JAMES JENSEN v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SANTA CLARA COUNTY
H048548
In the Court of Appeal of the State of California, Sixth Appellate District
May 28, 2021
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
Jensen moved to disqualify the Santa Clara County District Attorney‘s Office from prosecuting him, alleging that the district attorney‘s office leaked grand jury transcripts to the press four days before the transcripts became public which created a conflict of interest requiring disqualification. He also joined in codefendant Christopher Schumb‘s motion to disqualify the office due to Schumb‘s friendship with both Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen and Rosen‘s chief assistant, Jay Boyarsky.
The trial court denied the disqualification motions without holding an evidentiary hearing, and Jensen now seeks writ relief here. Jensen argues the trial court should have granted his motion because he identifiеd three bases for finding a conflict of interest requiring disqualification: the grand jury transcript leak; Schumb‘s relationships with Rosen and Boyarsky; and a dispute between Rosen and Sheriff Smith about access to recordings of county jail inmate phone calls. For the reasons stated here, we will deny Jensen‘s petition.
I. TRIAL COURT PROCEEDINGS
A. INDICTMENT ALLEGATIONS
Jensen is charged by indictment with 10 felony counts: conspiring to bribe an executive officer (
AS Solution provides contract security services for corporate executives. The company wanted local licenses to carry concealed weapons (CCW licenses), which are difficult to obtain. Nielsen contacted Nichols about the CCW issue in spring 2018. Nielsen and West then had lunch with Nichols, Nahal, and Schumb. At that lunch Schumb described his fundraising efforts for the reelection of Santa Clara County Sheriff Laurie Smith, and he
Nielsen met with Jensen, Nahal, and Nichols in May 2018. They reached an agreement that AS Solution would receive 10 to 12 CCW licenses in return for a $90,000 donation to support Sheriff Smith‘s reelection. Jensen instructed Nielsen to have his agents use false employer names and рositions on their CCW license applications. Nielsen delivered the completed applications to Jensen in summer 2018. Jensen met with Schumb at Schumb‘s office in fall 2018. Jensen then instructed Nielsen that the first part of the donation would be $45,000 for a $5,000-per-plate fundraiser for the sheriff‘s reelection campaign. Nielsen delivered a check to Schumb in October 2018 payable to the ” ‘Santa Clara County Safety Alliance.’ ” Schumb was thе assistant treasurer of an independent expenditure committee with a substantially similar name (the Santa Clara County Public Safety Alliance), whose purpose was to support Sheriff Smith‘s reelection campaign.
Nielsen complained to Schumb in early 2019 that AS Solution had not yet received any CCW licenses. Schumb called Jensen. Less than a month later, Jensen signed shooting range qualification paperwork for Nielsen‘s CCW license. Jensen later administered the firearms qualification training for other AS Solution CCW license applicants. Nielsen obtained his CCW license in spring 2019, signed by Sheriff Smith. Jensen later informed Nielsen that he should make the second $45,000 donation to the “Sheriff‘s Advisory Board.”
Based on the foregoing, the grand jury returned the operative indictment against Jensen, Schumb, Nahal, and Nichols. The indictment was filed in the superior court in August 2020. In a press release announcing the indictment, District Attorney Rosen was quoted as follows: ” ‘CCW licenses should not be given out in exchange for campaign donations. They should not be for sale.’ ”
B. MOTIONS TO DISQUALIFY THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY‘S OFFICE
Jensen moved to disqualify the entire Santa Clara County District Attorney‘s Office from prosecuting his case, alleging that it was the district attorney‘s office who leaked grand jury transcripts to the press four days before the transcripts were to become public by operation оf law. (
Jensen‘s motion noted the grand jury returned the indictment in early August 2020. The motion stated his defense counsel received the grand jury transсripts on August 21, but provided no evidence confirming that date. An article published online by San Jose Inside, dated August 27, 2020, was included as an exhibit to a declaration supporting Jensen‘s motion. The article quoted verbatim part of Nielsen‘s testimony before the grand jury. Jensen also included another article from the same media company, dated August 28, 2020, that again quoted the grand jury transcripts and also included the following: “Though absent from the transcript, witnesses to the proceeding say that‘s when [Sheriff] Smith, visibly overcome with emotion, paused to collect herself and wipe tears from her eyes.”
