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When safeguards fail (cont.)
Enjoying secrecy
Grand jury proceedings are held in secret, in theory to protect the innocent from the
unchallenged statements of witnesses.
That secrecy also helps conceal prosecutors misconduct such as happened in
the case of Miami Police Officer Reinaldo Rodriguez.
Rodriguez can be accused of poor judgment he admitted visiting the home of a
known drug dealer.
But that lapse should not have resulted in a 27-year sentence on drug charges
especially when there is substantial evidence to show prosecutors used a grand jurys
secrecy to promote the perjury of a witness.
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration Agent Lee Lucas told grand jurors he saw Rodriguez
drive Joseph "Junior" Ayala, one of South Floridas most notorious drug
suppliers, to the home of Miami drug dealer Francisco Novaton on Nov. 23, 1993.
Rodriguez admitted he knew Novaton and had been to his house on a few occasions.
He said he had visited Novatons mother, who was a high priestess of a Cuban-based
voodoo-like religion called Santeria, which combines black magic with Catholicism.
Rodriguez practices the religion.
He denied ever accompanying a drug dealer to Novatons home.
Lucass testimony was persuasive. Under questioning by Rodriguezs attorney
at a pre-trial hearing, he repeated his grand jury story and said Rodriguez and Ayala left
the car with a black bag presumably filled with money.
Based largely on Lucass testimony, a jury sentenced Rodriguez to 27 years for
providing protection to Novatons drug enterprise.
Two years after his conviction, Rodriguez learned another DEA agent had testified
before the grand jury about that same November night. This agents testimony should
have been turned over as part of the discovery process, but prosecutors kept it under
wraps.
DEA Agent Raymond Carvil said the person who arrived with Ayala that night was a
"white Latin female," and he made no mention of Rodriguez or a bag of money.
Unlike Lucas, Carvil had a videotape of his surveillance to back up his statements.
Since grand jury proceedings are secret, its not clear how grand jurors
reconciled Lucass version of events with that of Carvils. Or if the
contradiction was even pointed out by prosecutors or noticed by grand jurors.
Thats not unusual, the Post-Gazette investigation found. Grand jury witnesses
sometimes testify months apart, and prosecutors have no obligation to point out
discrepancies among witnesses or even bring up a witnesss testimony again. Witnesses
with statements not to a prosecutors liking may be quickly dismissed. And
prosecutors routinely emphasize or ignore whatever they want in pressing for an
indictment.
But because the grand jury system does not allow defendants to rebut false testimony,
Lucass statement helped indict Rodriguez. Then prosecutors compounded Lucass
inaccurate testimony by keeping Carvils statement from Rodriguezs attorneys.
In 1996, attorneys for Rodriguez asked for a new trial, based on the prosecutors
misconduct noting that hed made no effort to correct Lucass version of
events.
A judge turned down the appeal, citing, incredibly, the very testimony of Lucas that
Carvil and his videotape discredited.
Rodriguez appealed again.
"This newly discovered evidence suggests assistant U.S. attorneys . . . allowed
and then knowingly exploited the perjured testimony of Agent Lucas from the inception of
the investigation repeatedly misrepresenting the facts," stated Rodriguezs
attorney, William Matthewman.
Matthewman has asked for a new trial or a dismissal of the case based on the blatant
misconduct.
"Surely, the criminal justice system cannot tolerate such a pervasive pattern of
deceit by a federal agent and prosecutor," he said.
Rodriguez remains in prison, awaiting the courts decision.
Perjury unpunished
Witnesses who lie before grand juries on behalf of the government are seldom punished.
Indeed, federal prosecutors often threaten grand jury witnesses whose testimony
doesnt conform with the governments version of events.
Thomas Sanders is a retired Air Force pilot who logged almost 1,000 hours of combat
flying during the Vietnam War. After he left the service, he lived in a house owned by his
brother.
The house burned in an accidental fire in July 1993.
In September 1994, Sanders brother, Jim, was indicted for mail fraud. He told
prosecutors some of the records of his company had been destroyed in the 1993 fire.
Prosecutors didnt believe him and had Thomas Sanders testify before a grand jury.
Here are the key points of that testimony: There were records other than his own in the
house, but he wasnt sure if they were his brothers. Some of the records were
"not recognizable, burnt." And there might have been more records in the attic,
which he presumed would have been destroyed in the fire.
A fire official testified that no records were destroyed.
Based on that contradiction, Thomas Sanders was charged with perjury.
In the trials closing argument, Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel S. Linhardt of
Sacramento, Calif., several times misstated Sanders grand jury testimony, insisting
Sanders had said that "everything in the attic burned."
Despite the protests of his attorney over the misstatements, a jury found Sanders
guilty. During the sentencing hearing, Linhardt admitted hed been
"mistaken" about what Sanders had said that Sanders never testified
before a grand jury about anything in the attic burning.
The prosecutor wasnt punished for his misstatement.
Sanders was sentenced to six to 24 months in prison.
His appeal has been denied and he is living and working in Houston, waiting for an
order to report to prison.
In a complaint to the U.S. Justice Departments Office of Professional
Responsibility, Sanders charged that Linhardt engaged in misconduct from the moment he
came out of the grand jury room.
"[Linhardt] stepped out into the hall and advised my attorney that he was going to
have me indicted if I didnt go back into the room and change my story. I
didnt know enough about the situation to know what he wanted me to say," he
told the OPR.
He hasnt heard if his complaint is being investigated.
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