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Saturday, February 02, 2008

Officers were offered immunity for testimony in Moore case

Gallegos offered immunity for shooters' testimony in Moore case

District Attorney Paul Gallegos gave SWAT team members and negotiators “transactional immunity” in order to illicit their testimony in the grand jury proceedings that ultimately lead to the indictment of their commanding officers, sources said this week.

Gallegos officially announced in December that a criminal grand jury had handed up indictments of involuntary manslaughter charges against former Eureka police chief David Douglas and Lt. Tony Zanotti for their decision making roles in the 2006 officer-involved shooting death of Cheri Lyn Moore.

Gallegos did not immediately return calls seeking comment Friday.

A letter addressed to “all police chiefs and sheriffs” from Douglas' defense attorney Bruce Praet, of the Santa Ana firm Ferguson, Praet and Sherman, says Gallegos gave SWAT team members and negotiators “transactional immunity,” the highest form of immunity in state, in order to focus strictly on Douglas and Zanotti.

Current Eureka Police Chief Garr Nielsen confirmed Praet's comments.

Transactional immunity is defined as immunity that protects a witness from prosecution for the offense involved.

”To illicit their testimony, that's what it took,” Nielsen said.

Praet said it was peculiar that Gallegos granted the immunity because if a prosecutor believes a shooting is criminal in nature, he would want to go after everyone involved, including the shooters.

”It's an interesting tactic on Gallegos' part to pit them against their lieutenant and former chief,” Praet said.

University of California Hastings College of Law professor David Levine said he didn't think it was that peculiar, and that prosecutors often use immunity to “use the smaller people to work up to the bigger ones.”

”That's how you crack a big case,” Levine said. “You work from the bottom up.”

But, that this case is being decided in criminal court is extraordinary, Levine said, as opposed to the more customary administrative and civil arenas.

Moore, who had a history of mental illness and was reportedly distraught over the anniversary of her son's death, was shot April 14, 2006 by Eureka police officers in her apartment at Fifth and G streets after a two-hour standoff in which she brandished a flare gun, threw items from her second-story window and threatened to burn down the building.

Police have said they believed Moore had put down the flare gun when the decision was made to storm her apartment. When officers came face to face with Moore, who they say had the flare gun pointed at them, they shot her multiple times.

Praet's scathing letter states the defense team is confident both Zanotti and Douglas will be cleared of all charges, and urges police chiefs and sheriffs not to look at the case as a precedent setter.

”Quite frankly,” the letter states, “we are cautiously optimistic that this is little more than a rogue District Attorney Paul Gallegos who is attempting to advance his own political agenda as there is simply zero evidence to support these charges.”

The letter goes on to state that Gallegos “seems to be pursuing some sort of nonexistent theory of 'vicarious' criminal liability.”


Praet said it was troubling that Zanotti and Douglas were not among the nearly 50 witnesses called to testify during the criminal grand jury proceedings.

”One would think that if one's desire was to present a jury with a full picture of what had occurred, they would want to give the people who are the subject of the indictment the opportunity to present their side of the case,” Praet said. “Obviously, that was not done.”

Levine said it is possible that Gallegos knew Zanotti and Douglas were the targets of the grand jury proceedings from the start, and he didn't call them to testify figuring they would assert their Fifth Amendment rights.

Because Zanotti and Douglas also testified under oath at a coroner's inquest in 2006, Levine said Gallegos could have called Humboldt County Coroner Frank Jager to answer questions about Zanotti and Douglas' testimony at the inquest. A witness list obtained by the Times-Standard did not include Jager among the 47 people called to testify during the proceedings.

Nielsen said he knew early on in the proceedings that the incident's leadership was being targeted, but said he assumed that only meant Douglas.

Careful to say that he believes the indictments are erroneous, and Douglas and Zanotti will be cleared of any wrong doing, Nielsen said he didn't have a problem with leadership being the focus.

”As long as the officers who were involved are acting within policy and at the direction of their commanders, I think appropriately the responsibility ultimately needs to rest with the decision maker,” Nielsen said. “That's as it should be.”

As for Praet's reference to Gallegos as a rogue district attorney with a political agenda, Nielsen said he doesn't think that's the case.

”We're certainly not always going to agree. I don't agree with this ... and I'm sure he doesn't agree with everything I do and they way I run my department. But, I wouldn't characterize him in those terms,” Nielsen said. “The district attorney is an elected official and, as an elected official, he has to manage his agency as he sees fit.”


Thadeus Greenson can be reached at 441-0509 or tgreenson@times-standard.com

Sidebar: Transactional Immunity: Immunity from criminal prosecution granted to a witness for an offense related to his or her compelled testimony. It is the highest level of immunity that can be granted to a witness.

It differs from another type of protection afforded to witnesses, known as “use immunity.”