Four prosecutors filed declarations contesting Jensen‘s allegation that the district attorney‘s office was responsible for the leak: District Attorney Rosen; his chief assistant Boyarsky; and the two prosecutors present at the grand jury proceedings, Matthew Braker аnd John Chase. All four prosecutors made the same declaration under penalty of perjury: Except for the indictment, “I did not disclose to anyone not officially assigned to this case transcripts or other information about the grand jury proceedings in this case. Nor did I authorize anyone to do so. Nor am I aware of anyone having done so.”
The court denied Jensen‘s and Schumb‘s motions to disqualify, and denied Jensen‘s request to re-seal the grand jury transcripts. The court reasoned: “The state of the evidence now is entirely speculative as to the source of that [grand jury transcript] leak. I don‘t agree that the motive to leak the information had to be the District Attorney‘s Office. [⁋] I simply think there‘s plenty of other people who might have that motive. The leak, frankly, was more about embarrassing the Sheriff than it was, I think, prejudicing the defendants. So I think there‘s а lot of speculation going on, but I think it‘s a serious issue. [⁋] I don‘t think an evidentiary hearing is required, number one, because I don‘t think recusal is the appropriate remedy, even if a leak is determined and the source can be determined. So I think that should be investigated, I hope it is, but I don‘t believe it‘s the basis for the recusal of the entire District Attorney‘s Office at this time.”
Jensen petitioned for a writ of mandate or prohibition in this court, arguing the trial court abused its discretion in denying the disqualification motion. We
II. DISCUSSION
A. DISQUALIFICATION UNDER PENAL CODE SECTION 1424
B. THE TRIAL COURT DID NOT ABUSE ITS DISCRETION
Jensen raises three distinct issues that he argues demonstrate a conflict of interest requiring disqualification: the leak of grand jury transcripts; codefendant Schumb‘s personal relationships with Rosen and Boyarsky; and the dispute between District Attorney Rosen and Sheriff Smith over access to recordings of jail inmate phone calls.
1. Grand Jury Transcript Leak
Criminal grand jury proceedings are governed by statute in California, with many provisions intended to implement the common law tradition
The facts presented to the trial court on this issue are as follows: Jensen was indicted in early August 2020, which triggered the statutory duty for the stenographer to deliver a transcript of the grand jury proceedings to the superior court. Jensen‘s motion stated he received the transcripts by email on August 21, 2020, but provided no evidence from which we can verify that date. Because the Attorney Genеral does not contest that delivery date, we will assume its accuracy. An article was published online by San Jose Inside on August 27, 2020 containing direct quotes from the grand jury transcripts. That was four days before the transcripts were open to the public under
It is clear from the foregoing that San Jose Inside gained access to the grand jury transcripts at least four days before they were opened to the public, a serious concern given the importance of secrecy in grand jury proceedings. It remains a serious issue even though the practical impact of the access was limited because the transcripts became public four days after the first article was published. But Jensen provided only speculation to support his theory that the district attorney‘s office was responsible for the leak. In opposition were declarations by four members of the district attorney‘s office broadly and flatly denying any involvement in the leak. The trial court was entitled to credit those declarations and could reasonably conclude that nо evidentiary hearing was necessary. The court could further conclude that Jensen failed to prove that the district attorney‘s office was responsible for the grand jury transcript leak, which was the essence of Jensen‘s assertion that the district attorney‘s office had a conflict under
Jensen argues “[o]nly someone in the District Attorney‘s Office with a direct relationship to the case could have been responsible for the leak,” and claims the district attorney‘s office had a motive to “prejudice the public and potential jury pool against the defendants.” (Boldface omitted.) But the district attorney‘s office is not the only entity with access to the grand jury transcripts, and Jensen does not explain why the district attorney‘s office would risk jeopardizing the entire prosecution by leaking information. At the very least, the transcripts were alsо accessible to the stenographer who prepared them, court staff, and attorneys for the charged defendants. And information about a grand jury witness‘s demeanor that would not appear in the transcripts (i.e., Sheriff Smith appearing overcome with emotion) could also have come from anyone present during the grand jury proceedings, if indeed it was even accurate. Presented with various plausible scеnarios, the trial court could reasonably conclude Jensen did not demonstrate that the district attorney‘s office was the source of the leak.
