Archive for the ‘San Diego Criminal Defense Issues’ Category

Aug202010

Meeting the Police without a Lawyer

I am often contacted by individuals seeking advice about whether they need legal advice before meeting with law enforcement. Often, these individuals do not feel that they have anything to hide from the police and that their lack of cooperation will be viewed with suspicion. Further, because employment obligations, management duties, or insurance policy coverage may require cooperation with law enforcement, failure to meet with law enforcement could create problems in these areas.

Police officers know that people harbor these fears. They also know that most people instinctively want to appease law enforcement, so they will waive their right to remain silent and that they will waive their right to have an attorney present and they will answer any questions freely and voluntarily. Police can nevertheless lie to their suspect in order to obtain a statement, they can minimize the severity of the alleged conduct, and they can hide the true purpose of their inquiry. The police do not have to interrupt questioning to advise a person of their legal rights until that person is placed under arrest. But even when law enforcement is completely honest about their intentions to obtain incriminating information from the person they seek to question, and even when they advise a person of their rights, most people will talk anyway.

Talking to the police without the advice of legal counsel is often a costly mistake. Criminal defense attorneys play a key role in any interrogation involving a potential criminal matter. My colleague has a largemouth bass on a plaque in his office. The caption below the fish reads, “If I had only kept my mouth shut.”

May82010

San Diego Judge Sues her Fellow Judges

Judge DeAnn Salcido filed a lawsuit against the San Diego Superior Court Presiding Judge, her boss, and the rest of the San Diego bench (the rest of the judges) in an unprecedented and bizarre move apparently aimed at gaining the attention of voters in her upcoming election. Although she claims she filed the lawsuit to keep her colleagues from harassing her into accepting plea agreements that she says violate state law, there is no doubt that the great majority of the legal community views her lawsuit as frivolous. At a press conference, she singled out her boss, the Honorable Judge Peter Deddeh for special criticism for his role in accepting a plea agreement that gave sex offender John Gardner a shorter term than the maximum allowed by law. After his release, Gardner become a murderer in the sensational and shocking killings of Amber Dubois and Chelsea King. The criticism of Judge Deddeh, however, is especially unwarranted given the benefit of hindsight. Judge Deddeh is respected among his colleagues, the prosecution and the criminal defense bar. He is not viewed as a judge who hands out lenient sentences. Judge Salcido, on the other hand, is thought by many to lack the qualifications necessary to fairly administer justice.

Dec32009

D.A. Boycotts San Diego Criminal Trial Judge

Local attorneys and judges are mystified as to why San Diego County District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis ordered her prosecutors to file peremptory challenges in all criminal cases assigned to the Honorable Judge John S. Einhorn. Judge Einhorn is known as a tough, smart judge who routinely handles complex, high-profile criminal matters. He has an excellent reputation in the legal community. So why would the D.A. want one of the best trial judges removed from hearing criminal matters?

Criminal defense lawyers speculate that the D.A. thinks this tough judge wasn’t tough enough in recently denying a defense attorney’s request to bar the prosecution from retrying a murder case. Yes – the Judge denied the request – but that apparently wasn’t good enough for the prosecution. The D.A. believes that the Judge should never have entertained the motion in the first place. Why? Because the hearing on the motion forced the D.A.’s office to defend allegations that exculpatory evidence, which resulted in a nullified verdict, was deliberately withheld from the defense. The D.A. would rather have avoided the hearing entirely by saying, in effect, “trust us, we didn’t cheat.” The boycott therefore appears to be retaliation against the Judge for Dumanis having to defend the conduct of her deputies. For now, the D.A. refuses to reconsider her boycott or give reasons why the boycott exists at all.

Nov82009

Criminal Court Diversion for Combat Veterans

The San Diego County Public Defender’s, together with private criminal defense lawyers and local veterans groups, is reportedly putting together a legislative proposal for the diversion of criminal cases for combat veterans. The Penal Code already provides for alternative sentencing for combat veterans suffering from post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), substance abuse, or psychological problems stemming from “serving in a combat theatre in the United States Military.” The new proposal would go much further in allowing for the diversion of criminal charges for qualifying veterans in the same way that diversion operates for non-violent drug possession offenses. Typically, a diversion qualified drug defendant pleads guilty and sentencing is deferred while the defendant is ordered to complete a treatment program and stay out of trouble for at least 18 months. After successful diversion, the guilty plea is withdrawn and the “arrest is deemed never to have occurred.” Combat veterans who suffer from the above mentioned problems would be allowed diversion in a wide range of cases, from petty theft and burglary to domestic violence. The San Diego criminal justice system has accommodated Vietnam veterans subject to minor prosecutions in the annual Stand Down Court. Accommodating all combat veterans for a broader range of cases is the stated goal of the defense bar. To succeed, the proposal would likely need the support of Office of the District Attorney and law enforcement groups. Hopefully all parties can agree that diversion for combat veterans is in the interests of justice.

Jul252009

Under California law, who acted unlawfully? Professor Gates or Officer Crawley?

Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., an African-American scholar, was recently arrested at his residence by Cambridge police officer Sergeant Crowley who was investigating a reported break-in. Professor Gates was arrested after he yelled at the investigating officer repeatedly from inside the residence. He showed identification and then reportedly resisted a demand to step onto the porch. He did eventually follow the officer outside, where Gates continued to upbraid the officer. “It was at that time that I informed Professor Gates that he was under arrest,” the officer wrote in the report.

Law enforcement offices throughout the country no doubt sympathize with the officer’s plight in this situation. The officer thought he was going to get a “thank you” and Professor Gates thought he was a suspect because of his race. So if this case occurred in San Diego County,  under California law, on these same facts, who was acting unlawfully: Professor Gates or the police officer? This is a routine type of question for criminal defense lawyers. San Diego criminal attorneys routinely defend cases that begin with an officer’s claim that the defendant was not cooperating while they lawfully preformed their duties.

While it is not unlawful to yell at a police officer in anger for a perceived wrong such as racial profiling, it is unlawful under California law, to willfully resist, delay, or obstruct a sworn law enforcement office, or an emergency medical technician, in the discharge or attempt to discharge any duty of his or her office or employment. This provision is commonly referred to as “resisting arrest.” Some law enforcement officers no doubt justify arrests under this provision for those that “flunk the attitude” test. Conviction of misdemeanor resisting arrest carries a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000), or imprisonment in a county jail not to exceed one year.

Professor Gates may correctly argue, however, that for a resisting arrest conviction to be valid, a criminal defendant must have resisted, delayed, or obstructed a police officer in the lawful exercise of his duties. In California, the lawfulness of the officer’s conduct is an essential element of the offense of resisting, delaying, or obstructing a peace officer. If the officer was not performing his or her duties at the time of the arrest, the arrest is unlawful and the arrestee cannot be convicted under Penal Code section 148 (a)(1)(resisting arrest). Excessive force used by a police officer at the time of the arrest is not within the performance of the officer’s duty. An arrest made with excessive force is therefore unlawful. It is a public offense for a peace officer to use unreasonable and excessive force in effecting an arrest. Professor Gates would claim that after he showed his identification the officer’s duties ended and the excessive force began.

Arresting officer Crowley, on the other hand, may correctly argue that “the time of the arrest” does not include previous stages of law enforcement activities that might or might not lead to an arrest, such as conducting an investigation; it includes only the time during which the arrest is being effected. A conviction for resisting arrest under 148(a)(1) may be lawfully obtained only if the officers do not use excessive force in the course of making that arrest. A conviction based on conduct that occurred before the officers commence the process of arresting the defendant is not necessarily rendered invalid by the officers’ subsequent use of excessive force in making the arrest. For example, the officers do not act unlawfully when they perform investigative duties a defendant seeks to obstruct, but only afterwards when they employ excessive force in making the arrest. Similarly, excessive force used after a defendant has been arrested may properly be the subject of a Civil Rights lawsuit action notwithstanding the defendant’s conviction on a charge of resisting an arrest that was itself lawfully conducted. Sergeant Crowley would thus contend that the professor delayed and obstructed a lawful investigation by failing to cooperate before the arrest outside on the porch.

In any event, no matter who has the best legal argument, any criminal defense lawyer knows that a jury will apply a common sense approach to evaluating the conduct of both of the parties. Clearly, in this case, Professor Gates would not be convicted by a jury of his hypothetical California peers, whether he is absolutely right on the law or not.  And, as California juries are historically reluctant to side against cops, Officer Crowley would also likely escape any claim for money damges based upon a Civil Rights violation.

Contact us to help with your case, (619) 232-5122, or  info@attorneylombardo.com.

May22009

Prostitution and the Internet

The El Cajon Police Department yesterday published the names and photographs of men convicted of soliciting an act of prostitution and women convicted of agreeing to an act of prostitution. The men were snared through undercover officers posing as prostitutes. The woman were snared by undercover officers posing as Johns. Prostitution involves agreeing to pay for a sex act together with an act in furtherance of the agreement. The City of El Cajon decided that this crime is so serious that they will specially treat those convicted of prostitution to public shame and humiliation. Currently, El Cajon is the only City in San Diego County to publish the names and photographs of the convicted online, and I hope it will remain that way.  In my view the police should not be publishing this information. Internet publication of offender information goes well beyond what is otherwise in the public record. The public record of conviction does not contain a photograph of convicted person and is not available to anyone with a computer, nor does it need to be. Moreover, internet information may live forever in cached sites. A person is entitled to clear their record though rehabilitation and expungement without being permanently stigmatized. In San Diego, Criminal defense lawyers expunge prostitution convictions every day. If you believe that women are exploited by prostituting themselves, you would agree that they are further exploited and victimized by the stigma of  publishing their conviction and photo to the world. The majority of these women are teenagers. They deserve a second chance. No one can seriously believe that these women will be deterred from their conduct. The men – Johns – obviously have a lot to lose and arguably are deterred by publishing their names and photographs, but why are they also singled out for this public shaming and those convicted of other crimes ignored? They are obviously also entitled to rehabilitation and expugement without having to suffer beyond their punishment. For my part, this San Diego County criminal defense attorney will continue to fight these matters to jury trial, especially in El Cajon. I have had multiple prostitution juries report to me that they believe the time and money spent prosecuting these matter would be much better spent on other crimes.