Prosecutors should produce preponderance
FLO MARTIN
One can’t put a price tag on justice being served.
Dist. Atty. Tony Rackauckas must retry Greg Haidl, Kyle Nachreiner
and Keith Spann. A new trial will give both the prosecution and the
defense in this case the opportunity to cross their T’s and dot their
I’s and do a thorough job in presenting evidence to a new jury.
Some 20 years ago, another trial got daily headlines in the Los
Angeles Times, the Register and the Daily Pilot. For three weeks, the
attorneys interviewed more than 250 prospective jurors before seating
the final 12 and the four alternates. To this day, I shudder at the
memory of the moment we heard the attorneys say that they had
accepted the jury as seated. My heart began to pound, my stomach
began to sink and my head began to reel. I, Juror No. 2, was scared.
The jury heard a total of 60 witnesses in that murder case. We
heard from family members, from a multitude of experts, including
dentistry professors from USC and UCLA, anesthesiologists and
pathologists with law degrees, county coroners, nurses, paramedics,
police officers, a medical equipment salesman, dental assistants and
from a variety of people who had witnessed the events that resulted
in the deaths of three people.
The prosecution presented 49 of those witnesses. I filled 2 1/2
Steno notebooks. Then the defendant testified. (Another half a
notebook.) The defense attorneys presented four more expert witnesses
-- a pathologist, an anesthesiologist, an emergency physician and a
detective. I was well into Notebook No. 4 when the prosecution
presented 15 rebuttal witnesses -- more doctors and dentists, more
anesthesiologists, more emergency medical technicians, more
pathologists, another coroner and an FBI agent. Literally
mind-boggling!
I became very familiar with terms like endotracheal intubation,
medullar paralysis and histopathologic changes, just to name a few.
Sure, I liked science in high school and in college, but this was
ridiculous. This was more like medical school, dental school and law
school all rolled into one.
From March 28 to July 24 that year, the jury heard the same
details from every possible angle. The experts endlessly drummed
forensic medicine into our heads. By the time closing arguments
rolled around, I had five full notebooks in my lap -- no skipped
lines, either. Some had more than 10 books filled. We all felt like
medical school graduates.
The closing arguments lasted two days. Then the deliberations. We
pored over our notes again and again. We talked, we lay awake at
night, we agonized and I must admit, we cried.
The discussion never got personal. No one ever got cranky or mean.
The jury did its job and five days later came to a unanimous
decision.
Looking back on the trial, I realize that the deputy district
attorney who led the prosecution’s case knew that in order to provide
the jury with the tools for a unanimous decision, he had to present
the same evidence from a multitude of witnesses -- total overkill. He
could not leave any rock unturned. He had the responsibility to prove
beyond a reasonable doubt, and he took his good time.
That trial must have cost us taxpayers a very pretty penny indeed:
legal costs for the state -- pretrial investigations, preliminary
hearing, three weeks of jury selection, four months of trial, all
those experts at hundreds of dollars a pop, and a week of
deliberation, with a couple of lunches thrown in for the jury. I
can’t even imagine the bottom line.
Should Rackauckas try again? Should he shoot for “overkill?” For
the sake of all concerned, you better believe it!
* FLO MARTIN is a Costa Mesa resident and former high school
teacher.
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