Opinion
In April 2008, this court reversed the judgment entered against defendant Augustin Santillah Uribe, who had been convicted two years earlier of sex crimes involving his granddaughter, Anna. (People v. Uribe (Apr. 24, 2008, H030630) [nonpub. opn.] (Uribe).)
On remand, defendant filed a motion to recuse the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office, claiming that the district attorney and members of the SART unit had conspired to violate state law by not documenting that the latter had videotaped its examinations of alleged victims of sexual assault, • thereby preventing members of the defense bar from obtaining critical information in sexual assault cases. Defendant also filed a nonstatutory motion to dismiss the information based upon the alternative grounds of double jeopardy and outrageous prosecutorial misconduct in violation of his due process rights. Defendant argued in the motion to dismiss that members of the SART unit and the prosecutor had been aware of the videotape at the time of the first trial and had suppressed it in order to thwart defendant’s effort to obtain an acquittal.
After extended evidentiary hearings and briefing on the motions, the court denied the motion to disqualify the district attorney. It denied the motion to dismiss made under double jeopardy principles, but it granted the motion on the ground of prosecutorial misconduct. The court concluded that Troy Benson, the deputy district attorney who had prosecuted the first trial, had testified untruthfully in the hearings on the motions. In a strongly worded opinion, the court found the existence of “egregious prosecutorial misconduct committed following reversal for a Brady violation [that was] ... so grossly shocking and outrageous that it offends the universal sense of justice to allow prosecution in this matter to proceed.” (Original italics.)
The People contend that the court erred in dismissing the information. We agree. A court may dismiss an information in an extreme case to address outrageous governmental conduct. A prosecutor’s false testimony in any court proceeding is a grave affront to the judicial system. It is undoubtedly an act that is “outrageous” in a general, nonconstitutional sense. When such prosecutorial misconduct impairs a defendant’s constitutional right to a fair trial, it may constitute outrageous governmental conduct warranting dismissal. But here the false testimony occurred in a peripheral hearing and was not shown to have prejudiced defendant’s right to a fair trial. The misconduct thus did not constitute outrageous governmental conduct in violation of due process. Accordingly, while we acknowledge the trial court’s understandable and profound concern about the former prosecutor’s misconduct, including his false testimony, the court chose the wrong remedy. We will reverse the dismissal order.
I. Prior Trial
Defendant was charged by a second amended information filed in February 2006 with five felony sex offenses against Anna, namely, three counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child (violation of Pen. Code, § 269; counts 1 through 3),
Anna, defendant’s granddaughter, was 12 years old and was attending the seventh grade at the time of the trial. She testified that on one occasion before she started kindergarten, her grandfather went into her room and digitally penetrated her vagina. In another incident when Anna was five, defendant came into the living room where she was sleeping, lay down next to her, removed her clothes, and had forcible sexual intercourse with her. When Anna was nine and on a family trip to Tijuana, defendant lay down next to her in the back of his van, pulled her pants and underwear down, and had forcible intercourse. And when Anna was 11 years old, defendant had her sit on his lap, put his hand under her pants and panties, and digitally penetrated her vagina.
There was a significant amount of medical testimony at the trial. (See Uribe, supra, H030630 [nonpub. opn.].) Mary Ritter, a physician’s assistant and clinic coordinator at the Center for Child Protection (Center) in the Santa Clara Valley Medical Center (Valley Medical), conducted a SART examination of Anna in July 2005. She used a colposcope, which has a camera attached to it that permits the examiner to take magnified photographs. Several photographs taken by Ritter during her examination of Anna were introduced as exhibits. Ritter opined that there was a V-shaped configuration indicating that there had been a prior hymenal tear consistent with the occurrence of a penetrating event. A defense expert, Dr. Theodore Hariton, a retired obstetrician and gynecologist, opined, based upon records and photographs from the SART exam, that “with reasonable medical certainty this
On March 3, 2006, the jury convicted defendant on counts 2 through 5 and acquitted him on count 1.
II. Posttrial Proceedings
Defendant filed a motion for new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence (i.e., the SART video). The motion was based in part upon the declaration of defense counsel, Alfonso Lopez, who declared that he had (1) made a written pretrial request to Benson for all photos and documentation relating to the SART exam; (2) filed a pretrial motion to release documents subpoenaed from Valley Medical concerning Anna; (3) received, before trial, a medical report, photos and laboratory findings concerning the SART exam (but no videotape); (4) spoken with Ritter on March 26, 2006 (after the verdict), and she had informed him that she was in possession of a videotape of Anna’s SART exam; and (5) subpoenaed and obtained the videotape of the SART exam after his conversation with Ritter. Defendant argued that the prosecution should have disclosed the video pursuant to Brady v. Maryland, supra,
The court denied the motion for new trial. It also denied a second new trial motion that had been filed by defendant on the basis that Anna had signed a declaration completely recanting her charges of molestation.
In August 2006, defendant was sentenced to a prison term of 30 years to life.
HI. Prior Appeal
On April 24, 2008, we reversed the judgment on the basis that the nondisclosure of the SART video constituted a Brady violation that was prejudicial to defendant. We concluded that Valley Medical personnel who had performed the examination of Anna and created the undisclosed SART video were “part of the ‘prosecution team’ for Brady purposes. [Citation.] Their knowledge of the existence of the SART video was thus imputed to the prosecution.” (People v. Uribe, supra,
IV. Proceedings on Remand
A. Procedural History
In January 2009 (after the case was remanded), defendant filed a motion to dismiss the information on the basis of double jeopardy and prosecutorial misconduct. He alleged that the district attorney, Ritter, and Kerns were all aware of the existence of the videotape of Anna’s SART exam “and chose to withhold that evidence and make misrepresentations during [the] testimony [of Ritter and Kerns] to keep the SART video suppressed.” He contended further that “Dr. Kerns, in conspiracy with the prosecutor’s office, did not want defense attomey[s] to muddy up the waters with . . . SART video[s because] . . . they were concerned that . . . SART video [s] would give defendants evidence that would exonerate them.” Defendant argued that in light of the existence of the SART video, the trial testimony of Dr. Kerns—in which he strongly criticized Dr. Hariton’s opinions because he had relied on an allegedly unreliable photograph—was false. In a supplemental filing, defendant urged that the motion to dismiss should be granted based upon “outrageous prosecutorial misconduct at trial in violation of State and Federal Due Process.” Defendant argued that the prosecutor’s Brady error in failing to disclose the SART video that resulted in the reversal of the judgment of conviction here, “[ajlthough ... a gross disregard for Mr. Uribe’s due process rights, . . . [was] even more outrageous [in that the prosecutor and Dr. Kerns and Ritter] conspired to keep all SART videos suppressed between 1991 and 2006.” He concluded that this “ ‘institutional prosecutor[ial] misconduct’ ” was so severe that dismissal of the information was warranted.
