Sheriff Lee Baca The Trial of Lee Baca

Baca Wants Lead Prosecutor, Federal Judge AND City of LA Disqualified

Celeste Fremon
Written by Celeste Fremon


In a string of motions filed early this week, Nathan Hochman,
the attorney for former Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca, claimed that lead government prosecutor Brandon Fox plus U.S. District Judge Percy Anderson should both be recused from Baca’s upcoming trial that is scheduled to begin on December 6 of this year.

In addition Hochman has argued that Baca’s trial must be moved to another part of the state of California. Due to the “constant, inflammatory, and far-reaching media coverage surrounding this matter,” Baca’s legal team writes, “a trial within the Central District of California, particularly within Los Angeles County, will violate Mr. Baca’s due process rights.”

The defense went on to say that, if legal proceedings remain in Los Angeles, the former sheriff could not get a fair trial, due to “a tsunami of highly prejudicial media coverage of the case.” Thus, attorney Hochman would like proceedings to be transferred to, say, Sacramento, or Fresno, or San Diego. 
 And failing that, they would settle for Riverside or Orange counties.



DUMPING THE JUDGE

The former sheriff’s attorneys—present and past-–hinted when Baca’s plea deal was falling apart that they might make a push to remove Judge Percy Anderson from the case if Baca ended up going to trial. Now that Baca’s trial date is set, he and his attorney, Nathan Hochman, are making a forceful pitch for Anderson’s removal.

Hochman’s argument for recusing Anderson centers around statements that the judge made when he rejected Baca’s plea deal, which the defense argues makes clear ”that the Court predetermined that Mr. Baca is guilty of conspiracy and obstruction of justice,” even though, at the time, the former sheriff had yet to be indicted on those charges.

Mr. Baca, if you’ll remember, pleaded guilty in February to one count of lying to federal officials. In return for his plea, he was to receive a sentence of between 0 and 6 months in prison.

Judge Anderson rejected the plea because of the low sentencing range, saying it trivialized the harm that Baca had done to the department and to the community at large.

Anderson arguably had reason, at the time, to knowledgably make such statements since he was the judge who presided over the trial of the six former department members who were previously convicted of obstruction of justice for allegedly getting in the way of the FBI’s investigation into abuse and corruption in the jails, plus the two different trials of former LASD deputy James Sexton, who was convicted of the same charges. Perhaps, most significantly, Anderson presided over the trial of Paul Tanaka, where the part that Lee Baca did or did not play in allegedly trying to derail a federal investigation repeatedly came up in testimony.

Now the defense points to statements such as this one below, which Anderson made at one of this summer’s sentencing hearings, as the reason why he should not preside over the trial of the man who ran the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department, when those previously convicted of obstruction engaged in the actions, and followed the orders, that led to their convictions.

Anderson: It’s one thing to lie to an AUSA; it’s another thing entirely, as the evidence has shown, where the chief law enforcement officer of the County of Los Angeles is involved in a wide-ranging conspiracy to cover up abuse and corruption occurring in the Men’s Central Jail.

Hochman and company contend that there is no reasonable way Anderson can remain. “Even if the Court were to offer that it could put these predeterminations aside, the standard for recusal is whether the Court’s appearance of impartiality may be reasonably questioned, not whether the Court is actually biased against Mr. Baca. “

The defense also considered it problematic that Anderson was a member of the Christopher Commission, the independent commission that investigated misconduct in the Los Angeles Police Department leading up to the Rodney King beating.

“Some general determinations of the Christopher Commission include,” wrote Hochman, “[t]he failure to control [certain] officers is a management issue that is at the heart of the problem…”


THE LEAD PROSECUTOR AS WITNESS

The lengthiest motion—56-pages—was reserved for Baca and company’s legal pitch to have the government’s lead prosecutor, Brandon Fox, removed from the prosecution’s team because the defense says it plans to call Fox as an important witness.

Attorney Hochman’s argument about what he describes as Fox’s importance on the witness stand centers around the interview with Baca by the feds that took place on April 12, 2013, during which the former sheriff allegedly lied to two federal prosecutors, one of them Fox, along two FBI agents, about his knowledge and participation in departmental actions in the late summer of 2011 that would ultimate form the basis for all the obstruction of justice cases against members of the sheriff’s department.

In addition to being charged with obstruction of justice, and conspiracy to obstruct justice, Baca is charged with four counts of lying to federal officials, based on what he said in that interview in the spring of 2013.

Hochman contends that, as the main questioner of Baca, Fox can testify uniquely about the former sheriff’s physical and mental state as he answered questions during the four and a half hour interview, “since part of Mr. Baca’s defense….will rely on the impairment of his memory as a result of his Alzheimer’s disease, to remember in April 2013 what occurred twenty months before in August and September 2011.”

Hochman also wants to ask Fox why he decided to only audiotape the interview rather than video-taping it, when video “would be able to show whether Mr. Baca showed signs of tiredness, confusion, or lucidity…” and more.

Another question the defense feels it is crucial to ask Fox is “why he failed at the beginning of the interview, in contrast to other interviews he conducted in the investigation, to admonish Mr. Baca that although he was not under oath, he could be prosecuted for any false statement made to the FBI and U.S. Attorney’s Office. “

(One might wonder why a four-time elected sheriff who headed up the nation’s largest sheriff’s department for a decade and a half should need to be warned that lying to federal officials was against the law, whether under oath or not, but that’s a matter that will no doubt be taken up at the December trial.)

Since Fox was the lead prosecutor on all the obstruction of justice cases against former members of the sheriff’s department, along with several of the cases involving alleged brutality by former sheriff’s deputies, one presumes the prosecution team would be very loathe to lose him.

“All Mr. Baca wants is a fair trial that has a fair judge, a fair prosecutor and a fair jury,” Hochman told Matt Reynolds of the Courthouse News Service on Tuesday. “If he receives that fair trial he believes that he will prevail.”

Two of these matters will be taken up in a hearing in the courtroom of Judge Percy Anderson on October 31, Halloween.

The recusal of Anderson has been referred to another federal judge, Michael W. Fitzgerald



MEANWHILE, ON WEDNESDAY JUDGE ANDERSON RULES THAT PAUL TANAKA MUST REPORT TO PRISON WHILE HE WAITS FOR HIS APPEAL

At a Wednesday hearing, Judge Percy Anderson ruled that Paul Tanaka cannot remain out of prison while he waits to for the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals to rule his appeal.

However, the next step is for Tanaka and his lawyers to appeal Anderson’s decision to the 9th, which will keep Tanaka from having to report to a federal lock-up.

Joel Rubin at the Los Angeles Times has more on the ruling, and the appeal to come.

11 Comments

  • Where was the “due process” when you allowed PT to run so many people’s careers into the ground. Just accept the fact that your complete lack of judgement and control over the department led you towards your current situation. Nobody else to blame.

  • Well, it’s a stretch but Hochman has to do something for that 2 Mil. However, I must not gloat but may I ask Lee Baca a few questions? Lee: How does it feel to wait for years knowing you’re a jerk? Recall all the innocent Deps and their families you didn’t give a “F” about? Can you stop having Stonich and Waldie making phone calls on your behalf? It’s disgusting!

  • I am totally disheartened. Where is my former leader who said many times that he is ultimatedly accountable? Where is the man who said he would take responsibility for his actions? Where is the Leader? This actions by Baca and his attorneys are is direct conflict with everything that a true and upstanding law enforcement officer would want and do within the legal system. You screwed up Baca. Now be a man and quit trying to be a weasel. It is very clear to those of us who worked for you that you are all empty talk. Go to trial sooner rather than later and end your life with some dignity, although as a convicted felon.

