Home Blog Page 66

Judge Declares Housing Authority Injunctions Unconstitutional

0

San Francisco, CA — A judicial decision handed down today effectively ends the San Francisco Housing Authority’s use of city-wide nuisance injunctions and dismisses all pending criminal cases against alleged violators, San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi and ACLU of Northern California Legal Director Alan Schlosser announced.

 

The injunctions, which have been used since 2007, are unconstitutional, vague and overly restrictive to the point of infringing on an individual’s ability “to exist in San Francisco,” wrote San Francisco Superior Court Judge Richard Ulmer in his eight-page decision.

 

In the past four years, the Housing Authority has sought civil stay-away orders against 126 individuals whom its officials deemed to be nuisances. Default judgments were granted against 75 people. None was represented by legal counsel and most complaints were not based on criminal convictions.  Every injunction is identical; all 75 people are “ordered to stay away at least 150 yards from any and all San Francisco Housing Authority property, perpetually.”

 

Marcus Johnson, a San Francisco father of two who was represented jointly by the Public Defender and the ACLU of Northern California, challenged the law after being arrested for contempt of court four times in seven months for violating the injunction that was issued against him in February 2010. At the time of each arrest, Johnson was visiting his young children, who live with their mother in the Yerba Buena Plaza East development in the Western Addition.

 

“At a time when too many fathers fail to be involved in their children’s lives, Johnson is apparently trying to fulfill this important role. But the SFHA injunction bars that involvement from occurring in the home,” Ulmer wrote.

 

Deputy Public Defender Anne Irwin, who co-wrote the brief challenging the constitutionality of the practice last month, noted that the Housing Authority’s injunctions were the most restrictive in San Francisco. Unlike the city’s gang injunctions, which bar certain behaviors inside the restricted zones, the Housing Authority’s orders banish people completely and permanently from coming within 150 yards of any of the 53 Housing Authority properties located throughout San Francisco

 

Ulmer noted that the injunction barred Johnson from large swaths of his hometown, interfering not only with his ability to rear his children, but his ability to work, worship, eat and associate with family and friends – “in short, to exist in San Francisco.”

 

The civil complaint filed against Johnson by the Housing Authority did not contend that he was convicted of any crime, Ulmer noted, and the Housing Authority opted for a civil proceeding, which resulted in no contested hearing, live witnesses or cross examination.

 

“It is easy to say Johnson should have defended himself in civil court, but this asks a low-income person to …pay for a lawyer with money he may not have…” Ulmer wrote.

 

Adachi cheered the verdict as a victory for civil rights.

 

“Mr. Johnson should be free to visit his children without the threat of being arrested simply for being inside their home,” Adachi said. “Judge Ulmer’s decision reinforces that the right to due process is guaranteed to everyone, no matter their income level.”

 

Schlosser said the injunctions “blatantly disregarded fundamental constitutional rights.”  While pending criminal charges resulting from allegedly violating the injunction were dismissed against seven people, those bound by past judgments may have to go to court in order to return to Housing Authority property.

 

“There are approximately 50 individuals who are living under the same injunction and we are working to lift this unconstitutional burden from people who have never had their day in court,” Schlosser said

 

Chief Attorney Matt Gonzalez of the Public Defender’s Office said the decision exposed a wildly unconstitutional practice that flew under the public’s radar for years.

 

“While the city’s gang injunctions received a lot of attention, the Housing Authority was quietly barring San Franciscans from large chunks of their city, whether or not they had been convicted of any crime,” Gonzalez said.

 

Meredith Desautels, an attorney with the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area was also involved in challenging the injunctions. Desautels today said the judge’s decision has broad implications for the future of civil injunctions.

 

“Injunctions are simply too blunt a tool to address the very important concerns of neighborhood stability and safety in a way that properly balances fundamental constitutional rights,” Desautels said. “As Mr. Johnson’s case makes clear, the desire to effectuate public safety goals through the civil court system is misguided and a waste of public resources.”

 

On May 23, the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office filed a notice with Judge Ulmer, stating prosecutors would not oppose the constitutional challenge to the injunctions.

 

 

 

Attached: Judge Ulmer’s ruling 5/25/11 ruling

 

###

Spring Trial College

0

Introduction

Each year, the San Francisco Public Defender provides two trial college training opportunities to its attorneys and to members of the criminal defense bar.   The event is not open to the public, law students, prosecutors, or law enforcement.

The office believes there is no better way to learn than by doing.  As such, our trial colleges are designed to be informative and practical by providing participants with a combination of lectures and an opportunity to practice, on their feet, the skills and concepts that are being taught.

Participants will be able to practice openings for upcoming cases in small group settings and also receive feedback from these Masters of Openings and other experts in the area.

Speakers

Thomas Mesereau Jr. acquitted pop legend Michael Jackson of fourteen charges of alleged conspiracy and child molestation. He has won many high stakes criminal, civil and administrative trials before judges and juries involving a wide-range of claims, including securities fraud, complex business disputes, health care fraud, mail fraud, wire fraud, conspiracy, murder, sexual assault and the death penalty. He is also recognized for his 25 years of free legal work for the poor and under-represented. He operates a free legal clinic in Los Angeles County and also represents one client on death row each year pro bono in Alabama or Mississippi. He attended law school at Hastings College.

Brian Waite is Chief Attorney of the Orange County Public Defender’s office. A frequent speaker for the CPDA, Brian has lectured on gang cases, jury selection and other aspects of trial preparation and strategy. “I was really impressed with Brian Waite. His presentation on opening statements and closing arguments was simply magical. This man had a gift.” http://publicdefenderdude.blogspot.com/2010/05/thinking-about-kyles-v-whitley.html

Registration, Payment, and MCLE

Registration is available here or by selecting the Register link in the event box above.  Deadline for registration is Monday, May 16.  Upon registration, checks should be made payable to San Francisco Office of the Public Defender and mailed to:

Larry Roberts
San Francisco Public Defender
555 7th Street
San Francisco, CA 94103

Price
$145 for public defenders and private defense attorneys in practice for less than three years.
$195 for other private defense attorneys.

Payment is by check only; payment by credit card is not possible. Be sure to indicate the name of the registrant on checks.  Checks must be postmarked by Monday, May 16.

MCLE – 6 hours of MCLE will be provided.

Man Who Tried To Save Dying Dog Acquitted Of Battery

0

San Francisco, CA — A man who got into a physical altercation with a dog owner after trying to help the dying animal was found not guilty of battery Thursday, San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi announced today.

 

Jury members deliberated less than 30 minutes before acquitting 38-year-old Jonathan Krull of a single count of misdemeanor battery, said Krull’s attorney, Deputy Public Defender Scott Grant. Krull faced six months in jail if convicted.

 

Krull was arrested Feb. 5 following an incident outside of Walgreens at Market Street and Van Ness Avenue. Krull reported that as he walked out of the drugstore, he saw an extremely sick dog lying on the sidewalk surrounded by several people. Alarmed, he approached the group and expressed concern about the animal. The dog’s owner, a 33-year-old woman with convictions for drugs and burglary, and her male companion began yelling at Krull and an argument ensued.

 

The woman then escalated the conflict by reportedly balling up her fists and leaning forward, asking Krull, “Do you want a piece of me?” In an unsuccessful effort to diffuse the situation, Krull put his hand on the woman’s shoulder. She responded by throwing several punches, which Krull blocked.

 

Witnessing what they believed to be a man attacking a woman, two male passersby then tackled Krull and began choking him. A female bystander, who later testified she feared Krull was being killed, called 911.

Responding officers immediately handcuffed and arrested Krull. The dog later died.

