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Madrid v. Woodford, Master's Report on Code of Silence, Ca, Excessive Force, 2004

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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

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ALEJANDRO MADRID, et al.,
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)
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Plaintiffs
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v.
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JEANNE WOODFORD, et al.,
)
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Defendants
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______________________________)

NO. C90-3094-T.E.H.
SPECIAL MASTER’S FINAL
REPORT RE DEPARTMENT OF
CORRECTIONS “POST POWERS”
INVESTIGATIONS AND
EMPLOYEE DISCIPLINE

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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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I. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
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A. Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
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B. Report Organization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
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II. The Pelican Bay State Prison Use of Force Remedial Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

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III. The Special Master’s Hearings and Document Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

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IV. The Special Master’s Compliance with the
Order of Reference Filed January 23, 1995 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

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A. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

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B. Defendants’ Objections to the Draft Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

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C. Alameida’s Objections to the Draft Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12

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D. Moore’s Objections to the Draft Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

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E. Objections of Katie S. Hagen to the Draft Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

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F. The Amicus Filings of the CCPOA and the Union’s
Objections to the Draft Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

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G. The Special Master’s Investigations, Review of Reports,
and Attendance at State Hearings After the Filing of the Draft Report . . . . . . . . . . . 36

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V. Findings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
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A. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
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B. History of the Criminal Prosecutions Against Powers,
Garcia and Correctional Officer David Lewis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38

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C. Defendants’ Post Powers/Garcia Investigation and Discipline Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

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D. The Meeting Between Melinda Haag and CDC Officials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44

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E. The Substance of the Administrative Investigations of
Correctional Officers Jones, Matlock and Tuttle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45

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F. The Failure to Promptly Commence the Administrative Investigations . . . . . . . . . . . 50
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G. The Post Powers/Garcia Investigation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
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TABLE OF CONTENTS (continued)
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H. CCPOA Involvement At the Interview Stage
of the Post Powers Investigations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53

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I. The March 20, 2003 Meeting Between Ballard,
Barbara and Gaultney and the Decision to Refer
the Jones Investigation to the District Attorney of San Francisco . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54

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J. The Divergence of Testimony Concerning
the Events of March 24, 2003 to March 27, 2003 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57

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K. The Special Master’s Credibility Determination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69

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L. The Department of Corrections’ Failure to Comply
With the Post Powers Administrative Investigation
and Discipline Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76

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M. The Department of Corrections’ Failure to Comply
With Department Operating Procedures and OIS Policies
Concerning the Post Powers/Garcia Internal Affairs Investigations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
N. The Department of Corrections’ Failure to Comply
With the Court Ordered PBSP Use of Force Remedial Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77

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O. The OIS Failure to Conduct Adequate Post Powers/Garcia
Investigations is Indicative of Serious Systemic Problems
the Department of Corrections has Failed to Correct
for More Than Two Years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
P. The ELU Failure to Manage Adequate Post Powers/Garcia
Administrative Investigations and Discipline is Indicative of
Serious Systemic Problems With ELU Operations that
the Department of Corrections has Failed to Correct for Two Years . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85

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Q. The Problems Encountered During the Post Powers Investigations
are Representative of a Systemic Failure to Adequately Discipline
PBSP Correctional Officers by the Highest Level of CDC Officials . . . . . . . . . . . . 87

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R. The Directorate of the Department of Corrections Sanctioned
the Code of Silence by Their Decision to Shut-Down the
Post Powers/Garcia Administrative Investigations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98

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S. Summary of Factual Findings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
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TABLE OF CONTENTS (continued)
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VI. Discussion of Recommendations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
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A. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
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B. Defendants’ Initial Response to the Problems
Uncovered by the Post Powers Investigations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106

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C. Defendants’ Response to the Special Master’s Draft Report
Following the Election of Arnold Schwarzenegger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106

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D. Summary and Evaluation of the CDC’s Proposed
Post Powers Remedial Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107

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E. Barriers to the State’s Implementation of a Remedial Plan
that the Court Must Consider When Issuing its Remedial Orders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110

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F. Posting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117
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VII. Recommendations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119

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VIII. Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124
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Appendix 1: List of Witnesses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128

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Appendix 2: Exhibits Placed into Evidence During the Hearings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130

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Appendix 3: Exhibits Not Placed into Evidence During the Hearings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134

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Appendix 4: Documents Reviewed by the Special Master
but Not Attached as Exhibits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136

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Appendix 5: Glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141
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Proof of Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143

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I.

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INTRODUCTION

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A. Background.

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Pelican Bay State Prison (“PBSP”) Sergeant E.M. Powers (“Powers”) and Correctional

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Officer J. R. Garcia (“Garcia”) were charged in the United States District Court for the Northern

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District of California (case CR-00-0105-MJJ) with a conspiracy to violate civil rights (18 U.S.C.

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§ 241) and a substantive count of violations of civil rights (18 U.S.C. § 242). After a trial by

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jury, Powers and Garcia were each convicted of one count of conspiracy to violate civil rights

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and sentenced to prison. The cases are presently on appeal.
In October 2001, while the Powers/Garcia criminal case was pending, officials from the

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California Department of Corrections (“CDC”), including attorneys from the CDC Employment

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Law Unit (“ELU”), prepared a detailed written plan entitled “Follow-up Investigative Plan and

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Disciplinary Review Process” (“Post Powers Plan”) that called for investigations and discipline

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of those employees who had violated the PBSP use of force policy because of their involvement

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with the misconduct of Powers and/or Garcia. The Post Powers Plan was submitted to the

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Special Master. After several meetings and numerous revisions, it was approved by the Special

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Master.

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In June 2002, after the jury verdict in the Powers/Garcia criminal trial, various CDC

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officials, including the Department’s highest ranking investigators and an ELU attorney, met

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with Assistant United States Attorney Melinda Haag, one of the U.S. Attorneys who had

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prosecuted Powers and Garcia. Ms. Haag summarized the evidence presented at the criminal

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trial. The CDC officials at the meeting concluded that seven incidents of potential staff

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misconduct warranted further administrative review. During a follow-up meeting on June 8,

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2002, the decision was reached to pursue three of the seven cases further.

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The three cases will be referenced by the name of the inmate victim. The Perez case

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involved Sergeant Powers allegedly assaulting inmate Perez in the prison chapel hallway; the

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Black case involved Powers and other correctional officers allegedly assaulting inmate Black in a

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PBSP gymnasium; and the Chester case involved correctional staff allegedly planning and

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facilitating the stabbing of inmate Chester in a PBSP recreation yard. The underlying incidents,

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however, were not the focus of the CDC’s investigation. Pursuant to the Post Powers Plan

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submitted to the Special Master, the CDC intended to investigate whether the subject

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Correctional Officers: Jones, Matlock, and Tuttle, had committed perjury during their testimony

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regarding the Perez, Black, and Chester incidents at the Powers/Garcia criminal trial.

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The Special Master was informed of the CDC’s decision to pursue the three cases via a

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telephone conference with CDC officials in late June 2002. At that time, the cases were

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described as “solid.” The Special Master was provided an update concerning the investigations

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at a “60-day” meeting in Sacramento in January 2003, and was told that internal affairs

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investigations had commenced concerning the three cases. In late March 2003, however, the

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Special Master received a telephone call stating that the investigations had been completed and

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the decision had been made not to proceed with discipline.

