Pubdate: Wed, 26 Aug 1998 Source: San Francisco Examiner Contact: http://www.examiner.com Author: Seth Rosenfeld OF THE EXAMINER STAFF JUDGE DROPS DRUG CHARGE, LASHES FORMER U.S. ATTORNEY Says Prejudicial Comments Made To Press Tainted Jury In withering remarks from the bench, a federal judge dropped a major drug charge after concluding that the U.S. attorney's office in San Francisco made prejudicial comments about the infamous case to the press. U.S. District Judge Justin Quackenbush ruled Tuesday that former U.S. Attorney Michael Yamaguchi engaged in "reckless disregard" for the constitutional rights of alleged cocaine kingpin Anthony "Ant" Flowers. The senior judge said Yamaguchi violated both professional rules and his admonition not to discuss the 1996 prosecution. The former prosecutor, he said, had commented on the case and re-released an earlier press release on it, which, the judge said, was a shocking "parade of horribles." On that ground, Quackenbush dismissed the heaviest charge against Flowers: operating a "continuing criminal enterprise" - that is, supervising an illegal drug ring - that carried a mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years in prison. The U.S. attorney's office declined to comment on the ruling, as did Yamaguchi's lawyer, Jerrold Ladar. Maureen Kallins, Flowers' lawyer, said the judge's action was "brave and honest . . . and hopefully a message will go out to prosecutors that they have to play by the rules." The ruling was the latest turn in a troubled case that has been cited as one of the reasons Yamaguchi did not receive a federal judgeship and resigned as U.S. attorney effective Monday. His successor, Robert S. Mueller III, appeared at the hearing. In taking what he said was unusual action, the senior judge, visiting from Seattle, exercised his supervisory powers over court conduct. He noted that in the first part of trial, he had instructed Yamaguchi to make no further public comment on the case. The prosecutor had told a reporter that though his office brought fewer cases than did other districts, they were more serious, and cited the Flowers case. At the end of part one in December 1996, Flowers was convicted of conspiracy to distribute more than 11 pounds of cocaine in Oakland. Four other men also were convicted. At this point - before the jury began part two of the trial, on the continuing criminal enterprise charge - Yamaguchi faxed to three reporters a summary of the verdict in phase one and a copy of a press release issued more than two years earlier when Flowers was first charged in the case. The release said a street gang run by Flowers was in "a bloody war" with rival drug gangs. But the judge found Tuesday that evidence of that had not been admitted at trial. And, Kallins said, "My client has never been charged with violence in his life." This - along with Yamaguchi's comment to a reporter that the crackdown on Flower's gang was partly responsible for a "big drop" in Oakland's homicide rate - tainted the jury, the judge said. A juror read one of the resulting news stories and phoned the judge, who then questioned the jurors and found that some had engaged in misconduct by reading or discussing news accounts. On that basis, he last year reversed the convictions from part one of the trial. The 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals reinstated them, though further appeals by Flowers's lawyer are pending. On Tuesday the judge separately dismissed charges of running a criminal enterprise, money laundering and possessing illegal profits. And he criticized the U.S. attorney's office for not having admitted its errors earlier. 1998 San Francisco Examiner - ---