In February 2009, defendant filed a motion to disqualify the district attorney on the basis of conflict of interest, pursuant to section 1424. He alleged that Ritter, Kerns, and the prosecutor’s office had “conspired to violate State law by not documenting SART exams on Office of Criminal Justice Planning 925 (Form 925)” for the purpose of concealing the fact that Valley Medical was videotaping SART exams of alleged sexual assault victims. He argued that the district attorney could “not prosecute [the] case fairly and even-handedly . . . [because] the prosecutor’s office [was] part of a conspiracy to withhold evidence from defendant.”
The People opposed the recusal motion and the motion to dismiss the information based on double jeopardy and outrageous prosecutorial misconduct.
After further briefing, argument, and submission of additional evidence, the court on January 6, 2010, denied the motion to dismiss based upon double jeopardy, and granted the motion to dismiss based upon prosecutorial misconduct in violation of due process. The court concluded in its formal order: “This Court is presently confronted with the rare and concerning case of egregious prosecutorial misconduct committed following reversal for a Brady violation. Mr. Benson’s numerous acts of misconduct, culminating in his false testimony in this proceeding, strikes at the foundation of our legal system and is so grossly shocking and outrageous that it offends the universal sense of justice to allow prosecution in this matter to proceed. As such, defendant’s motion to dismiss on due process grounds is granted.” (Original italics.)
The People filed a timely notice of appeal from the dismissal order. The appeal from the order is proper. (§ 1238, subd. (a)(8) [order or judgment dismissing or otherwise terminating all or portion of action appealable by People]; see also § 1238, subd. (a)(1) [People may appeal order setting aside all or part of indictment, information, or complaint]; Bellizzi v. Superior Court
B. Evidence Presented at Hearing
1. Overview
Much of the testimony concerned the Center’s practice of videotaping SART examinations; its use, documentation and retention of the videotapes; and any communications it had with the district attorney relating to the Center’s videotaping practices. This evidentiary focus was in keeping with the defense theory for the motions that there was a conspiracy between the Center (Dr. Kems and Ritter) and the district attorney to conceal the practice of videotaping SART examinations. The inquiry—analogous to the United States Senate Judiciary Committee’s inquiry into the involvement of President Nixon in the Watergate scandal of the early 1970’s
As noted, the court did not find the existence of a conspiracy between the Center and the district attorney to conceal the practice of videotaping SART examinations, and it did not find that “either the current or the former [district [attorney, [or] any member of either[’s] executive management staffs” knew about the Center’s practice of videotaping SART examinations prior to 2006. The court’s finding of prosecutorial misconduct was directed toward Benson alone, and the court made clear that this misconduct focused upon his having given false testimony during the hearing on the motions. Although the court did not specify the “numerous acts of misconduct” in its order or elaborate on its finding of the prosecutor’s untruthfulness, there were several areas in which Benson’s testimony was contradicted by others. These areas concerned (1) how Benson learned of the existence of a SART exam video in People v. Zeledon (Zeledon) (a case that he handled before the Uribe
As an aid to our discussion below of the testimony presented at the hearing, we present the following chronology;
July 29, 2005: Mary Ritter conducts SART exam of Anna.
January 12, 2006: Ritter provides Benson with video of SART exam of alleged victim in Zeledon.
February 1, 2006: Trial begins in Uribe.
March 3, 2006: Jury convicts defendant of four felonies.
March 22, 2006: Lopez learns from consultant that Anna’s SART exam may have been videotaped.
March 28, 2006: (Lopez testimony): Lopez speaks to Ritter and learns for first time that Anna’s SART exam was videotaped.
(Benson testimony): Benson speaks to Ritter about another case and she informs him that she videotaped Anna’s SART exam. Benson immediately speaks to Brown about the video, and calls Lopez afterwards to tell him about existence of video.
March 29, 2006: Lopez signs declaration in support of issuance of subpoena for video, referring to March 28 conversation with Ritter.
March 30, 2006: Defense motion for issuance of subpoena for video is filed and served on district attorney.
April 4, 2006: Brown sends e-mail to members in her sexual assault unit about disclosing SART videotapes to defense counsel.
(Benson testimony): Memo sent at least one week after he spoke to Brown.
April 7, 2006: Original date for sentencing in Uribe.
(Lopez testimony): Lopez informs court and Benson of discovery of SART video; Benson expresses surprise that Ritter had videotaped SART exams.
July 28, 2006: Court denies motion for new trial in Uribe.
February 7, 2008: (Benson testimony): Benson confirms with Lopez that Benson had first informed Lopez in March 2006 about existence of SART video.
(Lopez testimony): Benson, upset, approaches Lopez and asks him if he could provide Benson with a declaration. (No statement by Benson that he had first discovered the SART video.)
April 24, 2008: Court of Appeal reverses judgment of conviction in Uribe.
May 20, 2008: (Benson testimony): Lopez confirms in telephone conversation that Benson had informed Lopez about existence of SART video. (Conversation denied by Lopez.)