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In his status report filed July 23, 2003, the Special Master informed the Court that the

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CDC had failed to comply with the use of force remedial plan and the Post Powers Plan. Rather

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than completing the investigations in six months, the investigations had not been assigned for

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four months. Instead of assigning a team of investigators, only one investigator was instructed to

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complete three complicated and serious investigations. No reports were prepared, no notes were

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retained, and only a fraction of the key witnesses on one of the three cases were interviewed. The

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remaining two cases were essentially ignored.

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The case that was investigated involved Correctional Officer Jones, who allegedly

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directed Correctional Officer Schembri to look away when Chester was to be stabbed. This case

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had been discussed with Robert Gaultney (“Gaultney”), Assistant Chief Counsel of the ELU on

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March 20, 2003. Gaultney instructed the investigator and lawyer assigned to the case to refer it to

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the San Francisco District Attorney. Thereafter, on March 24, 2003, the investigator informed

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the California Correctional Peace Officers Association (“CCPOA”) that the CDC had made the

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decision to “go criminal.” A few days later the investigator was ordered to appear at a meeting

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with the then Director of Corrections, Edward Alameida (“Alameida”). On March 27, 2003, one

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week after Gaultney made the decision to “go criminal,” all three investigations were shut down

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by Alameida.

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The Special Master subsequently received a “fact finding” letter prepared by the CDC’s

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Central Office to support the decision to close the investigations. Several statements within that

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letter were false. For example, concerning the incident where Officers Jones and Matlock are

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alleged to have covered up Sergeant Powers’ alleged assault of inmate Perez, the letter stated:

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“Perez’s credibility is questionable due to a history of mental illness.” As verified by Court

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expert Dr. Jeffrey L. Metzner, Mr. Perez does not have a mental illness or a history of mental

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illness. Concerning the allegation that Officer Jones allegedly told Officer Schembri to look

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away when inmate Chester was to be stabbed, the letter stated : “Officer Manzano was in the

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control booth during the alleged conversation between Schembri and Jones and stated he did not

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hear the alleged conversation.” CDC documents and the trial transcript, however, prove this

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statement to be inaccurate. Officer Manzano testified under a grant of immunity that he was in

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the control booth when Officer Jones spoke to Officer Schembri and he did hear a conversation

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about inmate Chester being in trouble, but heard nothing about Chester being stabbed. The

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Special Master also informed the Court in his status report that the CDC had missed the one year

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statute of limitations to file administrative charges against Officers Jones, Matlock, and Tuttle, if

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any administrative action was warranted.

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Based on these initial findings, the Special Master recommended a series of hearings

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concerning the Post Powers/Garcia investigations and the decision to shut down the three cases.

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At the Status Conference of July 28, 2003, the Court instructed the Special Master to proceed

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with those hearings and develop a full record and report.

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B. Report Organization.

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This report conforms to the format of prior final reports. It begins with an introduction,

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discusses the relevant remedial plan provisions, and summarizes the hearings and documents

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upon which the Special Master based his findings. The Special Master next addresses the

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objections that were submitted concerning his draft report, which issued in January 2004. The

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Special Master then sets forth his findings. A discussion concerning recommendations follows;

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thereafter, specific recommendations are set forth. The report ends with a brief conclusion. The

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appendices include a witness list, exhibit lists, and a glossary.

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II.

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THE PELICAN BAY STATE PRISON USE OF FORCE REMEDIAL PLAN

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The Court approved use of force remedial plan at PBSP mandate that certain actions take

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place during an investigation. For example, misconduct that includes false, incomplete, evasive

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reporting of the use of force violates the remedial plan, as does a lack of cooperation by staff

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during an abuse of force investigation. All managers and supervisors involved with PBSP

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investigations and discipline have the responsibility to investigate incidents of abuse of force,

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including incidents where correctional officers cover-up, withhold, or act in concert with others

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to prohibit factual information from being reported as required by the Use of Force Policy.

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Managers also must document the use of force and document investigation findings.

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Specifically:

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It shall be the responsibility of each supervisor and manager to review any
employee misconduct related to the use of force and take appropriate action in
compliance with this policy and procedure.

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See, PBSP Use of Force Disciplinary Policy Section II.D (9/30/02)

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. . . when an employee violates the below tenets of the Use of Force Policy, the
adverse action process shall be initiated at a level above an official reprimand.

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2. Any attempt to cover up or withhold any information relative to staff
misconduct in any use of force.

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3. Any involvement in a coordinated effort with other staff to prohibit factual
information from being reported as required in the Use of Force Policy.

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See, Use of Force Disciplinary Procedure Section V.C. 2-3 (9/30/02)
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At the conclusion of the investigation, the investigator shall provide a detailed
report of the investigation on a CDC Form 989A and B, Internal Affairs
Investigation Report. The CDC Form 989A and B shall be filled out completely
and contain the facts and evidence discovered by the investigator.

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See, Use of Force Investigation Policy and Procedure Section VIII.B.3 (9/20/00)
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The findings of each allegation shall be noted as to whether the inquiry
supports or refutes the allegation(s). The investigator shall arrive at one of the
following findings identified in Section VII, Subsection B, (5), (b), of this
procedure.

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See, Use of Force Investigation Policy and Procedure Section VIII.B.4 (9/20/00)

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A Court approved use of force policy and investigation policy has been in place at PBSP

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since 1996. Not surprisingly, these policies have been modified over time; however, essential

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provisions have remained consistent. The provisions above were in place at the time of the

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CDC’s Post Powers administrative investigations.

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The CDC officials who attended the meeting in the Director’s Office on March 27, 2003

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were well aware of the existence of these orders. For example, the Special Master met with

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Alameida in his office at CDC Headquarters shortly after Alameida’s appointment as Director.

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At that time, the Special Master provided Alameida with a verbal and written summary of the

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status of remedial plan efforts, emphasizing that monitoring was still necessary concerning

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adverse action discipline cases. Alameida also attended several “60-day” meetings in

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Sacramento with the Special Master and counsel for the parties where investigation and

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employee discipline cases were discussed.

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Thomas Moore (“Moore”), the Deputy Director of the Office of Investigative Services

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(“OIS”), the highest level investigator in the Department of Corrections, had been assigned to

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investigate PBSP employee misconduct cases prior to his appointment as Deputy Director. He

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acquired, during those investigations, specific knowledge of the PBSP use of force remedial plan.

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Moore also attended various 60-day meetings in Sacramento. Kathy Kinser (“Kinser”), Chief

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Deputy Director, had worked with the Special Master on remedial plan revisions, including

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revisions pertaining to use of force policy modifications concerning “Skelly” hearing procedures.

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Likewise Dennis Beaty (“Beaty”), Staff Counsel and retired annuitant Brian Parry (“Parry”)

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(former acting Deputy Director of OIS) had knowledge of, and prior involvement with,

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investigations and discipline of PBSP inmates based on the Court approved use of force remedial

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plan.

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III.

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THE SPECIAL MASTER’S HEARINGS AND DOCUMENT REQUESTS

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The Special Master conducted five days of hearings concerning the Post Powers/Garcia

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administrative investigations prior to issuing his draft report. The dates of the hearings,

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witnesses, and references to the transcript are set forth in Appendix 1. The transcripts for all

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hearings have been lodged with the Court, as were the exhibits placed in evidence during those

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hearings. The page numbers for the transcripts are sequential; therefore, citations to testimony

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from the hearings will reference the name of the witness, followed by “Tr.” and the page of the

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transcript where that testimony is found.

