Pubdate: Sun, 20 May 2001 Source: Marin Independent Journal (CA) Copyright: 2001 Marin Independent Journal Contact: http://www.marinij.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/673 Author: Gary Klien DA TRIES TO SURVIVE RECALL BID In 150 years of Marin County history, district attorneys have resigned, lost re-election campaigns and died in office. One even quit over allegations he poisoned his wife. But no DA has ever suffered the disgrace of being recalled. On Tuesday, voters will decide whether Paula Kamena will be the first. Kamena, the county's 23rd district attorney, is facing a special recall election driven by a consortium of medical-marijuana activists, family-court reformers and other critics. Her opponent is Thomas Van Zandt, a patent attorney who lives in Mill Valley. If a simple majority votes to recall Kamena, Van Zandt is almost certain to become the next DA. He is the only other choice on the ballot, although voters can select a write-in candidate. While Kamena enjoys the solid backing of the law enforcement and political establishments, the election could hinge on how many people bother to vote in the special election. The only issues on the ballot are the DA recall and, for Novato voters, the Bahia referendum. Marin County Clerk Michael Smith predicts a turnout of 30 to 35 percent in this election, roughly 50,000 voters or fewer. Assuming 50,000 voters do show up at the polls, Kamena's foes would need a little more than 25,000 votes to oust her. They have already collected nearly 20,000 signatures for the recall petition. However, the county elections office disqualified about 6,000 signatures over questions about current addresses and voter registrations. Also, state authorities are investigating whether some people who signed the recall petition were misled about its true purpose. The investigation could take months to complete, but the election will go on as scheduled. The differences between the two rivals are stark. Kamena, 55, of San Rafael, is a career prosecutor and probation officer who started working for the county in 1969. Van Zandt, 38, passed the bar in 1998 and specializes in patent law, labor relations and other civil litigation. He works in Santa Clara County. Kamena and her supporters say Van Zandt is completely unqualified to prosecute criminal cases and administer an office of 130 employees. But Van Zandt says the real issue is restoring integrity to the office and purging it of political influence. "Integrity is the threshold qualification for this job, and without it any resume is worthless," Van Zandt declares on the election ballot. "This ill-conceived recall is the result of misleading actions by disgruntled litigants who had their day in court and lost; by those who incorrectly believe that the District Attorney plays a role in child custody cases; and by those who want the District Attorney to bend to political pressure rather than follow the law," Kamena writes in her ballot statement. Both are referring to the child-custody case of Carol Mardeusz, Van Zandt's sister. Mardeusz lost custody of her daughter in a bitter family-law dispute and then made off with the child against a court order. Kamena's office then secured a grand jury indictment against Mardeusz for child abduction. The Mardeusz case was the spark that ignited the recall movement. The recall was originally directed at several family-law judges, but Kamena's name was added to the mix because of the indictment. When the revolt against the judges foundered, a group of medical-marijuana activists - accusing the DA's office of persecuting sick marijuana users - took up the cause against Kamena and got enough signatures for a recall. The ballot makes no mention of medical marijuana, only the Mardeusz case. Some residents complained that the petitioners told them they were signing in support of medical marijuana, not a DA recall. Polls open at 7 a.m. Tuesday and close at 8 p.m. For more information, call the Registrar of Voters at 499-6456, or visit http://www.marin.org. The deadline to register was May 7. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom