Hearing Set in Public Defender Case Amid Settlement Offer, Allegations of Delay Tact Defender411@cpda.org 20 Oct 2017 15:03 PDT

Hearing Set in Public Defender Case Amid
Settlement Offer, Allegations of Delay Tactics

POSTED BY THADEUS GREENSON ON FRI, OCT 20, 2017 AT 2:28 PM

The Humboldt County Superior Court has set a
hearing next month to determine whether embattled
Public Defender David Marcus meets the minimum
state qualifications to hold his job. But Patrik
Griego, the attorney who brought the lawsuit
challenging Marcus’ hire, is worried the county
is engaging in a pattern of "gamesmanship"
intended to delay the lawsuit until it becomes moot.

On Sept. 22, visiting Judge Marjorie Carter
denied a county request to dismiss the lawsuit,
which alleges Marcus didn't meet the minimum
state qualification for the position requiring
any candidate to have been a “practicing attorney
in all the courts of the state for at least the
year preceding” his or her hire.

Marcus, whom the board of supervisors hired Feb.
8, was living in Florida at the time of his hire
and had been primarily working as an insurance
adjuster for the year prior. During a deposition
in the case, Marcus testified that during that
year he also worked as a contract attorney for
the Walnut Creek law firm Cella, Lange and Cella,
which is owned by his good friend, but conceded
he didn’t appear in court or author any legal
pleadings during that span. He also also
testified that he had no contract with the law
firm and no records of his hours worked.

The county contends that California’s decades-old
statute simply requires Marcus to have been
licensed to practice law in California for the
year prior to his hire. Griego, on the other
hand, is arguing that the statute requires him to
have been a practicing attorney appearing in civil and criminal courts.

But Griego is growing concerned about the
plodding pace of the case, especially now that
the county has informed him it intends to depose
all of the plaintiffs in the case — Sarah
Caldwell, Eric Tschillard, Kate Green, Marilyn
Andrews and 13 others whose identities are
confidential — as well as almost all current and
former employees of the public defender’s office
who have worked underneath Marcus. A proposed
schedule County Counsel Jeff Blanck sent Griego
earlier this month seeks to spread 17 depositions
over almost four months, with the first occurring
Oct. 30 and the last on Feb. 22.

Griego told the Journal that he thinks the
depositions are a delay tactic, looking to slow
the case to make sure it’s still unresolved come
the Feb. 8 anniversary of Marcus' hire, at which
point the county can argue the case is moot
because Marcus will have been on the job a year.
At that point, even if the case is decided in
Griego’s favor, the board could simply reappoint Marcus.

“That’s what I think they’re trying to do,”
Griego said. “I think they know that he’s not
eligible and he wasn't qualified and, once they
realized the [motion for dismissal] didn’t work,
that’s their next tactic is to say, ‘After a year
he will be eligible, so let’s just hit the pause
button until we have someone who is eligible.’ …
It just makes them look bad. If they really
wanted to do these depositions, they could do them in a day or two.”

Griego said he anticipates little of value to the
case will come from the depositions as the case’s
plaintiffs will have little to say bout Marcus’
work history or qualifications for the post — the
matters at the heart of the lawsuit.

Blanck said he’s not sure what the petitioners
know, which is why he needs to depose them and
other witnesses in the case. And as to the
contention that this is a delay tactic, Blanck
said these processes typically take months,
pointing out that it took Griego several months
to schedule his deposition of Marcus.

“It would go a lot quicker if there weren’t 18
petitioners, but that was his choice,” Blanck
said, adding that he plans on requesting a
continuance in advance of the Nov. 13 hearing date.

The board of supervisors met in closed session
Oct. 10 to evaluate Marcus’ job performance but
took no action. Griego said that, in advance of
the meeting, he sent Blanck on offer that he
would waive any claim he has to the more than
$125,000 in attorneys fees and costs he’s
accumulated in the case — which the county could
be liable for if the suit is successful — if the
board “simply set aside its appointment” of
Marcus. The county never responded, he said,
adding that supervisors have also refused to meet
with public defender employees who have alleged Marcus is unfit for the job.

Blanck confirmed that Griego made the settlement
offer and that he took it to the board, but declined to comment further.

Source link:
https://www.northcoastjournal.com/NewsBlog/archives/2017/10/20/hearing-set-in-public-defender-case-amid-settlement-offer-allegations-of-delay-tactics