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Exhibits placed into evidence during the hearings are listed in Appendix 2. The Special

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Master also refers to additional exhibits in this report, documents provided by the Department of

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Corrections and reports from Court expert Dr. Patrick Maher. These exhibits are listed in

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Appendix 3. Finally, the Special Master also reviewed and considered a number of documents

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provided by the Department of Corrections which are not referenced in this report. Those

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documents are listed in Appendix 4. Appendix 5 is a glossary of Department of Corrections

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acronyms used in the report.

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The exhibits listed in Appendices 2-3 are filed with the Court concurrently with the filing
of this report. Exhibit 29, an Office of the Inspector General (“OIG”) report concerning

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problems with the OIS, was to be filed under seal. Its contents, however, have been the subject

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of public hearings and other proceedings to a degree that the report is no longer confidential.

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Therefore, Exhibit 29 is not filed under seal.

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The Special Master held numerous discussions with counsel during the hearing process.

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He allowed counsel for the parties to examine and cross-examine witnesses. The Special Master

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also allowed the parties the opportunity to call their own witnesses during the hearings. For

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example, defendants presented the testimony of Michael Miller and David Tristan (“Tristan”).

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In addition, the parties were provided the opportunity to submit documentary evidence in

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addition to documents placed in evidence by the Special Master. For example, defendants

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submitted into evidence exhibits 25 and 32. The parties were also offered the opportunity to

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argue at the final hearing; however, both plaintiffs and defendants declined the offer.

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In addition to the hearings described above, the Special Master issued a draft report in

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January 2004 and thereafter held three additional hearings to allow for objections and comments

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to that report. He met and conferred with the Youth and Adult Correctional Agency (“YACA”)

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and CDC representatives on numerous occasions concerning proposed remedial plans, and also

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attended three days of California State Senate hearings that addressed correctional officer

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misconduct, the code of silence, and problems with the Memorandum of Understanding

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(“MOU”) between the CDC and the CCPOA.

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IV.

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THE SPECIAL MASTER’S COMPLIANCE WITH THE ORDER OF

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REFERENCE FILED JANUARY 23, 1995

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A. Introduction.

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The Special Master served a draft version of this report on the parties on January 15,

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2004. A formal hearing concerning the findings of fact and the Special Master’s first, second,

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and fourth recommendations was held at 9:00 a.m. Friday, February 27, 2004. A second hearing

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was conducted to discuss the parties’ objections to the Special Master’s third recommendation at

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1:00 p.m. the same day.
Plaintiffs filed a letter with the Court on February 20, 2004 that raised no objections

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concerning the Special Master’s factual findings (CR 1720). Defendants raised two limited fact

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finding objections and three objections relating to systemic recommendations in the responsive

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pleading they filed on February 20, 2004 (CR 1721). Defendants’ objections are discussed in

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subsection B. below.

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Former Director of Corrections Edward Alameida, represented by Mildred O’Linn and

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David Bancroft, raised extensive factual and legal objections to the draft report’s findings of fact

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and the Special Master’s first and second recommendations in an Objection filed with the Court

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on March 3, 2004 (CR 1726). According to defendants, after the Special Master filed his draft

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report the Office of the Attorney General determined that a conflict precluded their representing

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Alameida concerning the Special Master’s draft recommendations. The CDC determined,

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however, that it should pay for conflict counsel for the former Director. Alameida’s attorneys

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requested and were granted a continuance to prepare their objections. They argued their

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objections at a hearing on February 27, 2004 (the transcript for this hearing has been lodged with

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the Court). Alameida’s objections are discussed in subsection C. below.

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Former Deputy Director of OIS Thomas Moore failed to file timely objections to the draft

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report. Similar to Alameida, the Attorney General declared a conflict concerning Moore’s legal

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representation. Unlike Alameida, however, Moore was not provided with a conflict attorney by

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the Department of Corrections. On March 3, 2004 the Special Master was contacted by Paul

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Goyette, who had been retained by Moore. Mr. Goyette requested a continuance, which was

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granted. In total, the Special Master allowed Mr. Goyette four additional weeks to file written

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objections for Thomas Moore.

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Moore’s objections to the draft report were filed on April 12, 2004 (CR 1734). A third

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hearing was held on May 7, 2004 concerning Moore’s objections (the transcript for this hearing

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has been lodged with the Court). See subsection D., below.

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The Special Master was also contacted by Katie S. Hagen, Assistant Deputy Director of

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the CDC’s Office of Selection and Standards. Ms. Hagen expressed concern about the

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completeness and accuracy of the Special Master’s draft findings re the “11 hour rule” limitation

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concerning background checks for correctional officer applicants. Ms. Hagen’s concerns are

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addressed in subsection E. below

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The CCPOA filed the Declaration of Ronald Yank (with attachments), and a pleading

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entitled the California Correctional Peace Officer Association Points and Authorities (with

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attachments) on February 20, 2004. Mr. Yank filed a second Declaration Correcting Inadvertent

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Errors on February 23, 2004 (see CR 1719, 1722). In addition, the CCPOA provided the Special

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Master with a February 20, 2004 letter from Mr. Yank (Exhibit 61). After an initial evaluation of

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the filings, the Special Master informed the CCPOA that he would treat the filings as an amicus

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brief and denied the CCPOA’s request to argue at the hearing of February 27, 2004 (Exhibit 62).

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The issues raised by the CCPOA are discussed in subsection F. below.

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B. Defendants’ Objections to the Draft Report.

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Defendants raise two types of objections: (1) objections to findings of fact and (2)

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objections to recommendations to the Court.
1. Objections to Findings of Fact: Defendants object to the Special Master’s

17
18

finding at paragraph “O” of page 46 of his draft report, that: the OIS failure to conduct adequate

19

Post Powers/Garcia investigations is indicative of serious systemic problems the Department of

20

Corrections has failed to correct for more than two years. Defendants propose that the Special

21

Master replace the word “is” with “may be,” pointing out that the OIS conducts thousands of

22

investigations.

23

The Special Master disagrees with defendants’ objection. As explained below, the

24

problems with the Post Powers investigations are identical to the systemic shortfalls of OIS

25

operations that have been identified by the OIG, problems that the CDC did not begin to correct

26

until after the Special Master begin his formal hearings. All of the testimony, including that of

27
28

9

1

Moore and the Agent in Charge of the Northern Region of OIS, Sandi Grout, indicate that the

2

problems that arose concerning these investigations are indicative of problems that have arisen in

3

many other cases. The fact that many other investigations are processed by OIS does not change

4

this fact. Furthermore, defendants’ objection is not entirely accurate. OIS does not process

5

“thousands” of investigations that involve the abuse of prisoners or ethical misconduct by

6

correctional officers.

7

Defendants also object to the Special Master’s finding that Robert Gaultney was not

8

entirely truthful in his testimony, as demonstrated by an e-mail issued by him (draft report at

9

page 22 and Exhibit 54). Defendants’ contention that Mr. Gaultney was not shown the damaging

10

exhibit during his testimony is correct. Therefore, the Special Master has modified this section

11

of his final report.