June 5, 2008: Lopez sends e-mail to Benson, indicating that Lopez was the person who first discovered that Ritter had videotaped the SART exam and had then informed Benson of the discovery.
2. Videotaping of SART examinations
The Center at Valley Medical began videotaping SART examinations in or about August 1991 and has done so continuously since that time. There are archived videotapes of approximately 3,300 SART exams. According to both Dr. Kerns and Ritter, the videotapes were not used as a part of the examination of the individual patients. Dr. Kerns testified that videotaping was done for “the primary reason [of providing] . . . live training during the exam.” The videos also served as a backup in the event the still photographs
Dr. Kerns believed that, prior to the Uribe trial, there were one or two instances in which attorneys requested the videotape of a SART exam. Dr. Kerns and Ritter both testified that they made no attempts to conceal from anyone, including the defense bar, the fact that the Center was videotaping SART exams.
Ritter testified that there had been several occasions over the years in which attorneys from the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office had toured the Center’s facility. A VCR was plainly visible in the examination room from 1991 to 2006. It was not Ritter’s practice during tours to note the fact that exams were videotaped, and she did not recall having talked about videotaping during any of the tours. She did not recall that Benson ever took a tour of the facility, although they met once at her office to discuss a case. Nor did she recall having spoken with him about videotaping SART exams. Likewise, Ritter did not recall having discussed with Brown the fact that the Center was videotaping SART exams.
In February 2005, Deputy District Attorney Paul Colin, who had been assigned for that year to the sexual assault unit, took a tour of the Center. At some point, either Ritter or another Center employee pointed out the photographic equipment in the examination room and mentioned something about videotapes. He had the impression that videotaping may have occasionally occurred but that the videotapes were not saved. After the tour, Colin asked his supervisor, Brown, if she was “aware of any issue with videotaping.” Brown testified that she had no recollection of this conversation, and that she first became aware that Colin had previously known anything about videotaping when she saw his December 2008 memorandum on the subject.
It was stipulated by the parties that Dolores Carr would testify that she was elected district attorney in November 2006; took office in January 2007; was previously a deputy district attorney and was the supervisor of the sexual assault unit between 1998 and 2000; and first became aware that Valley Medical videotaped SART exams after having taken office in 2007. It was further stipulated that George Kennedy would testify that he was the elected district attorney from 1990 to 2006; was not aware that Valley Medical videotaped SART exams until after defendant was convicted in 2006; and was unaware of any attempts by any employee of his office to conceal Valley Medical’s videotaping of SART exams.
The Santa Clara County Public Defender’s Office retained the Honorable William F. Martin, Judge of the Santa Clara County Superior Court (retired), to investigate the extent to which the public defender’s and alternate public defender’s offices were aware before 2006 of the Center’s practice of videotaping SART exams. Judge Martin noted in his report that Javier Rios, a deputy public defender, had sent an e-mail to attorneys in both offices on March 13, 2001, in which he indicated that he had learned from another attorney that Ritter videotaped her SART exams. Judge Martin concluded that, notwithstanding this e-mail—which Rios himself did not recall—“there was no generalized knowledge [on the part of the members of either office] of the [Valley Medical] practice of videotaping SART exams until after the Uribe trial in early 2006.”
4. SART exam video in People v. Zeledon
Benson was assigned to the sexual assault unit of the district attorney’s office in or about August 2005; his previous assignment had been to the gang unit. After the transfer, he was assigned the Zeledon case. After receiving a copy of a letter from a defense expert, Dr. James Crawford, criticizing the quality of still photographs from the alleged victim’s SART exam, Benson met with Ritter at her office in January 2006. He testified that she told him at that time that her general practice was to videotape SART examinations and retain the videotapes until the still photographs were developed. On January 12, 2006, she provided Benson with a copy of a video of the SART exam of the alleged victim in Zeledon. Benson’s paralegal sent the video to Dr. Crawford a week later. Benson testified that sometime between January 19 and February 3, 2006, he ran into Richard Pointer, the attorney for the defendant in Zeledon, who asked Benson how long the Center had been videotaping SART exams; Benson replied that he did not know. Pointer testified that he did not recall such a conversation.
Pointer testified that he met with Ritter at the Center sometime before January 19, 2006 (i.e., the date the SART videotape was sent to Dr. Crawford). In the course of his asking about the equipment in the examination room, Ritter told Pointer that she videotaped each of the SART exams in addition to taking still photos. This was the first Pointer had heard about the videotaping of SART exams. Pointer asked her for a copy of the videotape for the Zeledon case, and Ritter responded that she was willing to produce it, but that Pointer should make a discovery request to the district attorney’s office. Thereafter, when Pointer spoke to Benson, he seemed surprised by Pointer’s comment that Ritter had said that she videotaped the SART exams.
5. Discovery of SART video after Uribe trial
Benson testified that on or about March 28, 2006 (25 days after the jury verdict in Uribe), he spoke with Ritter about another case. The conversation took place before the originally scheduled sentencing date in Uribe of April 7, 2006. Ritter asked why he had called Dr. Kerns as a rebuttal witness in the Uribe trial. Benson responded that the defense expert, Dr. Hariton, had testified that Ritter had somehow manipulated the patient during the exam to make it appear that her hymen had a Y-shaped notch consistent with a prior trauma. Ritter responded, “ ‘That’s ridiculous. I’ve got a video that would show that that didn’t happen.’ ” When Ritter said this, Benson did not react, but “was freaking out in [his] head, because [he] didn’t think that these videos were kept.” He was not concerned at the time that he had committed a Brady violation; rather, he was concerned that the video would end up bolstering the defense. Benson testified that this was when he had first learned there was a video of Anna’s SART exam. He admitted that he did not think to ask Ritter several weeks earlier—when he was preparing for trial in Uribe and after producing the SART video in Zeledon—if such a video existed.
Ritter testified that she did not recall having had a conversation with Benson about the SART video in this case.
