Ya just have to laugh.
DA petitions Supreme Court
Humboldt County District Attorney Paul Gallegos is asking the California Supreme Court to review his fraud lawsuit against Pacific Lumber Co. that has failed three times to pass legal muster.
Gallegos said this time the influential environmental group Sierra Club is also asking the court to hear the case.
“We’ll see what happens,” Gallegos said in a phone interview Monday.
The district attorney’s case, filed in 2003 in Humboldt County Superior Court, and subsequent amended suits were dismissed on demurrer, which effectively throws out the suit on a lack of legal merit.
After hearing legal arguments from Gallegos and a city of San Francisco attorney on his behalf in December, the California Appellate Court justices blasted his case and concluded in a rare 23-page published ruling and opinion in January that Gallegos failed to prove — on his third attempt — any “reasonable possibility” that his case could be corrected to move forward.
Gallegos confirmed Monday that he has petitioned the state’s top court seeking judicial review of the Appellate Court’s ruling, which he wrote is in “clear error” and effectively denies the government a platform to prosecute cases where the underlying administrative proceedings were corrupt.
In addition to seeking judicial review, Gallegos is asking the Supreme Court to order the depublication of the appeal court’s opinion, which would prevent other courts from citing it as case law.
Gallegos’ suit alleges that PALCO intentionally committed fraud in an effort to increase timber harvesting by manipulating watershed sediment reports during the environmental review that led to the signing of the controversial Headwaters Deal in 1999.
But the courts have maintained that PALCO’s submission of an allegedly erroneous report and the subsequent resubmission of corrected data was protected by the “litigation privilege” that protects communications made as part of a judicial or quasi-judicial proceeding.
Gallegos argues that to grant immunity to an applicant who submits false information erodes the integrity of the system and disempowers the administrative agencies from fulfilling their mandate.
Except in certain death penalty cases, the California Constitution affords no automatic right to appeal before the Supreme Court, which is only granted as a matter of discretion, according to the Supreme Court Web site.
In his letter to the California Supreme Court, Gallegos said the “reasons why courts must shield litigants from derivative litigation are the very same reasons why courts must allow an exception to these evidentiary shields when the path to truth was muddied beyond the point of recourse.”
“In such an instance, a collateral attack under the (Unfair Competition Law) is the only form of equitable relief through which the government can stop an ongoing fraud,” Gallegos wrote.
In a response, PALCO Vice President and General Counsel Frank Bacik described Gallegos’ new filings as “vague assertions that everybody is wrong except Paul Gallegos.”
“The trial court is wrong, the court of appeal is wrong, Palco is wrong,” Bacik said.
Bacik said Gallegos argues that the Supreme Court should carve out an exception to the company’s constitutional right to petition administrative agencies, and also create a special provision for criminal prosecutors who feel like reopening final administrative and environmental review proceedings in order to have the last word on the accuracy and truthfulness of the process.
“His filings contain a series of slogans that lack reason, explanation or basis for either de-publication of the appellate court’s opinion or grant by the Supreme Court for a review of that opinion,” Bacik said.
As an example, Bacik cited Gallegos’ statement to the court that “the clear errors that the trial court committed and the appellate court affirmed obstruct not only the sanctity of 211,000 acres of Humboldt forest timberland, but also the very ‘paths which to lead to [sic] the ascertainment of truth.’”
“Whatever that means, it hardly presents a reasoned legal argument,” Bacik stated. “We’re eager to hear what the California Supreme Court makes of it, and interested to see how long Mr. Gallegos intends to continue beating this long-dead horse at considerable expense to the taxpayers of Humboldt County.”
It is unclear how much the five-year legal battle has cost taxpayers because Gallegos indicated in an e-mail correspondence previously that his office doesn’t keep such records.
“We have an overall budget,” Gallegos wrote. “There are attorney hours, which we don’t keep. I do not believe we had any other costs.”
Gallegos indicated he is still waiting to receive PALCO’s claim of costs, which the court ruled the county would have to pay.
PALCO officials declined to disclose the amount of legal fees it has incurred defending the lawsuit.
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TS Gallegos asks Supreme Court to review Palco ruling
Humboldt County District Attorney Paul Gallegos is asking the state Supreme Court to review an appellate court's ruling that allowed his fraud suit against the Pacific Lumber Co. to be tossed out. He also is requesting that the Supreme Court order “depublication” of the opinion.
”We would like the court to review it,” Gallegos said Monday.
Palco Vice President Frank Bacik said in a news release that the “filings contain a series of slogans that lack reason, explanation or basis for either depublication of the appellate court's opinion or grant by the Supreme Court for a review of that opinion.”
”The new filings appear in the form of vague assertions that everybody is wrong except Paul Gallegos. The trial court is wrong, the court of appeal is wrong, Palco is wrong,” Bacik said.
The lawsuit, filed in February 2003, claimed Palco submitted faulty studies during the Headwaters Forest negotiations to get the California Department of Forestry to adopt a less restrictive long-term logging plan. Gallegos' second amended complaint was thrown out of Humboldt County Superior Court by visiting Judge Richard Freeborn, a ruling upheld by the appeals court.
The logging plan was part of the agreement to sell the 7,400-acre Headwaters Forest and other groves for $480 million. Gallegos argued that the company secured it by submitting false data on landslides in one watershed and not submitting a correction until the last minute.
The appeals court judges determined that Palco's lobbying efforts with the state were the real force behind CDF's decision to drop the stricter logging plan and adopt a less restrictive one. They found the California Environmental Quality Act proceedings during the Headwaters discussions were the appropriate venue to consider if any evidence presented was false.
Those lobbying efforts are privileged under state unfair competition laws, the ruling reads. The court also determined that Palco is protected by the Noerr-Pennington Doctrine that shields anyone petitioning the government or government agencies against civil liability, unless they are engaged in a “sham.”
Palco's efforts didn't meet the definition of a sham, the judges wrote in the ruling.
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The best commentary so far Gallegos seeks stinging rebuke from even higher court Humboldt Mirror
Or, this from the Onion - Plan 'L' Switched To :) Enjoy.
Which lower courts have agreed with the DA so far? And how high do Palco's costs have to go before
ReplyDeletethe county is asked to pay them back due to a baseless action, incompetently pursued and publicly misrepresented?
And which of our crack DDA's is
writing and researching this case?
what's the matter, rose, you were so busy hating the palco suit that you had no time left this morning for lovin' on ol' Davey Gundersen?
ReplyDeletei'm sure there's some innocent explanation for the three different women who all reported rape or sexual assault, for the unlicesensed firearms, machine guns, prescription drugs with BLPD evidence #'s on them, etc., etc.
maybe "watchdave" would be a more useful blog, but then i guess rose isn't so concerned about serial-rapist police chiefs, just law-abiding DA's she disagrees with, obviously a much worse crime.
ReplyDeleteand she's real concerned about the money spent on the Palco suit, but never a peep about the millions the county spent to defend, unsuccessfully, the "right" of county law enforcement to swab pepper spray directly into the eyes of non-violent protesters.
amazing how selective the outrage is among the hatepaul crowd.
perhaps rose is just following the lead of the Eureka Reporter, which gave big play to their opinionated news article (really an editorial) on the Palco suit, but somehow passed over the developments in Gundersen case.
ReplyDeletehere is the times-standard link:
Gundersen, alleged second victim were living together, report says
http://www.times-standard.com/ci_8446451
hmm, the "second victim" was not his ex-wife after all.
hmm, she apparently reported the assualt to EPD, and the officer who took the report "can't remember" what happened next, in a case that was based on charges against a police chief. big surprise there.
Rose, your cyberstalker is back posting three times in a row.
ReplyDeletewhat a loser he/she is...and what a loser Gags is.
Anyone want to take bets on who penned this piece of shit opinion? My money is on Miller et.at, especially after I read that nonsensical My Word he wrote. Seems he just can't take "no" from the courts. Seems also that he has smoked too much of his own "medicine" with Gags and both have killed too many brain cells to be comprehensible.
Yeah - if 8;14, 8:20 et all would take a look, the Gundersen articles are up, noted and linked - they just take a bit more time BECAUSE it includes updating the archival links for those who are following this case - similar to the archival link page for the Cheri Moore/Douglas and Zanotti case.
ReplyDeleteThe Palco Appeal is a simple link, easy to post - not that it matters anyway. Posting's a little slow this week, dealing with the flu.
The Humboldt Mirror's post on the Palco thing cracks me up.
The ER story had one error - the SF attorney was NOT present (did not speak) when Gallegos argued his case in front of the First District Court of Appeals justices.
They laughed when Gallegos degenerated into his bumpersticker campaign speech argument - the right to lie, the catastrophe that awaits if they fail to uphold his attempt to sue... They didn't laugh at anyone else. It was all very somber.
Rose: didn't Eric Washburn (SF attorney) argue that matter for PALCO before the court of appeals?
ReplyDeleteThe article seems to refer to the SF atty who signed on an amicus brief in support of Gallegos' position - that atty did not appear, though I suppose it could be argued that their arguments were "heard" in the sense that they were part of the written arguments.
ReplyDeleteAfter hearing legal arguments from Gallegos and a city of San Francisco attorney on his behalf in December, the California Appellate Court justices blasted his case and concluded in a rare 23-page published ruling and opinion in January that Gallegos failed to prove — on his third attempt — any “reasonable possibility” that his case could be corrected to move forward.
a cyberstalker for the cyberstalker...now that's funny.
ReplyDeleteyup, that gunderson case sounds pretty good so far.
ReplyDeletealmost, almost as good as the media case against those bad boys at Duke.
wait for the prelim and trial.
Will Gallegos have to deconstruct his own expert in the Gunderson case? Only time will tell?
He may have to deconstruct a lot of stuff in this case. As most of knew the gun charges are zip-a-dee-doo-da gone. Trouble with an open mouth in legal issues,foot all to often inserts its self. All of this of course has nothing to do with guildt or ,what's that other thing?
ReplyDeleteGallegos is just one of those "types" whose ego is SO BIG (and braind so small) that he can't admit he screwed up. It is easier to waste his time and county resources to chase this imaginary dragon than just suck it up and move on.
ReplyDeleteAs for the Gunderson case it seems like there is and has been something wrong with the chief. Does this Gunderson mess make Gallegos heroic? Hell no, even a blind hog gets an acorn every once in awhile.