12
13
14
15
16
17

2. Objections to Recommendations.
a. Defendants object to the Special Master’s draft recommendation re civil contempt.
The draft report recommended the following:
The Court should issue an Order to Show Cause re Civil Contempt for defendant
Director of the Department of Corrections for violations of the Court approved
Use of Force Discipline Remedial Policy, Use of Force Disciplinary Procedure,
and the Use of Force Investigation Policy and Procedure. To purge this
contempt, defendants should be ordered to develop and implement in a timely
manner a comprehensive remedial plan . . .

18
19

Defendants raise two objections. First, defendants contend that the Special Master cannot

20

recommend civil contempt and that the evidence needed to prove disobedience to a specific and

21

definite court order is not shown in the report. The Special Master disagrees.

22

To begin, the Special Master is not “bringing” a contempt motion, he is recommending

23

that the Court consider civil contempt as a remedy to purge the prior violations of its order. As

24

explained in the finding below, undisputed evidence exists concerning violations of the Court’s

25

orders (although CDC officials attempted to characterize their misconduct as gross incompetence

26

and negligence rather than deliberate actions). These violations are affirmed in reports issued by

27
28

10

1

the OIG. Thus, there is no reason to reconsider the civil contempt recommendation based on

2

defendants’ first argument.

3

Defendants, however, emphasize that the Department of Corrections and other State

4

agencies are now actively engaged in the development of a remedial plan that addresses the

5

concerns of this report. Defendants stress in their objections that “an Order to Show Cause re:

6

Civil Contempt is not required to compel Defendants to produce a remedial plan or implement

7

one.” The Special Master agrees. As explained in Section VI, Discussion of Recommendations,

8

has a new Governor, a new Secretary of the Youth and Adult Correctional Agency, and a new

9

Director of Corrections. Given these changes, given the renewed effort by the CDC’s Central

10

Office to deal with problems of outside influence, bad investigations, and inadequate correctional

11

officer discipline, the Special Master has withdrawn his recommendation re civil contempt.

12

b. Defendants also express concern about the generalized language used in the Special

13

Master’s draft recommendation re Court monitoring. Specifically, defendants seek assurance

14

that monitoring by the Special Master will be limited to use of force cases and will not extend to

15

all internal affairs investigations (for example, investigations of correctional officer misconduct

16

outside the prison such as spouse abuse, theft, driving under the influence, etc.). The Special

17

Master agrees with this objection. The monitoring recommendations are limited to the abuse of

18

force and ethical misconduct (including the code of silence).

19

c. Defendants also contend that monitoring should be limited to “Pelican Bay and CDC

20

Headquarters” and not extend to other prisons. In response, the Special Master notes that

21

evidence is already before the Court, for example a report prepared by the OIG concerning

22

adverse action discipline, which proves that the employee discipline problems identified at PBSP

23

exist at other CDC prisons. The evidence gathered in the Post Powers investigation demonstrates

24

that the investigation shortfalls of OIS adversely impact on all CDC institutions. Concerning

25

almost every aspect of the problems described in this report, the shortfalls emanate from the

26

CDC’s Central Office in Sacramento, which serves all prisons. Likewise, the OIS and the ELU

27
28

11

1

serve all prisons. In similar fashion, the policies at issue in the Post Powers investigation pertain

2

to all prisons. Finally, the Senate hearings attended by the Special Master and referenced in this

3

report produced testimony about problems with investigations, discipline, and the code of silence

4

at numerous other CDC prisons.

5

The Special Master believes, therefore, that an appropriate and balanced monitoring

6

program must be developed that considers the limitations of this litigation and the need to correct

7

and monitor the correction of the very serious systemic problems that presently exist. As

8

mentioned above, the problems discovered during the Post Powers investigation involve the

9

officials, policies, and practices of the CDC’s Central Office headquarters in Sacramento. Thus,

10

minimally adequate monitoring must include Central Office processes, including OIS reviews of

11

use of force cases and correctional officer integrity cases at other prisons.

12

On February 25, 2004 the Special Master submitted a five page letter to counsel that

13

addressed the scope of monitoring and set forth proposed monitoring provisions for his final

14

report. A meeting was held on February 27, 2004 to discuss the issue. Neither party has raised

15

objections to the monitoring provisions recommended by the Special Master. The Special

16

Master incorporates those provisions in the monitoring recommendations in this report. Given

17

the cooperation between the parties concerning the Post Powers remedial efforts, the Special

18

Master is confident that the issue of monitoring can be handled in a manner that takes into

19

account jurisdictional limitations as well as the desire by all parties to solve the problems of

20

ineffective investigations and ensure employee discipline in an adequate, timely, and cost

21

effective manner.

22

C. Alameida’s Objections to the Draft Report.

23

Edward Alameida’s Amended Notice of Lodging of Amended Objections of Edward

24

Alameida to Special Master’s Draft Report with Amended Appendices A Through C Filed

25

Concurrently and Attached Thereto can be divided into two distinct sets of objections (see CR

26

1726). Pages 1 through 152 consists of specific objections to the draft report itself, including

27
28

12

1

proposed alternative language to many portions of the Special Master’s report. The amended

2

appendices, 36 pages in length, set forth Alameida’s legal contentions concerning the draft

3

report.

4
5

1. Alameida Objections to the Format and Factual Content of the Draft Report.
The Special Master has reviewed Alameida’s objection concerning the content and format

6

of the draft report. He also requested that Dr. Patrick Maher perform an independent evaluation

7

of each factual objection.

8

In essence, Alameida proposes to substitute his credibility determinations for those of the

9

Special Master, and to ignore a considerable amount of relevant information, including, for

10

example, Officer Lewis’ shooting of an unarmed Pelican Bay inmate. For the most part, the

11

Special Master disagrees with Alameida’s proposed modifications to the draft report. Many

12

objections misinterpret the testimony and the documents presented at the hearings; for example,

13

several objections rely only upon a specific sentence or one small part of a transcript and ignore

14

the rest of the evidence accumulated by the Special Master. Other objections are based on a

15

fundamental misunderstanding of the role of the Special Master, assuming inaccurately that the

16

Special Master must ignore personal observations, his discussions with the parties, and the long

17

history of this case. Alameida’s proposed revisions to the report also seek to discount or ignore

18

the testimony of Assistant United States Attorney Melinda Haag, and to substitute Ms. Haag’s

19

description of what was proven at the trial with selected portions of the transcripts of Officer

20

Jones, Matlock, and Tuttle, the very officers who were under investigation by the Department of

21

Corrections until Alameida closed the cases. Finally, Alameida attempts to interpret the evidence

22

concerning what took place in his office on March 27, 2003, the day that the Post Powers

23

investigations were shut down, as nothing more than a simple error, caused in part by his

24

subordinates. This interpretation of the facts is not supported by the evidence. Therefore, the

25

Special Master rejects the great majority of the modifications and findings proposed by Alameida

26

and his attorneys.

27
28

13

1

Each objection to the draft report was, however, carefully considered. Working with Dr.

2

Maher, the Special Master made forty-three changes to the text of this final report based on

3

modifications proposed by Alameida.