Benson testified that immediately after his conversation with Ritter, he went to see his supervisor, Brown. He asked her if prosecutors were “ ‘supposed to be turning over these videos of the SART exams,’ ” and Brown responded, “ ‘What videos?’ ” After Benson explained that Ritter had told him that the Center had videotaped SART exams, Brown instructed Benson to call Lopez and the court to advise them of this discovery. Benson did not tell Brown that a video of the alleged victim’s SART exam in Zeledon had been produced to the defense expert in that case about a month before the Uribe trial.
Brown testified that her conversation with Benson occurred on April 3 or April 4, 2006, about a week later than when Benson testified that the conversation occurred. Brown was “stunned”; this was the first time she had heard that Ritter had videotaped SART exams. She did not recall whether Benson said that he was about to, or had already informed defense counsel
Benson testified that, after speaking with Brown, he called Lopez, who “thanked [Benson] for disclosing this information to [him].” According to Benson, that day or the next day (i.e., Mar. 28 or 29), after he had spoken with Judge Bernal’s clerk, he and Lopez met with Judge Bernal, and it was agreed that because Lopez anticipated making a motion for new trial, he would subpoena the SART video.
Lopez’s testimony directly contradicted Benson regarding the circumstances of the discovery of the videotaping of Anna’s SART exam, their contacts with each other, and their communications with the trial judge on that discovery. Lopez testified that he, not Benson, discovered the videotape after speaking with Ritter. After the Uribe jury verdict, a colleague suggested Lopez contact another medical expert in the field of sexual assaults, Dr. Crawford. Lopez first spoke with Dr. Crawford on March 21 or 22, 2006. During their conversation, Dr. Crawford asked Lopez if his expert, Dr. Hariton, had viewed the videotape of the SART exam.
According to his testimony, Lopez then contacted Ritter. After leaving several messages or trading phone calls, they spoke on March 28, 2006, and she confirmed that there was a video of the SART exam. He told her not to destroy the video and that he was going to subpoena it. Ritter confirmed in her testimony that she spoke with Lopez on the telephone sometime after the Uribe trial concerning the fact that she had videotaped SART exams. Lopez testified that he had no conversations with Benson about Uribe between the time he spoke with Dr. Crawford and when he spoke with Ritter about the existence of the video.
Lopez testified that on the same day after speaking with Ritter, he prepared a motion and subpoena* to require Ritter to produce the SART video. He signed a declaration in support of the subpoena on March 29, 2006, in which he stated that he was “informed and believe[d] based on [his] personal discussion with [Mary] Ritter on March 28, 2006, that Mrs. Ritter has
Lopez believed that he called Benson sometime after the motion was filed and before April 7, 2006, but does not recall speaking with him. Lopez testified that the first time they spoke was immediately before meeting with Judge Bernal in chambers on April 7, 2006. During in-chambers discussions, Lopez advised that he had discovered the existence of the SART video from talking with Ritter. Benson said “he was shocked and surprised that Mary Ritter was videotaping.” Benson did not say when he had discovered the existence of a videotape.
Brown testified that she telephoned Ritter “almost immediately” after the conversation with Benson about the SART video in Uribe which she recalled having taken place on April 3 or April 4. Although Brown did not recall if she spoke to Ritter in that initial contact or left a message, she testified that they spoke within 24 hours of Brown’s conversation with Benson. Ritter told her that videotaping of the SART exams was done as a backup to the still photographs, but that the videos were “ ‘not forensically acceptable.’ ” Brown sent an e-mail on April 4, 2006, to members of her sexual assault unit. (Contrary to Brown’s testimony, Benson recalled that the e-mail had been sent at least a week after his conversation with Brown.) She composed it either while speaking with Ritter or immediately after hanging up the phone. She wrote: “Ritter videotapes child SART exams as back up to her photos .... The opinions [the Center] forms are based on the photos and not the video[s] due to the poor quality of the videos. However, if defense wants the documentation re the SART exam, the video is.part of that documentation.” Brown testified that “the whole purpose of [the e-mail was] not only to inform the team of the [SART videotapes’] existence, but to tell them they needed to make this part of the discovery process when we were the ones providing the documentation of the SART exam.”
6. Communications regarding SART video after Uribe appeal
Benson testified that he twice confirmed with Lopez in 2008 that it was Benson who had first informed Lopez in March 2006 about the existence of the SART video. The first such confirmation was on February 7, 2008, and Benson made a note of this conversation. Lopez’s testimony was contrary to Benson’s. Lopez testified that in or about February 2008, he ran into Benson in the hallway of the courthouse. Benson approached Lopez, appeared very upset, and asked Lopez, “ ‘Do you think you could write me a declaration?’ ”
Benson testified that on May 20, 2008, Lopez again confirmed by telephone that Benson had been the one to inform Lopez about the existence of the SART video; Lopez said that he would provide Benson with a declaration to that effect to submit to the State Bar. (As Benson explained in a May 2008 e-mail to Judge Bernal, copied to Lopez, due to the reversal of the Uribe judgment, he found himself “in the unique situation of having to self-report unethical conduct to the State Bar for discovering and disclosing evidence.”) After several e-mails from Benson seeking a declaration from Lopez, Lopez advised Benson on June 5, 2008, that a statement of facts that Benson had prepared was incorrect: it was Lopez’s recollection that he, not Benson, had first learned about the SART video in a conversation with Ritter after the jury trial and that Lopez then informed Benson of its existence. Lopez testified that he only became aware of Benson’s contention that he, not Lopez, had first learned about the SART video when he received Benson’s June 4, 2008 e-mail with a draft declaration for Lopez’s signature. Lopez sent the e-mail in response on June 5, 2008, because he was not going to sign a declaration that was false. In that e-mail, Lopez indicated that Benson’s proposed statement of facts was “not correct in this area: . . . after the [jury trial, Lopez] first learned of the video tape from speaking with Mary Ritter and [Lopez] notified [Benson] of that. . . .” Lopez sent a second e-mail to Benson to the same effect on June 23, 2008, and also indicated that he would be willing to sign a declaration indicating that he had no reason to suspect that Benson was aware of the existence of the SART video before or during the Uribe trial because Lopez then believed that Benson had first become aware of the video from talking with Lopez after the trial.