Jensen contends the court should have at least held an evidentiary hearing to allow defense counsel to examine the four attorneys about their declarations. He likens his case to Rosato v. Superior Court (1975) 51 Cal.App.3d 190, where a trial court conducted a hearing and held news reporters in cоntempt for refusing to disclose who provided them with a grand jury transcript that remained sealed. (Id. at pp. 200–204.)
Jensen‘s other arguments are unpersuasive because they all presupposе the district attorney‘s office leaked the grand jury transcripts, such as that the leak is evidence that the district attorney‘s office is treating him unfairly and that the leak is “inextricably linked to the conflict of interest identified by Schumb.” These arguments fail because we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court‘s conclusion that those theories are too speculative to support a finding that the district attorney‘s office was responsible for the leak. We also do not reach his arguments related to the likelihood of receiving a fair trial because that question becomes relevant only after a defendant has shown a conflict under
2. Schumb‘s Relationships with Rosen and Boyarsky
Jensen argues that codefendant Schumb‘s friendships with Rosen and Boyarsky disqualify the entire district attorney‘s office from prosecuting any of the defendants in this case. Jensen acknowledges that he himself “does not have a personal relationship with Rosen or Boyarsky.”
In our separate opinion filed today resolving Schumb‘s petition for writ of mandate (case No. H048532), we conclude that the entire Santa Clara County District Attorney‘s Office must be disqualified from prosecuting Schumb because Schumb‘s friendships with Rosen and Boyarsky create a conflict and make it unlikely Schumb will receive a fair trial if prosecuted by that office. But relationship-basеd conflicts of interest relate to the individuals involved, meaning Schumb‘s conflict is personal to Schumb. As Jensen concedes, he has no personal relationship with Rosen or Boyarsky. Unlike Schumb, he will not be calling them as trial witnesses, and he has no history of fundraising for them. There is no conflict
Jensen argues that as a matter of his “rights to due process and a fair trial, not to mention basic principles of judicial economy, it would make no sense” to disqualify the district attorney‘s office from prosecuting Schumb without also disqualifying it from prosecuting Jensen. But a defendant must satisfy specific requirements under
3. Jail Phone Call Recordings
Jensen argues that a dispute between the district attorney and Sheriff Smith over access to recordings of jail inmate phone calls places him “in the middle of this tangled web of political and personal connections” and the district attorney‘s offiсe must therefore be disqualified. Jensen has arguably forfeited this issue by not raising it in the trial court, other than by implication in joining Schumb‘s motion. Assuming it was preserved, Jensen provided no evidence that he had any personal involvement in the apparent dispute between District Attorney Rosen and Sheriff Smith. On this record, the trial court could reasonably conclude that Jensen did not meet his burden to show a conflict of interest—much less one requiring disqualification—based on the mere existence of a dispute between the district attorney and the elected official with supervisory power over Jensen. We find no abuse of discretion as to this issue.
Jensen also argues that the trial court should have held an evidentiary hearing about the jail calls dispute because “it is vital that Captain Jensen be afforded the opportunity to explore the nature of the rеlationships between his co-defendant, the Sheriff, and the District Attorney.” Jensen forfeited that argument because he did not request an evidentiary hearing about the issue in the trial court; his request for an evidentiary hearing was limited to the leak of the grand jury transcripts. (In re Marriage of Even-King & King (2000) 80 Cal.App.4th 92, 117 [“A party who fails to raise an issue in the trial court has therefore waived the right to do so on appeal.“].) A trial court does not abuse its discretion by not granting relief that wаs not requested.
III. DISPOSITION
Jensen‘s petition for writ of mandate or prohibition is denied. Upon finality of this opinion, the temporary stay order is vacated.
Grover, J.
WE CONCUR:
Elia, Acting P. J.
Wiseman, J.*
H048548 - Jensen v. Superior Court
* Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Fifth Appellate District, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
| Trial Court | Santa Clara County Superior Court Case No.: C2010724 |
| Trial Judge | Hon. Eric S. Geffon |
| Attorneys for Petitioner James Jensen | Harry S. Stern Rains Lucia Stern St. Phalle & Silver, PC |
| Attorneys for Respondent The Superior Court of Santa Clara County | Xavier Becerra Attorney General of California Lance E. Winters Chief Assistant Attorney General Jeffrey M. Laurence Senior Assistant Attorney General Seth K. Schalit Supervising Deputy Attorney General Bridget Billeter Deputy Attorney General |
| Attorneys for Real Party in Interest The People |