4

2. Alameida’s Legal Objections to the Draft Report.

5

a. Jurisdictional/Due Process Objections (Appendix pgs. 21-27)

6

Alameida raises two objections which question the Special Master’s authority to conduct

7

an investigation into why the Post Powers investigations were shut down by the Director of

8

Corrections.

9

First, Alameida argues that the Special Master exceeded his authority by taking testimony

10

at the hearings to determine why the defendants violated the Court’s use of force investigation

11

orders, who was responsible for the violation, and whether the violation was a deliberate effort.

12

Essentially, Alameida contends that the evidence gathered by the Special Master should be

13

limited to determining whether an act of non-compliance with a Court order has taken place

14

(Appendix pg. 22, lines 16-20). Once non-compliance has been demonstrated, Alameida argues,

15

the Special Master should cease any investigation into the causes of the non-compliance. The

16

Special Master disagrees. A full record and report about the closure of the Post Powers

17

investigations required a determination into why the investigations were closed, the

18

circumstances under which they were closed, and who was responsible for the closures. Indeed,

19

a report that informed the Court of nothing more than a finding of a violation of Federal orders,

20

without explaining the scope of the violation and identifying the CDC officials responsible,

21

would be useless. Alameida’s proposed limitations on the Special Master’s authority serves only

22

to encourage future instances of official misconduct.

23

Second, Alameida disputes the Special Master’s draft findings and recommendations by

24

attempting to characterize the Special Master’s hearings as a “critical stage” of a Federal Court

25

criminal proceeding (Appendix pgs. 23-26). The characterization is inaccurate. Alameida also

26

misstates the record.

27
28

14

1

The Special Master’s requests for documents and the hearings under oath were conducted

2

for to assemble a full record and report concerning what had transpired concerning the closure of

3

the Post Powers investigations. The defendants in this case, including Alameida, did not provide

4

this information voluntarily. The hearings were not conducted to determine whether the Director

5

of Corrections should be charged with criminal contempt; indeed, at the time the Post Powers

6

hearing began, the Special Master did not know the true facts concerning why the investigations

7

had been shut down. In fact, the full scope of the violations of Court orders was uncovered only

8

because of the hearings. As soon as an adequate record was obtained, however, the Special

9

Master ceased his evidence gathering and issued a draft report, as required by the Order of

10

Reference. Contrary to Alameida’s assertions, no critical phase of a criminal proceeding has

11

been conducted by the Special Master.

12

The claim that “[t]he Special Master’s hearings were conducted without notice to Mr.

13

Alameda that he was a criminal target” (Appendix pg. 25, line 6-7) is entirely false. Early in the

14

Post Powers investigative process, defendants proposed, as an alternative to formal hearings, an

15

“informal” meeting between CDC officials, the Special Master, and counsel. The Special Master

16

informed both Scott Mather, the Deputy Attorney General representing Alameida, and Kathy

17

Keeshen, Deputy Director of the CDC’s Legal Affairs Division, that he did not know what the

18

evidence might reveal, and therefore was not inclined to obtain “informal” information. Both

19

attorneys understood that evidence of willful misconduct might be uncovered, and both discussed

20

the issue of a conflict of interest with the Special Master. Based on this discussion, the one

21

informal meeting that was held did not include Alameida.

22

Furthermore, defendants, including Alameida, did not raise objections during the hearings

23

complaining that the Special Master was intruding upon criminal due process rights. No one

24

asserted at any time, including Alameida on the day he testified, that the Special Master was

25

embarking on a critical phase of a criminal prosecution. It should also be noted that Alameida

26

was accompanied by conflict counsel Mildred O’Linn, the same conflict attorney who represents

27
28

15

1

him now, when he appeared to testify under oath on November 21, 2003. Alameida and his

2

attorneys made the conscious decision to participate in the Post Powers hearing process. His

3

objections arose only after the Special Master issued his draft report.

4

b. Objections Relating to the Manner by Which the Special Master has Provided

5

Information to the Court.

6
7
8
9
10
11

Alameida also raises two objections to the manner in which the Special Master has
provided information to the Court.
First, Alameida objects to the Special Master’s reference to an unrecorded conversation
between he and the Special Master (Appendix pg. 28). To some degree, this and related
objections by Alameida are based on a misunderstanding of the role of the Special Master.
The Special Master functions as the eyes and ears of the Court when performing his

12

monitoring duties. As reported below, the Special Master had a conversation with Alameida

13

wherein the Director made statements that are inconsistent with his testimony under oath. The

14

Special Master has every obligation to bring this conflict to the Court’s attention, as well as his

15

concerns about Alameida’s credibility. The great majority of monitoring information gathered by

16

the Special Master is obtained through prison inspections, the review of documents, meetings

17

that are not recorded, and discussions with inmates and PBSP staff that are also not recorded.

18

The Order of Reference specifically provides for the Special Master going on-site at the prison

19

and gathering information through informal discussion. The Special Master’s investigation of

20

the Post Powers investigation involved both formal and informal evidence gathering. It is

21

entirely consistent with his past practices. To summarize, there is no “recorded testimony only”

22

limitation on the Special Master’s ability to inform the Court of compliance problems.

23

Second, Alameida objects to the Special Master attaching Exhibits 45 - 48 prepared by

24

the Court’s use of force expert, Dr. Patrick Maher to this report concerning credibility

25

assessments. (see Appendix at pgs. 29-31). The Special Master rejects this credibility related

26

objection. Alameida and his appointed “Directorate” (Alameida, Kinser and Tristan) made

27
28

16

1

credibility assessments that should be brought to the Court’s attention. In fact, Alameida and the

2

Directorate shut down the Post Powers investigations following a thirty to forty minute meeting

3

on March 27, 2003, based in part, according to his testimony, on credibility assessments of the

4

victims and witnesses to the alleged staff assaults on inmates. The Directorate’s credibility

5

determinations are set forth in the letter subsequently sent to the Special Master (Exhibit 19).

6

Given these facts, the Court should be provided with expert reports that explain the nature

7

and scope of each incident under investigation, and include an assessment of witness testimony.

8

Dr. Maher is not offering an opinion about the credibility of a witness in a criminal case that is

9

being heard by a jury. He is providing the Court with compliance related information relative to

10

the credibility of officer statements. The opinions are intended to assist the Court to determine

11

whether the Post Powers cases were closed for a legitimate reason, or were closed because of

12

outside influences. The Court, of course, has the discretion to assign a weight to Dr. Maher’s

13

opinions; however, there is no reason to exclude them entirely, especially given the excuses

14

offered for the closure of the Post Powers investigations by Alameida, Kinser, and Tristan.

15

Likewise, Dr. Maher’s detailed explanation of the operation of the code of silence, and

16

the dynamics of the meeting in Alameida’s conference room on March 27, 2003 (Exhibit 50) is

17

also relevant. As explained in detail below, Alameida, Kinser, and Tristan characterize, in their

18

testimony, the meeting as being cordial and open, where everyone was provided ample

19

opportunity to give their real opinion. Employment Law Unit attorney Joseph Barbara

20

(“Barbara”), Parry, and OIS investigator Robert Ballard (“Ballard”) testify to a different meeting

21

environment. To the degree Exhibit 50 provides relevant information concerning this crucial

22

event, it should be considered by the Court, which can give it whatever weight it deems

23

appropriate.

24
25
26
27
28

17

1

c. Objections Relating to Criminal Contempt.