Benson also testified that he spoke with Judge Bernal by telephone in February 2008
7. Prosecution of Uribe after remand
After remand and in June 2008, Deputy District Attorney Tim Mclnemy was assigned as trial attorney for the retrial of the Uribe case. Although Mclnemy was assigned to succeed Benson as trial attorney, the latter was responsible for filing motions in the case after remand, including a motion for discovery from defendant and a motion for the conditional examination of Anna’s mother.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
The standard for reviewing orders granting nonstatutory motions to dismiss is somewhat uncertain due to a dearth of California authority involving review of such orders. Defendant contends that our review of the court’s factual findings is governed by the substantial evidence standard, and that the dismissal order is reviewed for abuse of discretion. The People disagree, arguing that the question presented here is a mixed question of fact and law and the order is, in part, subject to independent review.
Mixed questions of fact and law “are those ‘in which the historical facts are admitted or established, the rale of law is undisputed, and the issue is whether the facts satisfy the [relevant legal] standard, or to put it another way, whether the rule- of law as applied to the established facts is or is not violated.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Louis (1986)
Thus, for instance, in Cromer, supra,
The Supreme Court has explained that “California and federal cases have deemed the independent review standard appropriate for a diverse array of mixed law and fact questions, often on the ground, among others, that such
We recognize that it is not universally true that the second step is subject to independent review in a mixed question case. (See Ault, supra,
The determination of whether the government engaged in outrageous conduct in violation of defendant’s due process rights is a mixed question. The first step involves the consideration and weighing of the evidence and assessing the credibility of the witnesses to determine factually whether, and
Although we conclude otherwise, we recognize that there is some support for defendant’s advocacy of an abuse of discretion standard here. (See People v. Conrad (2006)
II. Finding of Prosecutorial Misconduct
As noted above, in this mixed question case, the trial court’s finding of prosecutorial misconduct was based upon its consideration of the evidence and is subject to deferential review. (Leyba, supra,
The court’s finding that Benson engaged in substantial misconduct, including untruthful testimony at the hearing on the motions, is supported by substantial evidence. Although not spelled out in the court’s order, the court could have found Benson’s testimony to have been untruthful in at least three areas. First, the issue of when and how he learned of the video of the alleged victim’s SART exam in Zeledon was contradicted by Defense Attorney Pointer’s testimony. Second, Benson’s testimony concerning when and how he learned about Anna’s SART exam video was extensively contradicted by Lopez. Lopez testified that he first discovered from Ritter that she had videotaped Anna’s SART exam, and he denied that he had learned about the video from Benson. The declaration Lopez signed March 29, 2006, in support of the motion to compel production of the SART video was consistent with his testimony. Ritter did not recall talking to Benson about Anna’s SART video. And Benson’s testimony was at odds with that of his supervisor, Brown, to the extent she placed her conversation with Benson at least six days after the date Benson said it occurred, and thus, significantly, at least four days after Lopez’s motion—wherein he declared that he had learned about the video from Ritter on March 28—was served on the district attorney.
III. Propriety of Order of Dismissal for Outrageous Conduct
A. Introduction
At the heart of the People’s position is that dismissal was an unwarranted sanction for Benson’s misconduct because “the evidence presented at the hearing show[ed] neither actual prejudice to defendant’s fair trial right, nor a substantial likelihood of an unfair trial . . . .” The People argue that the central inquiry of a due process claim based upon prosecutorial misconduct is the fairness of the trial, not the blameworthiness of the misconduct. Accordingly, they assert that since there was neither a showing nor a court finding that Benson’s misconduct had an impact on defendant’s ability to receive a fair trial, dismissal was improper.
Defendant responds that “[t]he determinative issue” here “is whether the governmental acts are sufficiently outrageous to satisfy the ‘shock the conscience’ standard . . . [and] determination of prejudice to the defendant’s right to a fair trial is not a factor in the court’s decision.” He argues that under Rochin v. California (1952)
There is apparently no authority addressing the issue before us: Whether the trial court, in addressing prosecutorial misconduct primarily consisting of the giving of false testimony at a pretrial hearing, may impose the sanction of
We address below defendant’s claim that the dismissal order was justified based upon a substantive due process claim, and we reject that position. We conclude further that the three California cases upon which defendant relies in which there was a dismissal order based upon a finding of outrageous governmental conduct are distinguishable and do not support the court’s order. From a review of the relevant cases, we find that a showing of prejudice to defendant’s right to a fair trial was required and that the absence of such a showing precluded dismissal as a sanction for prosecutorial misconduct. We also conclude that the federal cases from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals addressing outrageous governmental conduct in violation of due process—relied on by the trial court—do not support the dismissal order. Lastly, we hold that the dismissal of the information here was not appropriate as an exercise of the court’s inherent supervisory powers. Neither the Ninth Circuit cases cited by the trial court nor the California decision cited by defendant supports the court’s dismissal of the information under its authority to supervise judicial proceedings.