  • Poor little A Paul, he’s throwing the kitchen sink at this. Hey Paul, news flash, your attorneys have mortgages and car payments to make and you are making it for them. They will convince you to file motions, for a fee, that the lights were too bright in the courtroom. So file all you wish, pay as you go and in the end, you are simply delaying the inevitable. The longer you delay, the older you are going to be when you get out. Conversations must be pretty limited around the dinner table of late. But know this, all of this is of your own doing.

  • the question i have for judge anderson –
    was your judgement temporarily impaired by ego when you went on record with your uneccesary diatribe opining about unquantifiable damage to the sheriff dept citing baca as the cause?

    or

    were your extraneous comments from the bench simply another scripted plot development intended to sabotage your own credibility in what is ultimately a show trial for the masses that eventually ends with lee baca never spending a day, an hour, a minute in custody?

    The only other explanation is pure stupidity, but i don’t believe anyone who becomes a federal magistrate can be accused of stupidity.

    here is my prognosis for the future of these usa vs. sheriff baca criminal proceedings:

    Judge Fitzgerald will extend the courtesy to Judge Anderson allowing Anderson to recuse himself thus preempting the release of Fitgerald’s report and ruling into the permanent record.

    Judge Anderson will graciously act on the opportunity to self-recuse and sustain moderate damage to his authority rather than wait for judge fitzgerald’s report to enter the record causing severe damage to Anderson’s jurisprudential legacy.

    Anderson’s recusal will benefit all the LASD “pandoras box” defendants in their appeal efforts.

    Baca’s attorneys and the federal prosecutor will bog down for 3 months of procedural wrangling.

    if the baca prosecution has any legs still remaining on January 19. 2017 then president obama will pull the plug on the boondoggle by including Leroy david Baca’s name on the final pardon list he signs before handing over keys to the White House.

    as for Lee Baca’s medical condition – he is a very good candidate for halting and reversing progression of the early onset Alzheimer’s disease through a program of exercise, diet, juicing and the faithful care and companionship of his wife.

    lee baca is a lucky man.
    he will tell you that himself.

    the advent of his alzheimers was actually a lucky development.
    it helped to provide an explanation and a legal defense for the crimes which he has been charged with.

    and it also helps provide for his personal safety.

    thats because lee baca knows a lot after so many years in his position.

    in the concerns of certain individuals of prestige, position, wealth, authority, privilege –
    lee baca knows too much for a 70yr. old facing the prospect of prison.
    They feel less anxious knowing his memory has been erased by a medical ailment so they don’t have to send him on a Jimmy Hoffa vacation cruise.

    if Baca had any guts too him, it might not be such a concern.
    but lee baca is a died in the wool pussy.
    a disgrace to the concept of honor, loyalty and fortitude.
    he trembles at the thought of spending one night in jail.
    that fact alone should disqualify him from a leadership position.

    anybody who wants to become sheriff, or police chief, or judge, or senator, mayor or president needs to spend at least a night in jail.
    because its important for them to understand what its really like.

  • I feel mr. charlie may be onto something. Seems to me the L.A. establishment (for lack of a better name) has had quite a heavy hand in this whole affair. No need to argue, mr. charlie made some pretty specific predictions, let’s see if they come true.

  • Don’t be too hard on mr. charlie. He got one thing right. Lee Baca IS a dyed in the wool pussy. Always was. He’s a typical nerd who was smart enough to do just enough to give gullible people the impression that he was a man’s man. He couldn’t wait to point out his service in the USMC (as a reserve) whenever there was a few alpha males in the room. He knew how to use his position to find a few alpha males who were willing to sell their souls and vouch for him to their brethren.
    He’s always been a pussy, dweeb, nerd.
    Lee Baca is that typical admin pogue that loved to front himself as one of the warriors. He’s been full of shit since day one. He couldn’t lead a fat man to a free buffet.
    Any of you who are wondering what happened to your “leader” need to look in the mirror and ask yourself two questions:
    What the fuck ever possessed you to actually believe Lee Baca was a leader? Who’s the dumbass in the equation?

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