2

Alameida raises three objections that presume criminal contempt charges will be filed

3

against him. While these objections are premature, the Special Master sets forth a brief response

4

below.

5

i. Alameida’s Argument That the PBSP Use of Force Investigation Policy

6

was not adopted by the Court’s June 21, 2000 Order (Appendix pg. 2).

7

Alameida argues that the Court’s Order of June 21, 2000 did not adopt the PBSP

8

modified Use of Force Investigation Plan. Therefore, Alameida contends, he has not violated a

9

Court order even if he violated the PBSP Use of Force Investigation Policy. The Special Master

10

notes that this objection is limited to the Recommendations 1. b. & 1.c. The other two contempt

11

recommendations (Recommendation 1.a. & 1.d.) pertain to violations of the Use of Force

12

Discipline Policy. Alameida has not raised this objection relative to the Use of Force

13

Disciplinary Policy.

14

The Special Master disagrees with Alameida’s limited objection for two reasons. First,

15

the Special Master believes that the Order of June 21, 2000 did adequately adopt the revised

16

PBSP policy. Second, even if the Order of June 21, 2000 did not adopt the revised Use of Force

17

Investigation Policy, the provisions of the revised policy that were violated had been adopted by

18

the Court in prior orders. For example, the Order Re Use of Force Investigation Policies filed

19

April 24. 1998 (Exhibit 24, placed into evidence by defendants) proves that the Court adopted

20

DOM section 31140 and the Revised Use of Force Disciplinary Policy revised March 11, 1998.

21

The provisions in the DOM and revised policy are almost identical to the provisions set forth in

22

the 2000 revised PBSP Policy. In fact, since the Court adopted the DOM, Alameida’s decision

23

not to follow DOM requirements for closing out investigations during the meeting of March 27,

24

2003 provide the basis for another violation of Court orders.

25
26
27
28

18

1

For example, DOM section 31140.14 requires:

2

6

“Upon completion of each Category II internal affairs investigation the special
agent shall forward the completed investigation and all supporting documents,
including investigative notes and case file documents to the regional special agent
in charge via the senior special agent and legal counsel. The completed
investigation shall include all relevant information supporting or refuting the
allegations. The investigation shall contain the findings of fact. Upon approval of
the completed investigation the regional special agent in charge shall forward a
complete copy, including all original exhibits, investigative notes, and case file
documents to the hiring authority who requested the investigation.”

7

As the facts below demonstrate, Alameida and Moore shut down the investigation, no

3
4
5

8
9
10
11

final report was completed, and the case was never referred to PBSP Warden Joe McGrath.
ii. Alameida’s Argument That There is no Evidence he had Knowledge of
the Court’s Order (Appendix pg. 3).
As mentioned above, based on prior meetings with Alameida and Moore, the Special

12

Master is convinced that both of these high level CDC officials had specific knowledge of the

13

Court’s orders re investigations and employee discipline. Furthermore, in early 2002, Alameida

14

was personally involved in a problem involving the CDC/CCPOA MOU violating a provision of

15

the use of force discipline policy relative to “Skelly” hearing requirements. The Special Master

16

held three meetings concerning this problem; the first in Federal Court in Sacramento, the second

17

at the Office of the Attorney General in San Francisco, and the third in Federal Court in San

18

Francisco. Alameida attended both of the San Francisco meetings. Use of force investigations,

19

including how the hiring authority manages investigations, and numerous details of the discipline

20

policy were discussed for several hours at each meeting. Alameida was also personally involved

21

in proposing changes to the CDC “Skelly” hearing procedures based on his concern about the

22

impact of the Court orders on the MOU and the CDC’s DOM. There is no question that the

23

former Director had detailed knowledge of both the PBSP’s discipline and investigation policies

24

long before the meeting in his office on March 27, 2003.

25
26

Finally, as explained below, Alameida, Moore, Kinser, Beaty, and Parry testified they
were aware of the importance of the Post Powers investigations relative to Madrid compliance;

27
28

19

1

indeed, there is no other explanation for the Director of Corrections to hold a meeting on March

2

27, 2003 about an use of force investigation concerning PBSP staff.

3

iii. Alameida’s Argument that the PBSP Use of Force Investigation Policy

4

Did Not Apply to him (Appendix pgs. 4-6).

5

Alameida also contends that the PBSP remedial plan applies only to PBSP, citing specific

6

provisions of the Use of Force policy. The Special Master disagrees. Alameida was a named

7

defendant in the Madrid litigation. As the Director of Corrections he was subject to all remedial

8

orders. Furthermore, Alameida, at the meeting of March 27, 2003, made the decision to close

9

down the Post Powers investigation. He essentially by-passed PBSP and the proper hiring

10

authority, Warden Joe McGrath. Alameida guaranteed that the Court’s orders pertaining to

11

Pelican Bay State Prison would not be enforced by preventing the Post Powers cases from ever

12

reaching Pelican Bay. Under these circumstances, the remedial orders, in the opinion of the

13

Special Master, apply to the Director of Corrections.

14

The Special Master notes that there is a common thread running through certain of

15

Alameida’s objections that calls for discussion. Alameida argues that not all of the specific facts

16

necessary to prove each and every element of criminal contempt have been proven at the Post

17

Powers hearings. The hearings, however, were for the purpose of developing a record and report

18

of what caused the Post Powers investigations to be closed down. The hearings were not

19

conducted to obtain evidence of every element of a willful violation of the Court’s orders by

20

CDC officials. To the contrary, when the Special Master concluded his review and made his

21

initial determination to recommend that the Court consider an Order to Show Cause (“OSC”) re

22

contempt, he determined that it would not be appropriate to conduct further hearings into the

23

requirement of criminal contempt. Rather, the consideration of these issues should be left to the

24

Court to make. Furthermore, if the contempt process begins, it should take place before an

25

Article III Judge, and not before the Special Master.

26
27
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1
2

d. Evidentiary Objections.
Alameida also raises four evidentiary objections.
i. Documents missing from record (Appendix pg. 29).

3
4

In an excess of caution, the Special Master provided the parties with a list of the

5

documents that he reviewed during the Post Powers investigation process but did not attach to his

6

report (see Appendix 4). Alameida complains that he “has not been provided with copies of

7

those documents.” The objection is without merit. The documents listed in Appendix 4 were

8

obtained from the Department of Corrections. At the time the documents were gathered,

9

Alameida was the Director of Corrections. Alameida’s attorneys had copies of the documents

10

listed in Appendix 4; after all, CDC counsel provided the documents to the Special Master.

11

There appears to be a failure to communicate between Alameida’s conflict attorney and counsel

12

for the CDC, a problem that was not created by the Special Master.

13

ii. Non testifying witnesses not excluded during hearing (Appendix pg.

14

31).

15

Alameida complains that non testifying witnesses were not excluded during the Post

16

Powers hearings. Defendants, however, did not seek exclusion. Likewise, Alameida did not

17

request exclusion, including the day he testified accompanied by Ms. O’Linn, his conflict

18

attorney.

