Pubdate: Sun, 24 Dec 2000 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2000 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: PO Box 120191, San Diego, CA, 92112-0191 Fax: (619) 293-1440 Website: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Forum: http://www.uniontrib.com/cgi-bin/WebX Author: Matt Krasnowski, Copley News Service Bookmark: L.A. Rampart Scandal http://www.mapinc.org/rampart.htm RULING WON'T STOP RAMPART PROBE LOS ANGELES -- A judge's reversal of three officers' convictions has once again thrown this city's massive police corruption probe into turmoil, but officials said yesterday that the Rampart investigation would continue. Prosecutors were "deeply disappointed" by the decision handed down late Friday night by Superior Court Judge Jacqueline Connor granting a new trial to three Los Angeles police officers charged with framing two gang members, a spokeswoman said. Connor voided the conspiracy, perjury and false report convictions of police Sgts. Edward Ortiz, 44, Brian Liddy, 39, and Officer Michael Buchanan, 30. The judge determined that jurors engaged in misconduct by considering an issue in their deliberations that was never raised during the trial. She also found there was insufficient evidence to convict the officers and criticized prosecutors for not being forthcoming about whether they would use as a witness Rafael Perez, the officer-turned-convict who started one of the largest scandals in LAPD history. "While recognizing the enormous pressure on the community, on the police force, on the district attorney's office, and on the courts to 'fix' the Rampart scandal, this court is only interested in evaluating the fairness of the proceedings and determining whether justice was done in this case," Connor said in her 18-page ruling. "The court cannot simply look the other way and ignore the improprieties, innocent or not, intentional or unintentional, that served to deny a fair trial in this case." Just the latest wrinkle The decision is the latest deep wrinkle in the sprawling dirty-cop investigation that has caused more than 100 convictions to be overturned, brought more than 70 officers under suspicion and further sullied the reputation of the department infamous for the Rodney King beating. The department will soon be under the watch of a federal monitor. Civil suits stemming from the scandal are expected to cost the city $125 million. The Rampart scandal was made public when Perez started testifying against his colleagues last year in an effort to lighten his sentence for stealing cocaine from a police evidence locker. Liddy and Buchanan were accused of fabricating a report that two gang members tried to run them down in a pickup in 1996. Ortiz was their overseeing officer. With the three officers' convictions reversed, prosecutors have the option of appealing the decision, putting the police on trial again or dropping the charges altogether. "I do not anticipate that we're going to make a snap decision," said Sandi Gibbons, a spokeswoman for the district attorney's office. "We're going to look at (Connor's ruling) carefully." Gibbons said a determination would not be made until January. A hearing in the case is set for Jan. 16. Attorneys for the officers were thrilled with Connor's decision, comparing it to an early Christmas present. But they were split on what the next move by prosecutors would be. "I think they'll probably drop the case," said Buchanan's attorney Harland Braun, saying that Connor discredited the state's evidence. Ortiz's attorney Barry Levin said he was uncertain. Shortly before the verdicts, former District Attorney Gil Garcetti was voted out of office and replaced by Steve Cooley. Levin said he was going to discuss the case with Cooley shortly and expected the new top prosecutor's decision "will not be based on politics or public opinion." If there is a re-trial, however, Levin said he would "seriously consider" a motion to move the trial out of downtown Los Angeles. Levin had ripped the racially mixed jury after its Nov. 15 verdict, accusing jurors of bias against the officers. Prosecutors may have success if they appeal Connor's ruling, said Erwin Chemerinsky, a University of Southern California law professor who has written reports about the police scandal and followed the trial closely. "The judge found the jury committed misconduct by not following her instructions. But the line between disregarding (a judge's) instruction and confusion by a jury is a fine one," Chemerinsky said. "Her conclusion is reasonable. But it would be just as reasonable for a court of appeal to say the jury's actions do no rise to the level of misconduct. I think it could go either way." Making an example Before the trial, police and prosecutors said the first Rampart case was important to send a message to rank-and-file officers that any corruption would not be tolerated. In a written statement, police Chief Bernard Parks said the probe would continue. "The ruling notwithstanding, it is important that we as a department move forward with identifying and rooting out corruption at all levels," he said. Perez's attorney, Winston Kevin McKesson, said the public would not accept Connor's ruling. "I don't think any post-trial ruling can erase what the jury said about the investigation," he said. "I think the community has spoken. I think that was the accurate decision." Almost from its start, the prosecution of Ortiz and his colleagues seemed snake-bitten. When jury selection began, a former Perez girlfriend made allegations that he was involved in three murders. Prosecutors did not call him as a witness. After testimony closed in the trial, the girlfriend admitted she lied. During the trial, gang witnesses gave shaky testimony, and police officers called as state witnesses were hostile toward prosecutors and sympathetic to their accused colleagues. In the end, defense attorneys were shocked by the jury's decision, and Garcetti acknowledged the prosecutors were underdogs. More cases ahead Regardless of Connor's ruling, prosecutors are expected to go ahead with the second Rampart-related trial: an attempted murder case against former Officer Nino Durden. The former partner of Perez allegedly handcuffed gang member Javier Ovando, shot him in the head, leaving him paralyzed, then framed him. Ovando was released from prison last year and filed suits against the city and county. He settled with the city for $15 million last month. The Rampart case has produced no other criminal charges against any officers, but Gibbons said she did not expect Connor's decision to have any impact on future cases. "Each case is a different case," Gibbons said. "They all have different set of circumstances. They all have different evidence." But Braun expected the Rampart probe to fold up its tent after the Durden trial. "They really don't have anything else, it seems," Braun said. "They've got Perez saying a lot of things that they haven't been able to prove. There's no 'there' there." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D