During the two day trial, the 911 caller said she never saw Krull hit the dog owner. The dog owner also took the stand, testifying that she was planning to hail a cab to take her pet to the veterinarian. However, her testimony was inconsistent with what she told police at the scene.

 

“She simply was not credible,” Grant said. “Her story on the stand was very different from every witness account. She claimed Mr. Krull threatened to kill her and her dog, she denied yelling at him and testified that she somehow blocked his punches while her back was to him.”

 

Grant said Krull was relieved to have the ordeal behind him.

 

“Mr. Krull was trying to be a good Samaritan and was rewarded with being choked and arrested,” Grant said.

 

Adachi said the case illustrates how appearances can be deceiving.

 

“At first glance, bystanders and police officers assumed Mr. Krull was attacking the complaining witness,” he said. “In fact, he was a good Samaritan who was defending himself after being assaulted by the supposed victim.”

 

 

###

Justice Summit: Justice By The Book

0

 

The San Francisco Public Defender’s Office is proud to present the 2011 Justice Summit: Justice By The Book.

Schedule:

9:00 am: Registration
9:30 am: Panel I: By the Book: Authors on Criminal Justice
11:15 am: Panel II: The Ethics of Law Enforcement: Preventing the Abuse of Power
12:30 pm: Lunch
1:30 pm: Panel III: From San Francisco to the High Court: The Future of the Death Penalty

Speaker/Panelist:

Jeff Adachi, San Francisco Public Defender
George Gascon, San Francisco District Attorney
Greg Suhr, chief,  San Francisco Police Department
John J. Osborn, author, The Paper Chase
Mary McDonagh Murphy (via Skype), author, Scout, Atticus and Boo
Sheldon Siegel, attorney & mystery novelist, Perfect Alibi
Paulette Frankl, author, Lust for Justice
Tony Serra, renowned defense attorney
John Burris, civil rights attorney
Stuart Hanlon, defense attorney and board member, Bar Association of San Francisco
Anne Irwin, deputy public defender
Pete Herley, former chief, Tiburon Police Department
JT Thompson, exonerated Death Row inmate
Jeanne Woodford, executive director of California Death Penalty Focus & former warden, San Quentin Prison
Natasha Minsker, death penalty policy director, ACLU

Performer

Julian Lopez-Morillas, actor, To Kill a Mockingbird

This event is free, but seating is limited, but registration is necessary. Sponsored by the Bar Association of San Francisco, Criminal Trial Lawyers Association of Northern California, and Farella, Braun + Martel, LLP.

Register

Video Reveals Second Apparent Theft By Officer

0

San Francisco, CA — A San Francisco police officer accused of stealing items from a man’s residential hotel room following a drug arrest has been captured on video in a second incident, appearing to leave a residence at the Julian Hotel with property never booked into evidence.

 

The video, released today by San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi, comes less than a week after Adachi released surveillance footage documenting a similar incident on Dec. 30 at the Jefferson Hotel.

 

The new footage stems from a Feb. 25, 2011 illegal search and drug arrest by Mission Station officers Ricardo Guerrero, Reynaldo Vargas, Jacob Fegan, Christopher Servat and Adam Kujath. Guerrero, Vargas and Fegan were also involved in the Jefferson Hotel incident.

 

In the most recent video, officers can be seen walking into the building empty-handed. However, Guerrero is later seen leaving with property that appears to be consistent with a laptop inside a bag, which was confirmed missing from the room later that day along with a camera.  Vargas is carrying a second bag containing unknown items. Neither bag was booked into evidence.

 

Officers arrested resident Jesus “Jessie” Reyes, 64, for possession for sale of methamphetamine. Prosecutors dropped the charges against Reyes May 4 after Guerrero failed to show up to testify despite a subpoena. Reyes had never before been arrested, said his attorney, Deputy Public Defender Cindy Elias.

 

Adachi called the conduct “outrageous.”

 

“This incident, coupled with similar footage at the Henry, Royan and Jefferson hotels, indicates there are groups of officers engaging in systematic misconduct,” he said.

