Los Angeles Times

Lawyer in brawl at court

Defense attorney and D. A. investigat­or make a bloody scene at O. C. courthouse.

- By Richard Winton and Christophe­r Goffard

Two weeks ago, defense attorney James Crawford won a new trial for one of his clients, a convicted killer, and proudly mounted the resulting newspaper clips on his office wall.

It was another humiliatio­n for the Orange County district attorney’s office, however, which has seen case after case unravel in an ongoing scandal regarding the misuse of jailhouse informants.

Around 10: 30 a. m. Wednesday, on an unrelated case, Crawford found himself in a confrontat­ion with an investigat­or for the district attorney’s office on the 10th f loor of a busy Santa

Ana courthouse. It left the attorney bloodied, his left eye badly swollen, while stunned jurors stepped carefully past blood spatter and crime- scene tape.

Crawford was advising a woman who had been subpoenaed to testify as the victim of a brawl in the parking lot of a Lake Forest nightclub. The investigat­or was there to watch over the woman, said Crawford’s lawyer, Jerry Steering.

The investigat­or called Crawford “sleazy,” Steering said, prompting Crawford to invoke the snitch scandal that has engulfed the district attorney’s office in recent years.

Steering said that as Crawford walked away, the investigat­or called him a derogatory name. Crawford replied with a profanity of his own. Steering said the investigat­or tossed a paper clip at Crawford’s head, which Crawford tossed back.

Steering said the investigat­or then attacked Crawford, slamming his head into a bench and pummeling him with punches.

In a brief interview with The Times, Crawford said he “began seeing lights from all the blows.” He added that he suffered a sinus fracture.

Paul Meyer, an attorney representi­ng the district attorney investigat­or, said his client was also injured in the brawl, but he declined to specify how.

“The one- sided version currently being circulated is simply not accurate,” said Meyer, who declined to iden- tify his client.

The district attorney’s off ice also refused to identify the investigat­or, or to comment on whether he was still at work. Neither person was taken into custody. The county Sheriff ’ s Department is investigat­ing the case and will turn its report over to the state attorney general’s office.

The union representi­ng Orange County deputy sheriffs, which also represents district attorney’s office investigat­ors, criticized Crawford after he told reporters he planned to sue.

Tom Dominguez, president of the Assn. of Orange County Deputy Sheriffs, said in a statement there was “the very real possibilit­y that this is an effort by a criminal defense attorney to drum up a payday.”

The incident comes as the office of Orange County Dist. Atty. Tony Rackauckas is embroiled in an embarrassi­ng controvers­y that shows no signs of abating. Numerous conviction­s, including homicide cases, have fallen apart amid claims by defense lawyers that authoritie­s improperly withheld informatio­n about jailhouse informants.

In late February, an Orange County Superior Court judge ordered a new trial for Crawford’s client Henry Rodriguez, 39, who was convicted of participat­ing in the murder of a 22- year- old woman. The judge ruled authoritie­s had improperly withheld records showing a key prosecutio­n witness had been an informant in numer- ous other cases.

The district attorney’s office is appealing that ruling, along with the same judge’s ruling tossing the office off its most high- profile case, that of mass shooter Scott Dekraai. Dekraai’s lawyer, Scott Sanders, has argued that Orange County authoritie­s have violated inmates’ rights for years by relying on jailhouse informants.

Brian Gurwitz, a defense attorney who has become an outspoken critic of the district attorney’s office, said he saw the incident Wednesday in the context of Rackauckas’ defensive response to criticism.

“Tony Rackauckas engenders a victim mentality in his office, and that victim mentality does not respect the role of defense counsel,” Gurwitz said. He attributed the altercatio­n to “the dysfunctio­nal byproduct of that victim mentality.”

Lee Stonum, an attorney in the Orange County alternate defender’s office, said he also saw a connection between the courthouse incident and an increasing­ly rancorous us- versus- them attitude from upper management at the district attorney’s office.

Leadership in the district attorney’s office has “adopted this idea of, ‘ We’re the victims and all these defense attorneys are bottom feeders,’” Stonum said. “Not only have they adopted that publicly, they have actively sought to spread that narrative within the ranks.”

The district attorney’s off ice declined to respond to the criticism.

 ?? Jerry Steering/ ?? DEFENSE ATTORNEY James Crawford is shown after a confrontat­ion in a Santa Ana courthouse.
Jerry Steering/ DEFENSE ATTORNEY James Crawford is shown after a confrontat­ion in a Santa Ana courthouse.

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