Use Immunity: Immunity granted to a witness in a criminal case that prevents the use of the witness' compelled testimony against that witness in a criminal prosecution. Source: Lawyers.com

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Too bad Garr Nielsen fails to grok the situation.
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For a pretty nearly complete list of articles (w/links) on this topic, CLICK HERE

Some of the articles are posted on watchpaulARTICLES in case links go dead.


To contribute to the City of Eureka's defense fund for David Douglas:
Send checks made out to the City of Eureka,
with David Douglas written in the “for” line,
to City Hall, 531 K St., Eureka, CA 95502.
Councilman Larry Glass said the checks would only be cashed if needed.

9 comments:

  1. Not surprising.

    PVG needed to charge a cop, specifically an EPD cop, for something on this just to satisfy the lust of the likes of Ken Miller. PVG is not so stupid to think he could have a half of shot at charging the cops that shot (after all Moore was aiming a deadly weapon at them). So he gives the shooters and everyone else a pass to go after the management cops. It's a stretch by any theory but has more of a chance than trying to prosecute the shooters. This way PVG gets his name in the paper (which he dearly loves) and he satisfies the fringe nutcases and druggies that put (and kept) him in office.

    Sad but true ......... even when he loses this one (and he will) PVG will talk all types of trash about how he "polices the police" , that he's not affraid to go after the cops and so on. It's all BS but he doesn't care, afterall BS is the name of his game (Plariarism). It's been said before, PVG is nothing more than a 2nd rate defense attorney. * I think the term second rate is being kind *

    This information was out there before, the TIMES STANDARD already knew about this. Why in today's paper? I would guess they are getting ready for the show (the arraignment is set for the 21st).

    There has not been a decent DA in Humboldt County since ........... at least since the 60's. I never have been a fan of Farmer, but he was head and shoulders above PVG. Then there was DePaoli (now a convicted felon), before that was it Buffington ? And does anyone remember how he fell out of power as a judge? And then of course Ferragero, "Ferracommie", his claim was charging a DEA agent with shooting some SoHum doper and he got his picture taken with Bobby Kennedy.

    Humboldt County is doomed to be a corrupt NorCal version of Peyton Place.

    Sorry for going on so long, the danger of a good nights sleep.

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  2. So he does this by secret grand jury, he immunizes certain officers to strip away their Fifth Amendment rights and compel their testimony, again in secret, away from the press and public, he does this almost two years after the fact and as his famous lawsuit
    is circling the drain, and his whole case for "policing the police " is based on a negligence theory?
    He's not going after cops who are supposedly corrupt, or brutal, he's not even alleging that. He's alleging negligence. And he had to do it in secret?
    Negligence is secret? I mean if you are going after an ongoing conspiracy, or some kind of organized brutaliy, the Mafia, the Klan, the Taliban, fine, do in secret, there's a persistent threat. But negligence? Based on a single event that took place almost two years ago? That took place in public in front of the media (with PVG right there, no less, photographed talking to Douglas). Top secret immunity worthy negligence? Boy, those are some interesting transcripts, I bet..

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  3. who is going to police the DA? He is out of control with his elected official power and it needs to end! I for one have had enough!

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  4. I enthusiastically supported Paul in the first and last elections.

    I feel betrayed.

    The guy is just a opportunistic hack. He's got to go back to chasing ambulances.

    Please parties, bring us a rational DA who will focus more on public safety than political expediency. I don't care about the blue, red or green parts.

    Integrity is.

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  5. ditto 3:44pm

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  6. Yeah,the anti-Paul crowd really picked the worst candidate possible to run against him the last time,hopefully they'll wise up and attempt to reach out to progressives who aren't beholden to Paul instead of labeling us in one way or another and reminding us that an "agenda" may exist within the anti-Paul movement.That's been Paul's biggest ally,his haters driving away progressives who wouldn't mind seeing Paul go.

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  7. Sorry, mresquan, but the "progressive" BS has been tried - and that has gotten you where you are today - excusing the degradation of the office, the destruction of programs that take care of the innocent victims, prosecution of innocent fathers walking their kids while rapists get probation, and the "progressives" excusing it all away.

    You tell that to the kid on the stand last week. Why Palco matters more than she does. You tell her that.

    Yeah, nice, Mark, real nice. I'm surprised at you.

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  8. I never said I wasn't concerned about those items you've mentioned.did I?

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  9. Funny typo in that story - illicit instead of elicit.

    I think they meant elicit, but illicit says it much better.

    elicit - to draw or bring out or forth; educe; evoke: to elicit the truth; to elicit a response with a question. ...

    illicit - not legally permitted or authorized; unlicensed; unlawful. - proved of or not permitted for moral or ethical reasons.

    ReplyDelete

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