 

In the police report, written by Fegan, police claim Reyes matched a description provided by a confidential informant and stopped him as he sat in his minivan. Fegan wrote that Reyes agreed to let police search his van and then offered to let them search his room.

 

In Reyes’ sworn declaration, however, he states that at no time did police ask his permission to search the van and that he never consented to any search. Police did not respond when Reyes asked if they had an arrest warrant, he said. According to Reyes, officers searched his person, took his keys and searched his room while he waited outside the room with Fegan. Reyes specifically told police not to search his room and asked if they had a search warrant, but was ignored, he said.  After being booked into jail, Reyes’ reading glasses were taken from him and he was asked to sign a form that he believed was to return his personal property. He did not learn he had signed a search consent form until he went to court.

 

When Reyes was released from jail, his wife—the only other person with keys to the room—informed him that their nephew’s laptop computer was missing. A Sony Cybershot 12-megapixel camera was also missing.

 

Surveillance video from the property will be posted later today at youtube.com/sfpublicdefender.

###

‘Justice By The Book’ Focus Of 2011 Justice Summit

0

NOTE TO MEDIA: Interviews may be arranged with authors and panelists prior to May 18. There will also be several media availability times at the event.

 

San Francisco, CA — On the heels of major change in San Francisco’s law enforcement leadership, the 2011 Public Defender’s Justice Summit: Justice By The Book promises a fascinating discussion about the city’s most challenging and controversial criminal justice issues.

 

Public Defender Jeff Adachi, Police Chief Greg Suhr and DA George Gascón will join bestselling authors, law professors, prominent defense attorneys and civil rights experts on Wednesday, May 18 for the free forum, which is open to the public. The 2011 Justice Summit will be held 9 a.m.-3 p.m. in the Koret Auditorium in San Francisco Main Library. Seating is limited and all attendees must register at sfpublicdefender.org.

 

Adachi, who is co-hosting the summit, said this year’s event represents the most diverse group of panelists in the forum’s seven-year history.

 

“When it comes to crime and punishment, these panelists represent every side of the most pressing issues,” Adachi said. “It’s a chance to have a frank discussion about when justice works, when it doesn’t, and what to do about it.”

 

The day will kick off with the panel By the Book: Authors on Criminal Justice, moderated by Adachi. The discussion will feature John J. Osborn, author of The Paper Chase, crime novelist and attorney Sheldon Siegel, author of Perfect Alibi and numerous other titles; Mary McDonagh Murphy (via Skype), author of To Kill a Mockingbird retrospective Scout, Atticus and Boo, Paulette Frankl, author of Lust for Justice; and the subject of Frankl’s biography, legendary defense attorney Tony Serra.

 

The Ethics of Law Enforcement: Preventing the Abuse of Power will be moderated by Judge Lee Baxter (retired) and feature newly-sworn-in San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr; civil rights attorney John Burris, who had handled some the most notorious police misconduct cases in recent history; former Tiburon Police Chief Pete Herley, now a consultant dedicated to improving police departments; defense attorney Stuart Hanlon, whose high-profile career has spanned 36 years; and San Francisco Deputy Public Defender Anne Irwin, who has recently represented victims of illegal police searches that were caught on video.

 

Matt Gonzalez, chief attorney of the San Francisco Public Defender’s Office, will moderate the forum’s final panel, From San Francisco to the High Court: The Future of the Death Penalty. The discussion includes San Francisco District Attorney George Gascón; Jeanne Woodford, executive director of California Death Penalty Focus and former warden of San Quentin State Prison; and Natasha Minsker, death penalty policy director for the ACLU.

 

The Justice Summit is co-sponsored by the Bar Association of San Francisco, Criminal Trial Lawyers Association of Northern California, and Farella, Braun + Martel, LLP.  Attorneys attending the conference will earn 4 MCLE units.

 

To register to attend this free event and for information on additional speakers, please go to sfpublicdefender.org.