B. Substantive Due Process Claim Under Rochin v. California
1. Rochin v. California
In Rochin, supra,
Subsequent decisions of the high court emphasize that extreme governmental conduct is required under Rochin to satisfy the “shock the conscience” standard for a violation of substantive due process. (See, e.g., United States v. Salerno (1987)
2. Substantive due process generally
The substantive component of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment “bar[s] certain government actions regardless of the fairness of the procedures used to implement them, e.g., Rochin, supra, [
The high court has explained that “substantive-due-process analysis has two primary features: First, we have regularly observed that the Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition,’ [citations], and ‘implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,’ such that ‘neither liberty nor justice would exist if they were sacrificed,’ [citation]. Second, we have required in substantive-due-process cases a ‘careful description’ of the asserted fundamental liberty interest. [Citations.]” (Washington v. Glucksberg (1997)
3. Analysis of substantive due process argument
Commencing here with the second feature of substantive due process enunciated by the high court, it is difficult to provide “a ‘careful description’ of the asserted fundamental liberty interest” (Glucksberg, supra,
The conduct of Benson that defendant claimed initially in the motion to dismiss to have been outrageous concerned defendant’s right to timely discovery of the SART video in this case, a right for which defendant was given redress when we reversed the conviction and granted a new trial due to a Brady violation. As expanded in defendant’s later filings, Benson’s posttrial conduct affected his rights with respect to the presentation of the motion to dismiss itself. However defined, defendant’s rights affected by Benson’s misconduct cannot be properly considered to be a “deliberate decision[] of [a] government official[] to deprive a person of life, liberty, or property.” (Daniels v. Williams, supra,
Moreover, under the more-specific-provision rule of Graham v. Connor, supra,
As noted, substantive due process is governed by principles of judicial restraint that guard against unjustified expansion into new areas. (Collins, supra,
Defendant relies on three California cases in which the appellate court either directed or affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of criminal proceedings based upon outrageous governmental conduct. (See Morrow v. Superior Court (1994)
In Moore, supra,
The appellate court affirmed, noting that the defendant had a constitutional right to be represented by counsel throughout the time that charges against
Moore is obviously distinguishable. The case involved the prosecution’s active and persistent interference with the accused’s relationship with his defense attorney. This interference, in addition to violating due process, also infringed upon the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel.
Boulas, supra,
The appellate court granted a writ of mandate compelling the court to dismiss the information. (Boulas, supra, 188 Cal.App.3d at p. 435.) After emphasizing the importance of a criminal defendant’s right to effective assistance of counsel at all stages of the proceedings, the court found that the government’s conduct “effectively short-circuited Boulas’s right to be assisted by counsel at a critical stage of the proceedings. . . . [Citation.] It is highly probable that conversations outside the presence of counsel may have served to impede whatever opportunity defense counsel would otherwise have had to secure a plea bargain. [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 433.) The appellate court concluded that the actions of the deputy sheriff and deputy district attorney “actively caused irremediable harm to Boulas’s relationship with his attorney” (ibid.) and constituted a “subversion of Boulas’s rights” (id. at p. 434). (See also id. at p. 435 [“Boulas was seriously prejudiced as a result of the improper governmental intrusion . . . .”].) It therefore found “the government conduct ... to [have been] outrageous in the extreme, and shocking to the conscience; we are, thereby, compelled to order the dismissal of the present case.” (Id. at p. 434.)
Boulas has no application. There, “the grave sanction of dismissal” (Boulas, supra,
Morrow, supra,
The Court of Appeal issued a writ of mandate compelling the trial court to dismiss the proceeding. (Morrow, supra,
Morrow likewise has no application to the case before us. The prosecutor there committed “egregious” (Morrow, supra,
Having addressed defendant’s substantive due process claim and his misplaced reliance on the three California “outrageous conduct” cases discussed, ante, we consider whether the sanction of dismissal for the prosecutorial misconduct here was appropriate in light of relevant United States Supreme Court and California authorities.
In Smith v. Phillips (1982)
The high court observed that “[p]ast decisions of this Court demonstrate that the touchstone of due process analysis in cases of alleged prosecutorial misconduct is the fairness of the trial, not the culpability of the prosecutor.” (Smith v. Phillips, supra,
In United States v. Valenzuela-Bernal (1982)
Our state’s high court considered the proper remedy for state misconduct in People v. Zapien (1993)
The requirement of a prejudice showing is not limited to claims founded on alleged procedural due process violations. In Morrison, supra,
The California Supreme Court has likewise held that prejudice must be shown to establish that a violation of a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel warrants dismissal. (See Alexander, supra,
Likewise, since due process considerations require examination of the fairness of the trial rather than the blameworthiness of the prosecutor (Smith v. Phillips, supra, 455 U.S. at pp. 219, 220, fn. 10; see also People v. Crew (2003)
The governmental conduct here consisted of the actions of a single deputy district attorney, Benson, who is no longer trial counsel, in (1) soliciting untruthful declarations from his adversary and the trial judge apparently to benefit Benson’s State Bar investigation; (2) making misleading statements to the trial judge and his adversary concerning the discovery of the SART exam, also apparently in furtherance of Benson’s personal objectives regarding the State Bar investigation; and (3) providing false testimony in the hearing on defendant’s motions. It was this “egregious prosecutorial misconduct committed following reversal for a Brady violation” that the court held warranted dismissal of the information. (Original italics.) The court did not identify or explain in what manner this prosecutorial misconduct impacted defendant, i.e., deprived him of his constitutional due process rights. There was no showing that Benson’s misconduct prevented defendant from receiving a fair
The Supreme Court has enunciated a tailored-remedy approach in connection with the abridgment of an accused’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel; “[W]ithout detracting from the fundamental importance of the right to counsel in criminal cases, we have implicitly recognized the necessity for preserving society’s interest in the administration of criminal justice. Cases involving Sixth Amendment deprivations are subject to the general rule that remedies should be tailored to the injury suffered from the constitutional violation and should not unnecessarily infringe on competing interests. . . . [][] Our approach has thus been to identify and then neutralize the taint by tailoring relief appropriate in the circumstances to assure the defendant the effective assistance of counsel and a fair trial. The premise of our prior cases is that the constitutional infringement identified has had or threatens some adverse effect upon the effectiveness of counsel’s representation or has produced some other prejudice to the defense. Absent such impact on the criminal proceeding, however, there is no basis for imposing a remedy in that proceeding, which can go forward with full recognition of the defendant’s right to counsel and to a fair trial.” (Morrison, supra, 449 U.S. at pp. 364-365; see also In re Alvernaz (1992)
The trial court’s dismissal of the information here considered only the prosecutorial misconduct without regard to its impact on defendant. The court failed to tailor the remedy to the harm caused by the misconduct, and gave no consideration to societal interests in having those who have committed serious crimes being brought to justice. (See People v. Shrier (2010)
Defendant contends that this case presents a different species of prosecutorial misconduct for which, in fashioning a remedy, the court should ignore the impact of the misconduct on defendant’s right to a fair trial. This assertion is without merit. We thus conclude that the court was not empowered to dismiss the information based upon the prosecutorial misconduct it found to have occurred, absent a showing (and finding by the court) of its significant impact on defendant, namely, that the misconduct prevented him from receiving a fair retrial.
E. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals Decisions
Although the court below acknowledged that there was no federal authority that addressed dismissal under the circumstances presented here, it cited five decisions of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in support of its conclusion that dismissal was appropriate: U.S. v. Blanco (9th Cir. 2004)
We observe initially that while federal authority may be regarded as persuasive, California courts are not bound by decisions of federal district courts and courts of appeals. (People v. Zapien, supra,
In Russell, supra,
The Russell dictum has been cited by the California Supreme Court several times in entrapment and prosecutorial misconduct cases; the high court, however, has not found in any particular case that outrageous governmental conduct violating due process acted as a bar to prosecution of the case. (See People v. Smith (2003)
2. Ninth Circuit “outrageous conduct” decisions
The Ninth Circuit has held that the court may dismiss an indictment based upon outrageous governmental conduct that constitutes a violation of due process. (U.S. v. Bogart (9th Cir. 1986)
The Ninth Circuit has acknowledged that “the due process channel which Russell kept open is a most narrow one . . . .” (U.S. v. Ryan (9th Cir. 1976)
The conduct here—in contrast to the alleged misconduct considered by the Ninth Circuit in most of the outrageous conduct cases—had nothing to do with the investigation that ultimately ensnared defendant in this prosecution. The prosecutorial misconduct, as identified by the court, consisted of Benson’s (1) “weaving] a tangled web of deceit” after becoming aware of the existence of the video of Anna’s SAR.T exam by seeking false declarations from Judge Bernal and Lopez, by attempting to mislead Judge Bernal, and by “attempting] to initiate improper ex parte communications with that judge” and (2) giving “untruthful testimony . . . during an ancillary proceeding,” namely, the hearing on the recusal and dismissal motions. As discussed above, the court did not identify or explain in what manner this prosecutorial misconduct impacted defendant, i.e., deprived him of his constitutional due process rights, and there was no evidence of prejudice presented. As such, the prosecutorial misconduct the court sanctioned here did not come within the “most narrow” “due process channel” described by the Ninth Circuit. (U.S. v. Ryan, supra,
Defendant argues alternatively that the court’s dismissal order was justified “as a proper application of its supervisory powers.” Although the basis for the trial court’s decision is unclear, it cited Ninth Circuit precedent which recognizes the concept that federal courts have the supervisory power to dismiss a criminal case in certain instances. It may be reasonably inferred, therefore, that the court relied on the concept of supervisory powers in dismissing the information. Further, although defendant does not elaborate on his position—and cites only one authority, a civil case, in support of his argument (Stephen Slesinger, Inc. v. Walt Disney Co. (2007)
1. Ninth Circuit authority—courts’ supervisory powers
The Ninth Circuit recognizes a category of cases in which the outrageous governmental conduct, although falling short of constituting a deprivation of due process, may warrant the dismissal of the indictment under the court’s supervisory powers. (See, e.g., Barrera-Moreno, supra,
We note that the supervisory powers doctrine, as explained by the Supreme Court, is grounded in the powers available to federal courts. (Hasting, supra,
Under the first basis for the court’s exercise of its supervisory powers— namely, “to implement a remedy for the violation of a recognized statutory or constitutional right” (Simpson II, supra,
The court’s use of its supervisory powers to dismiss an indictment “to preserve judicial integrity by ensuring that a conviction rests on appropriate considerations validly before a jury” (Simpson II, supra,
As a third basis under its supervisory powers (in the view of the Ninth Circuit), the court may fashion a remedy that deters future illegal conduct, including dismissal of the indictment. (Simpson II, supra, 927 F.2d at pp. 1090, 1091.) Here, there was no finding by the trial court of systemic intentional misconduct on the part of the district attorney’s office. The intentional misconduct sanctioned by the court was that of Benson alone.
2. California courts’ supervisory powers
California courts are empowered by statute to dismiss criminal proceedings, charges, or allegations in certain instances. For example, under section 1385, subdivision (a), the court has discretion, either on the request of the prosecutor or on its own motion, to order the dismissal of an action “in furtherance of justice.” A dismissal under that statute may be appropriate before, during, or after trial. (People v. Orin (1975)
Apart from any statutory authority, California courts have inherent supervisory or administrative powers which are derived from the state Constitution. (Litmon v. Superior Court (2004)
Defendant cites no authority other than Slesinger, supra,
Moreover, even were we to find the civil litigation principles of Slesinger equally applicable to criminal proceedings—a finding we decline to make here—dismissal was nonetheless unwarranted. As the Slesinger court explained, “California courts have [the] inherent power to terminate litigation for deliberate and egregious misconduct when no other remedy can restore fairness . . . .” (Slesinger, supra,
G. Conclusion
The court’s finding that Benson engaged in misconduct was supported by substantial evidence. The court, however, in fashioning a remedy did not consider the impact, if any, that the misconduct had on defendant’s right to a fair trial. Benson’s actions, including falsely testifying at the hearing, did not violate defendant’s substantive due process rights under Rochin, supra,
Our conclusion should in no way be construed as a signal that we condone the misconduct that the trial court found, based upon substantial evidence, to have occurred here. Attorneys may not “mislead the judge or any judicial officer by an artifice or false statement of fact or law.” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6068, subd. (d).) “[A]n attorney ‘ “. . . owes the duty of good faith and honorable dealing to the judicial tribunals before whom he practices his profession. He is an officer of the court—a minister in the temple of justice. His high vocation is to correctly inform the court upon the law and the facts of the case, and to aid it in doing justice and arriving at correct conclusions. He violates his oath of office when he resorts to deception or permits his clients to do so.” [’] [Citation.] [][]... [][] Courts expect even higher ethical standards from prosecutors. [Citations.] This is ‘. . . because of the unique function he or she performs in representing the interests, and in exercising the
DISPOSITION
The order of dismissal is reversed and the matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
Rushing, P. J., and Grover, J.,
A petition for a rehearing was denied October 19, 2011, and respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 25, 2012, S197859.
