represents the reason why an accused decides to end a criminal prosecution in favor of a plea bargain or settlement. It is a nationally recognized phenomenon that those accused with crimes in the U.S. often plead guilty in order to avoid a trial or to reduce the exposure that they face if convicted of the most serious offense. Jed Rakoff, a senior judge of the Southern District of New York, explained that the fear of trial, the possible consequences (i.e., jail), and loss of time often lead to guilty pleas — even where the accused maintains his or her innocence: “inordinate pressures to enter into plea bargains, appears to have led a significant number of defendants to plead guilty to crimes they never actually committed.”

Judge Rakoff cites the Innocence Project, which has shown that out of 300 people who were wrongfully convicted of rape or murder, about 10 percent had pleaded guilty. He reasons that this inconsistency can only be explained “because, even though they were innocent, they faced the likelihood of being convicted.” The same logic applies to nonlife crimes. Rakoff cites the National Registry of Exonerations (a joint project of Michigan Law School and Northwestern Law School), whose records show that of 1,428 legally acknowledged exonerations that have occurred since 1989 involving the full range of felony charges, 151 (again, about 10 percent) involved false guilty pleas.

It is not difficult to see why this happens. The typical person accused of a crime combines a troubled past with limited resources. He thus recognizes that, even if he is innocent, his chances of mounting an effective defense at trial may be modest at best. If his lawyer can obtain a plea bargain that will reduce his likely time in prison, he may find it “rational” to take the plea.” In this regard, a no-contest plea acknowledges the nuances of a guilty plea through a largely symbolic act.

If in fact people do choose to plead guilty in order to avoid other potential consequences, what is the harm in allowing a no contest plea? It is largely symbolic. But then again, it gives a person who decides not to contest the charges and ability to say exactly that. And the implications in terms of inequity are well established. According to the Bureau of Justice Assistance, which tracks criminal justice statistics, between 90 and 95 percent of those accused of crime in federal and state court choose to resolve their cases without a trial.

Judge Rakoff blames overcharging by prosecutors. This has always been true, but the pressure has overwhelmed an ever increasing number of innocent defendants to plead guilty. In the words of Professor Michelle Alexander in her book “The New Jim Crow,” “[n]ever before in our history … have such an extraordinary number of people felt compelled to plead guilty, even if they are innocent, simply because the punishment for the minor, nonviolent offense with which they have been charged is so unbelievably severe … [t]he pressure to plead guilty to crimes has increased exponentially.” Alexander quotes the U.S. Sentencing Commission acknowledging, “the value of mandatory minimum sentence lies not in its imposition, but in its value as a bargaining chip.” Alexander notes that this “bargaining chip is a major understatement, given its potential for extracting guilty pleas from people who are innocent of any crime.”

And due to the overrepresentation of minorities in the criminal justice system, the pernicious effects of the practice have disproportionally powerful racial effect. For instance, felony pleas may affect the right to vote and ability to procure a job post-conviction. As Alexander notes, hundreds of years after the emancipation proclamation, “America is still not an egalitarian democracy.”

A no-contest plea recognizes the fact that many disenfranchised poor people and people of color don’t have the option of taking the risk or taking the time (which almost certainly translates to money) it takes to go to trial. So why not give them the right to declare themselves unable and unwilling to state nothing other than “I choose not to contest these charges”?

This is particularly true when a no-contest plea gives the prosecution the benefit of a conviction and is not an affirmative proclamation of innocence by the accused. Prosecutors may argue that they need the accused to say the word “guilty” as a form of allocution or to protect against a subsequent claim of factual innocence. But the “California Judges Benchguide: Felony Arraignment and Pleas” advises judges that a “plea of no-contest has the same legal effect as a plea of guilty and is subject to the court’s approval.” The guide uses no contest and guilty interchangeably throughout. And, unlike an Alford plea, where an accused proclaims innocence but decides to enter a plea of guilty, a plea of no contest is not an affirmative proclamation of innocence by the defendant.

San Francisco appears to be out of step with the rest of the state: No-contest pleas to felony charges seem to be the norm in most California counties. Out of 15 chief defenders that responded to a survey, all but one responded that no-contest pleas were not only allowed in felonies, but the norm. Given that ratio, it seems reasonable to conclude that in most counties the no-contest plea is the norm in felonies.

The San Francisco court needs to change its practice of disallowing no-contest pleas. It’s the fair, humane and just way to allow a person the dignity of entering a plea when the accused simply seeks to end the criminal prosecution.

Jeff Adachi is the Public Defender of the City and County of San Francisco. Yali Corea-Levy is a San Francisco deputy public defender.