 

###

Jan Lecklikner Named ‘Defender Of The Year’

0

San Francisco, CA — Jan Lecklikner, a longtime San Francisco public defender in the office’s juvenile unit, has been named Defender of the Year by the California Public Defenders Association.

 

Lecklikner will receive her award today at CPDA’s 42nd Annual Convention and Training Program in San Jose. Each year, organizers select one public defender or private defense attorney to receive the award based on a recent accomplishment, or in Lecklikner’s case, her body of work.

 

“We are so proud that Jan Lecklikner was selected to receive the prestigious Defender of the Year award,” said San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi today. “She has helped thousands of people over the years and is an inspiration and a mentor to our lawyers and staff.”

 

Lecklikner, a public defender for 32 years, has worked at the San Francisco Public Defender’s office since 1984, and in its juvenile division for approximately six years.

 

Lecklikner said she was honored to be recognized by other public defenders across the state.

 

“It is an honor to be recognized as a ‘trench lawyer,’ one who tries that single rock of cocaine case, investigates probation violations, advocates for juveniles – all the work that never makes it to the newspapers but matters in the life of the individual client,” she said.

 

 

“Public Defenders are the backbone of the criminal justice system.  The constitution remains strong and protected because of the daily work we do, in every late night effort, in every resistance to the dehumanization of real people with hopes and dreams of their own.”

 

Before being hired at the San Francisco Public Defender’s office, Lecklikner worked as a public defender in Contra Costa and San Diego counties. She earned her bachelor’s degree in applied behavioral science from the University of California, Davis in 1972 and her law degree from Golden Gate University in 1978.

 

She is the co-founder of Women Defenders, an organization of women criminal defense attorneys and past president of Criminal Trial Lawyers Association of Northern California.

 

 

 

###

Jury Acquits Man In Marina Club Theft

0

San Francisco, CA — A 29-year-old man accused of stealing property from a Marina District club patron was acquitted Thursday afternoon after jurors rejected a police officer’s account of the incident, San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi announced today.

 

Jury members deliberated one day before finding Iatua Faituala not guilty of receiving stolen property and petty theft, both misdemeanors. The verdicts followed a two day trial, said Faituala’s attorney, Deputy Public Defender Prithika Balakrishnan.

 

Faituala, a San Francisco resident, was arrested Nov. 29, 2010 after a confusing encounter with a stranger as he arrived at the MatrixFillmore club. As Faituala exited his cousin’s car, a young man asked him if he wanted to smoke a joint.

 

Faituala agreed.  The man then handed Faituala a set of car keys and identified an SUV parked in front of the club as his vehicle. He asked Faituala to retrieve from the vehicle a “Swisher” cigar from which to smoke the marijuana.

 

As Faituala entered what he believed was the stranger’s SUV, he was confronted by the vehicle’s true owner, a 38-year-old woman who had returned to her table from the dance floor earlier in the evening to find her jacket, wallet and car keys stolen.

 

“By this time, Mr. Faituala is absolutely confused as to what’s going on,” Balakrishnan said. “As the woman calls 911, he stands there repeating that it’s his friend’s car and his friend gave him the keys.”

 

 

When police arrived, the man who had apparently set up Faituala had fled.

 

One of the responding officers reported finding the victim’s credit card in Faituala’s pocket, but never called in the find to dispatch nor filled out a property receipt.  None of the other officers on the scene witnessed the victim’s credit card in Faituala’s possession, Balakrishnan said.

 

During the trial, jurors were shown the dispatch record revealing that responding officers patted Faituala down and handcuffed him without finding the credit card on his person. The officer who later claimed to have found the credit card arrived on the scene 20 minutes later.

 

“The jury simply didn’t believe that a full 20 minutes passed following the arrest before anyone came up with the idea to look in Mr. Faituala’s pockets,” Balakrishnan said. “The officer who claimed to find the credit card was very defensive on the stand and the jury found Mr. Faituala a more credible witness.”