Notes
We filed the unpublished opinion in Uribe on April 24, 2008. On May 19, 2008, on our own motion, we ordered the opinion partially published. (See People v. Uribe (2008)
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
Extensive treatment of the evidence from the original trial is found in our prior opinion. (See Uribe, supra, H030630 [nonpub. opn.].)
Anna was impeached by evidence that, before trial, she had told a social worker, an investigator, a nurse, and at least two police officers that she had lied about defendant’s sexual misconduct. She had also testified during cross-examination at the preliminary hearing that she had lied about everything she had said during her earlier examination by the prosecutor. Anna was also subjected at trial to extensive cross-examination that exposed a number of contradictions and inconsistencies concerning the details of the alleged incidents. (See Uribe, supra, H030630 [nonpub. opn.].)
The parties stipulated that the evidence, ostensibly presented for the recusal motion, would be considered in connection with both motions.
The court foreshadowed these findings at a hearing approximately two months before it announced its ruling in open court by posing the following question to the People: “[S]o let’s say that there is a finding of credibility or lack thereof, let’s say a prosecutor—that there is a finding that a prosecutor falsely testified under oath. Q] ... [ID Would that rise to the level of truly outrageous conduct that would warrant dismissal?” Later in the same proceeding, the court observed: “I know that some cases that we found said that suborning peijury did not rise to the level necessary to dismiss a case. So we are dealing with intentional falsehood, perjury. But I’m also mindful of the fact that if, in fact, there was testimony that was not truthful, it wasn’t given to secure a conviction. This is an ancillary proceeding ....’’
A memorable and repeated inquiry of Senator Howard Baker during the Watergate hearings was, “What did the President know [about the coverup of the June 1972 burglary at the Democratic National Committee’s office at the Watergate Complex in Washington D.C.] and when did he know it?” (New World Encyclopedia, Watergate scandal, Investigation, Tapes <http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entryAVatergate_scandal> [as of Sept. 30, 2011].)
There were 15 witnesses who gave live testimony before the court, nine of whom were affiliated with the district attorney. In addition, counsel stipulated to the substance of brief testimony of two individuals without their personal appearance, one witness was permitted to testify through submission of a declaration, and one witness, a retired judge, offered evidence through the submission of the report of his investigative findings.
Dr. Crawford confirmed in his testimony that he spoke with Lopez on March 22, 2006, when he was retained as a consultant in Uribe, and that he would have asked Lopez for photos of the SART exam and would have told him that a video of the exam might exist.
The record presents some confusion as to the timing of Benson’s telephone call to Judge Bernal. After Benson testified that the call took place in February 2008, he stated that it occurred after the judgment in Uribe was reversed (i.e., Apr. 24, 2008).
Without objection from defendant, a declaration signed by Judge Bernal was introduced by the People as an exhibit.
Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 384 U.S. 436 [
The court specifically identified this conflict in the testimony during argument on the motion to dismiss. The court—in the context of referring to the possibility of untruthful testimony by the prosecutor and mentioning the date discrepancy between Benson’s and Brown’s testimony—indicated that “the timeline . . . doesn’t fit with the testimony.”
From the record, it appears that the court could have found (but did not so find) that Benson had actual knowledge of Anna’s SART exam video before the jury reached its verdict on March 3, 2006. By Benson’s own testimony, he knew there was a video of the alleged victim’s SART exam in Zeledon by no later than January 12, 2006, over a month before the first witness was sworn in the Uribe trial. Benson testified that he had thought (before the discovery of the video of Anna’s SART exam) that the Center did not retain the videotapes. (This testimony, however, does not explain why the video of the alleged victim’s SART exam in Zeledon was retained by the Center.) Benson’s testimony notwithstanding, the court could have inferred (but apparently did not do so) that Benson knew that there was a video of Anna’s SART exam before the trial in Uribe commenced.
Defendant also relies on Commonwealth v. Virtu (1981)
Although the Sixth Amendment was not expressly identified by the court in Moore, the court emphasized that the state had interfered with the defendant’s right to counsel and cited a landmark case (Gideon v. Wainwright (1963)
A fourth case, Barber v. Municipal Court (1979)
The trial court cited Sons v. Superior Court (2004)
In an early entrapment case, our high court, without citing Russell in particular, observed in dictum: “Sufficiently gross police misconduct could conceivably lead to a finding that conviction of the accused would violate his constitutional right to due process of the law. [Citation.]” (People v. Mclntire (1979)
Giglio v. United States (1972)
The high court in Hasting, supra,
Apart from Benson’s misconduct, including his untruthful testimony at the hearing, the trial court did not conclude that there was any intentional misconduct of other members of the district attorney’s office or of employees of the Center at Valley Medical. It did make an oral finding that Brown’s supervision of the sexual assault unit was negligent in that she failed to (1) follow up on information about the videotaping of SART exams provided to her by Colin in February 2005, and (2) “erect an ethical wall between Mr. Benson and the newly-assigned trial attorney” after defendant’s judgment was reversed. These findings were not included in the written order dismissing the information and, in any event, such a finding of negligent supervision is facially not egregious prosecutorial misconduct that would support the sanction of dismissal.
Our conclusion that dismissal of the information was unwarranted here does not mean that under no circumstances may a court—under the authority of its inherent supervisory powers or otherwise—impose the extreme sanction of dismissing criminal proceedings to address egregious prosecutorial misconduct that is prejudicial to the defendant’s right to a fair trial.
Judge of the Monterey Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
