D.A. calls jury-hiring unheard of
Deepa Bharath
The move by defense attorneys in a high-profile gang-rape case to
hire members of a jury that deadlocked during the first trial is
“outrageous,” Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas said
Monday.
Prosecutors say 19-year-old Greg Haidl, son of Orange County
Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl and two others, Kyle Nachreiner and Keith
Spann, also 19, raped an unconscious 16-year-old girl and sexually
assaulted her with various objects at the assistant sheriff’s Corona
del Mar home.
The six-week jury trial ended in a mistrial last month. The
district attorney refiled the case the very next day.
Defense attorneys said Sunday they will likely hire 10 jurors at
$50 a hour as consultants to help them prepare for the retrial.
Rackauckas said such strategy is unheard of.
“I’ve been handling criminal cases for 30 years,” he said. “I’ve
been a judge. But I’ve never seen or heard of a defense team hiring
jurors.”
It’s a display of wealth and power by the defense backed up by the
assistant sheriff, Rackauckas said.
“It’s like trying to set a different standard for people with
money,” he said. “They’re trying to send a message to the new jury
that you can get on Haidl’s payroll after the trial.”
Greg Haidl’s former attorney, Joseph Cavallo, who has withdrawn
from the retrial, said if jurors sign the contract, prosecutors will
have to approach defense attorneys if they want to talk to the
jurors.
Rackauckas said that is not true.
“If we want to talk to jurors, we can definitely do so,” he said.
“It will be up to the jurors to talk. But I don’t see us trying to go
out of the way to talk to them, now that they’ve gone on the
defense’s payroll.”
Howard Varinsky, an Emeryville-based trial consultant who has
worked on many high-profile cases, said the Haidl defense is making a
rare, yet smart move.
“It’s like a focus group with the jurors,” said Varinsky, who
advised prosecutors in the Martha Stewart and Scott Peterson cases.
“You could learn a tremendous amount of information and conduct
in-depth interviews. You could build up an accurate picture of how
they reacted to the trial events, from opening statements to key
witnesses and the evidence itself. Attorneys could learn how
persuasive their arguments really were.”
Why, then, is it not common practice?
“Money,” Varinsky said. “It’s not cheap to do something like
that.”
Greg Haidl was arrested on a misdemeanor statutory rape charge on
Thursday. Prosecutors say he had sex with a 16-year-old girl he met
during a party his father threw in his Spyglass Hill home the night
of the mistrial.
Prosecutors are also asking that Haidl’s bail be revoked, saying
that he is a flight risk and a danger to society. A hearing has been
scheduled for Friday at 2 p.m. at the Central Justice Center in Santa
Ana.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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