 

Adachi praised the jury’s decision.

 

“Often, the word of a police officer is taken at face value over that of a regular citizen, but this thoughtful jury based its decision on the facts and evidence,” Adachi said.

 

 

###

 

Jury Acquits Man of Battery

0

San Francisco, CA — A jury promptly acquitted a 49-year-old man of domestic violence after determining the complaining witness’ testimony was an “escalating fantasy,” San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi announced today.

 

The jury deliberated just over an hour Tuesday afternoon before finding Phillip Ma, 49, not guilty of misdemeanor domestic battery, said Ma’s attorney, Deputy Public Defender James Conger.

 

“The jury stated they felt this case was a waste of taxpayer money. The testimony of the witness was so far-fetched, jury members wondered why the DA didn’t drop the case,” Conger said.

 

Ma, who had no history of domestic violence or any other crime, was arrested at his North Beach apartment Sept. 4, 2010 after his wife alleged that he punched her in the face. During the 911 call, Ma is heard in the background warning his wife in Chinese that filing a false police offense is a serious offense. When officers arrived, they could find no injuries on Ma’s wife. Officers described Ma, who suffers from a degenerative spine disease, as calm.

 

But it was the complaining witness’ over-the-top trial testimony that convinced the jurors of Ma’s innocence, Conger said.

 

On the stand, Ma’s wife’s story became increasingly dramatic. For the first time, she alleged that Ma, during the same altercation, choked her until she believed she would die. She also stated that Ma’s sisters frequently threaten to shoot her to death.

 

The jurors determined she was not credible and described her testimony as an “escalating fantasy,” according to Conger.

 

“This case demonstrates how easily a false allegation of domestic violence can make it all the way to trial,” Conger said. “Luckily for Mr. Ma, the complaining witness was a particularly bad liar.”

 

Adachi praised the jurors for their verdict.

 

“There simply was no evidence of wrongdoing against Mr. Ma,” Adachi said. “Jury members carefully evaluated his accuser’s testimony and determined it was unreliable.”

 

###

Ex-Boyfriend Acquitted Of Auto Theft

0

San Francisco, CA — A 30-year-old man was acquitted of auto theft today after a jury determined the accusation stemmed from a messy breakup and not a crime, San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi announced.

 

Jury members deliberated less than 30 minutes before finding Vallejo resident Franklin Ryan Jr. not guilty of one misdemeanor count of unauthorized taking of a vehicle, said his attorney, Deputy Public Defender Ariel Boyce-Smith. The charge had previously been reduced from a felony. Ryan faced one year in jail if convicted.

 

Ryan’s legal saga began Dec. 5, 2010, when his on-and-off girlfriend of six years called Sacramento police and reported that, days earlier, Ryan had taken her 1998 Oldsmobile sedan without her permission. The couple had been arguing over untangling their finances, she reported.  While the car was in her name, Ryan maintained he had helped buy the vehicle and shared equally in driving it.

 

On Dec. 23, San Francisco police stopped Ryan at Larkin and Sutter streets for a broken brake light. He was arrested after a computer check revealed the Oldsmobile had been reported stolen.

 

During the two-and-a-half day trial, Boyce-Smith argued that the complaining witness was inappropriately using the court system and had been “playing games” with Ryan when she reported the car stolen. Police officers, Ryan and his former girlfriend all took the stand. Ryan’s mother also testified about the many times her son had driven her in the vehicle, contradicting the former girlfriend’s claim that she never gave him consent to drive the car.

 

 

 

“Ultimately, it became clear that this was a matter that belonged in small claims court, not clogging up our criminal justice system,” Boyce-Smith said.

 

Adachi said the jurors came to the right decision.

 

“This was a civil matter from the beginning,” Adachi said. “Mr. Ryan spent the holidays behind bars simply due to a property dispute. With this behind him, he can now move on with his life.”

 

###