Monday, October 25, 2010

Typical OC DA Corruption clearly on display

     Today, the OC Reg played catch-up (see Voice of OC) with its own story about DA Tony Rackauckas’ willingness to arrange for Republican crony Tom Harman to hang around the DA office for a couple of days so he can claim to be a “prosecutor.” Yeah, and then Rackauckas said he was “surprised.”

Harman sworn in, mostly no-show as DA volunteer (OC Reg)

     GOP state Sen. Tom Harman of Huntington Beach participated for only a few days of an eight-week program required of participants in the district attorney’s Trial Attorney Program, District Attorney Tony Rackauckas said.
     Harman was sworn in as a deputy district attorney before beginning the program – then, without prosecuting a single case Harman tried to be identified as “Prosecutor/Attorney/Senator” on the ballot when he ran for state attorney general in June.
     Los Angeles District Attorney Steve Cooley – who would prevail in the GOP primary for attorney general – sued Harman over the term “prosecutor.” A Sacramento judge sided with Cooley, ruling that because Harman had never tried a case he could not use prosecutor as part of his ballot designation. Harman was forced to remove the word prosecutor.
. . .
     The description of Harman’s brief participation in the Trial Attorney Program were made by Rackauckas last Wednesday during a sit-down with reporters to discuss why he fired then-assistant district attorney and one-time protege Todd Spitzer.
     In the midst of accusing Spitzer of campaigning for district attorney on county time, using county resources and county staff, Rackauckas, who endorsed Harman in the June primary, acknowledged Harman’s less than full participation in the Trial Attorney Program.
     Known as TAP, the program is designed to give private attorneys courtroom experience while saving the county money by using volunteers. Even though they are volunteers, the attorneys are sworn in as deputy district attorneys.
     Rackauckas said he agreed to take Harman into the eight-week program.
     Rackauckas swore Harman into the program Feb. 5. Harman had a “special schedule” because of his position as a state senator and the fact that he was campaigning for state attorney general. According to Rackauckas and court documents, Harman showed up for just a handful of days.
     He stopped coming altogether after the judge refused to allow him to use prosecutor designation on the ballot, according to Rackauckas and court documents.
     It wasn’t until Rackauckas ran in to Cooley at an event that he said he found out Harman was trying to use prosecutor as part of his ballot designation.
     “I was surprised,” Rackauckas said.

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