19
20

iii. Attorney/client privilege (Appendix pgs. 31-33).
On December 8, 2003, several weeks after Alameida had retained conflict counsel, the

21

Special Master requested a number of documents from defendants that related to statements

22

made by Alameida during his testimony on November 21, 2003. Some of the documents were

23

requested to test the veracity of Exhibit 32 (a note from Alameida’s secretary and copies of

24

Alameida’s calendar pertaining to the meeting of March 27, 2003) which Alameida’s attorneys

25

submitted as evidence, without prior notice, at the hearing of November 21, 2003. Other

26

requested documents related to the decision to pay for Correctional Officer David Lewis’

27
28

21

1
2

criminal defense.
On January 2, 2004 defendants produced both a privilege log and the requested

3

documents to the Special Master and plaintiffs’ counsel. When the hearings resumed on January

4

9, 2004 the Special Master questioned witness Peter Jensen about the documents that had been

5

produced. The Special Master then placed into evidence exhibits 33 through 38, including a

6

legal opinion from Legal Affairs attorney Mark Mustybrook (Exhibit 38). (Tr. 910-917). No

7

objections were raised. Thereafter, Mr. Specter questioned Mr. Jensen about the exhibits. (Tr.

8

920-926). Again, no objections were raised. Following Mr. Specter’s questions, Counsel for

9

defendants requested a brief recess. A five minute recess was granted, which took eight minutes.

10

(Tr. 930). Deputy Attorney Generals and lawyers from the CDC’s Legal Affairs Unit were

11

involved in the recess discussion. Following the recess, no objections were raised concerning the

12

documents. Thereafter, the Special Master heard testimony from Joe Reynoso and Frank King.

13

Another recess was granted prior to the conclusion of the day’s testimony. After that

14

recess, defendants informed the Special Master that the documents which had been placed into

15

evidence were inadvertently provided, apparently due to a failure to communicate between the

16

Legal Affairs Unit and the Attorney General. According to the statements of defense counsel,

17

defendants were unaware of the delivery of the documents because of the failure by a Legal

18

Affairs attorney to review the pleadings submitted to the Special Master and plaintiffs by the

19

Attorney General. No attorney client objection was raised at that time. Defendants did ask the

20

Special Master to file the documents under seal. (Tr. 951). The Special Master denied this

21

request and instructed defendants to file objections with the Court. (Tr. 956). Defendants did

22

not, and have not, filed such objections.

23

As explained above, the documents were requested by the Special Master based on the

24

testimony of Alameida himself. Both the Attorney General and conflict counsel were aware of

25

this fact. The documents in question were provided to the Special Master and plaintiffs after

26

review by the Attorney General. According to the testimony of the attorneys representing

27
28

22

1

Alameida, the disclosure was because a Legal Affairs attorney assigned to the Madrid case failed

2

to review the Attorney General’s submission. Thereafter, however, defendants made no effort to

3

correct the allegedly erroneous submission. For example, there was no effort to correct the

4

disclosure between the date the documents were provided and the January 9, 2004 hearing. (Tr.

5

952-956). Furthermore, Alameida was represented by counsel at the hearing of January 9, 2004;

6

indeed, there were numerous lawyers from both the Attorney General’s Office and CDC Legal

7

Affairs in the courtroom. Nevertheless, those attorneys failed to raise attorney client privilege

8

objections at that time.

9

The record is not in dispute. Neither Alameida nor his attorneys made reasonable efforts

10

to protect or to preserve the privilege. The documents were made public at the hearing, there was

11

extensive testimony on the record about the documents, and the privilege has been waived.

12

iv. Lewis Legal Fee Testimony and Contact with CCPOA Leaders

13

(Appendix pgs. 35-36).

14

Finally, Alameida argues, “[a]ll references to the David Lewis case should be struck,”

15

contending that “[t]he Lewis prosecution had nothing to do with the Powers/Garcia case.” This

16

statement is simply wrong. Before he was fired from the CDC for misconduct that included

17

calling inmates “primates,” “monkeys,” “toads,” and “niggers,” and for demeaning actions

18

toward sex offenders, Correctional Officer David Lewis worked for Powers. As shown in

19

Exhibit 26, Lewis was involved in the pattern of mistreatment of inmates organized by Powers

20

and Garcia, including, according to the charging documents that led to his termination, for

21

identifying inmates convicted of child molestation to other inmates. Indeed, the F.B.I. was

22

preparing the prosecution of Powers and Garcia when its agents came across evidence that Lewis

23

had shot an unarmed inmate. (Reynoso Tr. 490 - 491).

24

More importantly, the references to David Lewis are relevant because they demonstrate a

25

pattern of interference by the CCPOA that took place during the Powers and Lewis criminal

26

investigations, including, as described in detail below, an attempt by CCPOA Vice President

27
28

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1

Lance Corcoran to pressure the CDC to prevent one of its investigators from assisting the United

2

States Attorney in a criminal trial scheduled to begin before United States District Court Judge

3

Martin Jenkins.

4

The record should also reflect that the Special Master sought approval from the Court

5

prior to conducting the hearings that related to David Lewis (Exhibit 63). In its Order filed

6

September 23, 2003 the Court concluded there was a sufficient basis for the Special Master to

7

inquire into the Lewis matter. (Exhibit 64). Based on all of these factors, the Special Master

8

denies Alameida’s request to strike all reference to David Lewis in this report.

9
10
11

D. Moore’s Objections to the Draft Report.
1. Objections to Contempt Recommendations.
Moore’s objections to the Special Master’s recommendations essentially adopt the

12

objections of Alameida (see CR 1734 at pgs 1 - 9). Therefore, the Special Master’s response to

13

Alameida’s objections applies equally to Moore’s objections and will not be repeated.

14

2. Objections to Recommendation Re Referral to United States Attorney for the

15

Filing of Perjury Charges.

16

Moore’s objections to the Special Master’s recommendation that the Court should

17

consider referring the Post Powers Report and the transcript of Moore’s testimony to the United

18

States Attorney for possible perjury charges are found at CR 1734 at pgs. 10 - 19. The Special

19

Master has reviewed each objection concerning the five portions of Moore’s testimony

20

referenced in the draft report. He also discussed the objections with Mr. Goyette during the

21

recorded argument that took place on May 7, 2004.

22

To begin, the Special Master disagrees with Moore’s claim that none of these statements

23

were material because the Special Master should have stopped his hearings as soon as evidence

24

arose that the remedial plan had been violated (CR 1734 at pgs 11 - 12). As discussed above, the

25

Special Master was instructed to conduct a full investigation about the shut down of the Post

26

Powers investigations and report to the Court. This investigation required an inquiry into why

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2

the investigations were closed down, who closed them down, and under what circumstances.
Second, the transcript of Moore’s testimony on July 30, 2003 reveals numerous false and

3

misleading statements. The five statements selected for the Special Master’s recommendations

4

where chosen because they focus on critical aspects of the Post Powers inquiry; for example,

5

exactly when an investigator really was assigned to the cases; or why Moore called Ballard and

6

instructed him to appear in Alameida’s office.

7

The Special Master also does not believe, given the testimony of Thomas Moore, that his

8

statements were “literally true;” nor does the recorded testimony indicate that Moore truly

9

believed what he was saying; indeed in some cases Moore testified, under oath, to different

10

versions of what transpired.

11

Finally, the Special Master finds that several of Moore’s objections ignore the relevant

12

facts surrounding the statement at issue. For example, the fifth of Moore’s statements that the

13

Special Master recommends the Court consider for referral to the United States Attorney is the

14

following:

15

17

“He gave myself a briefing as to, meaning Ballard and Barbara gave myself and
Brian Parry, Parry was privy to the briefing. And it was then that we realized we
had to brief Mr. Alameida now. I believe the day before I contacted Mr.
Alameida to make sure his calendar would be available because I knew this case
had to be reviewed.” (Moore Tr. 159: 19 - 25).

18

Moore contends that it is plausible to interpret this statement as simply meaning that one

16

19

meeting followed another or that Moore realized that California’s Peace Officer Bill of Rights

20

(“POBAR”) investigation time constraints existed. (CR 1734 at pg. 18). The Special Master

21

disagrees. As explained below, Brian Parry was not at the 3:00 p.m. meeting. Furthermore,

22

Moore had not just “checked” Alameida’s calendar, he actually made an appointment for a 4:00

23

p.m. meeting with Alameida on March 26, 2003, twenty-four hours before he met with Ballard

24

and Barbara. See also, pages 69 - 70 below.

25
26
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3. Summary.

2

Moore’s explanations for his conduct, and his interpretations of what he really meant

3

when he testified under oath, conflict with the record. Moore’s objections do not warrant the

4

Special Master modifying his draft recommendations. The perjury related recommendations are

5

made because the Special Master, after examining the transcript of the hearing and all other

6

evidence, concluded that Thomas Moore made false statements under oath concerning material

7

issues of fact at the hearing of July 30, 2003. The Special Master notes that he did not

8

commence the Post Powers hearings in an effort to find perjury on the part of Thomas Moore, or

9

anyone else. It may be that the Court or United States Attorney will disagree with the Special

10

Master’s recommendations, or a decision will be made to conduct additional inquiries into

11

Moore’s testimony. Now that the Post Powers investigation is complete, however, the Special

12

Master believes it appropriate to cease his hearings. If perjury is to be considered, it should be a

13

decision of the Court and not the Special Master.

14

E. Objections of Katie S. Hagen to the Draft Report.

15

Following the filing of the draft report the Special Master met with Katie S. Hagen,

16

Assistant Deputy Director (A) of the CDC’s Selection and Standards Branch, Peace Officer

17

Recruitment Section, and Annice L. Porter, Correctional Captain, Northern Selection Center to

18

discuss possible inaccuracies in the draft report relating to peace officer recruitment, the

19

applicable standards for recruitment, and the “11 hour rule” as discussed at pages 47-48 of the

20

draft report. At that meeting, Ms. Hagen and Captain Porter provided the Special Master with

21

extensive information about the CDC’s officer recruitment process and several relevant

22

documents including a fact sheet concerning background investigations, a summary of selection

23

“standards” and “guidelines,” and a flow chart concerning the selection process. The concerns

24

raised by Ms. Hagen and Captain Porter are well taken, and several errors were identified in the

25

draft report at pages 47-48. Those errors are corrected in the final report.

26
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2
3

F. The Amicus Filing of the CCPOA and the Union’s Objections to the Draft Report.
1. Introduction.
Judge Steve White and former Inspector General testified at the Senate hearing of January

4

21, 2004 that the CCPOA can be a force for both good and bad. The Special Master agrees. In

5

some respects the CDC is a better organization because of the CCPOA. The union has worked

6

diligently to improve wages and working conditions of its members. It has also established

7

reasonable inmate to correctional officer ratios, improved CDC training, and taken steps to

8

protect the rights of victims of crime. As the record in the Post Powers hearings and Senate

9

hearings demonstrate, however, the CCPOA has not been responsive concerning the abuse of

10
11

inmates and the code of silence.
The CCPOA functions as a mirror or twin of its adversary and lifetime partner, the CDC.

12

Like the CDC, the CCPOA has grown dramatically over the past twenty years, and it has a

13

limited and small core of leaders - almost all of whom have not worked in a prison for more than

14

a decade. Like the CDC, the CCPOA functions in an insular manner, it has not established

15

ethical policies and procedures, it has failed to train its representatives on ethical standards, and it

16

refuses to acknowledge the existence of the very code of silence it helps perpetuate. And

17

identical to the CDC prior to Mr. Hickman’s recent memorandum, there is a code of silence

18

about the code of silence in the CCPOA. Unlike the recent changes in YACA and the CDC,

19

however, the CCPOA continues to deny a wide range of serious problems, as exemplified by its

20

amicus filing with the Court.

21

2. The Special Master’s Long Standing Policy to Address the CCPOA’s Concerns

22

About Potential MOU and Remedial Plan Conflicts.

23

As the Court is aware, the Special Master has repeatedly endeavored to include the

24

CCPOA and other employee labor organization in remedial plan discussions when appropriate.

25

For example, the CCPOA has been involved in remedial plan discussions such as the hiring and

26

retention of Medical Technical Assistants (“MTA’s”) at PBSP; a conflict between the MOU and

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the use of force discipline policy that arose after the MOU was modified in 2000; and most

2

recently concerning modifications to PBSP policies re “Skelly” hearings based on a decision

3

from the California Courts of Appeal. On many occasions, the resolution of these problems

4

involved both the exchange of letters and face-to-face meetings between the Special Master, the

5

remedial team, the CDC, and the CCPOA.

6

The Special Master has also been careful to ensure that his recommendations for Court

7

orders do not conflict with State law or contracts, consistent with the Court initial remedial

8

orders in this case. In fact, because of repeated problems involving the CDC’s failure to inform

9

the Special Master about potential conflicts between the Court’s order and its labor contracts, a

10

recent modification to the Use of Force Discipline Policy and Procedure requires the CDC to

11

notify the CCPOA in the event that the CDC amends the policy in a manner that impacts wages,

12

hours or working conditions. (See Use of Force Discipline Policy and Procedure, Section IX).

13

To summarize, the Special Master has on numerous occasions allowed the CCPOA to

14

participate in the remedial process, as amicus, when legitimate union interests appeared to

15

interface with the remedial plans. On every occasion that the CCPOA has sought to be heard

16

during the nine year remedial process, the concerns raised by the union have been considered by

17

the Special Master. All conflicts between the MOU and the remedial plans were resolved;

18

indeed, the union has never deemed it necessary over this long period of time to submit pleadings

19

to the Court concerning remedial plan conflicts with the interests of its members.

20

3. The CCPOA’s Contact with the Special Master After the Filing of the Draft

21

Post Powers Report.

22

The Special Master was contacted by Linda Buzzini of the Department of Personnel

23

Administration several weeks after he issued his draft report. Ms. Buzzini had been called by

24

Ronald Yank, an attorney representing the CCPOA. Mr. Yank requested to meet with the

25

Special Master and Ms. Buzzini to discuss the CCPOA’s concerns about the draft report.

26

The Special Master declined the CCPOA’s invitation for a private meeting for several

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reasons. First, the Order of Reference establishes the procedure that a party must follow to bring

2

its comments and objections to the Special Master’s attention. The Special Master believed it

3

would not be appropriate to consider CCPOA comments outside the procedure set forth in the

4

Order. Second, the Special Master did not want to meet with the CCPOA without the attorneys

5

for the parties and the appropriate CDC officials. From February through April 2004, however,

6

the CDC was experiencing extensive turnover of key personnel because of the new

7

administration in Sacramento. Third, the evidence gathered in the Post Powers investigation

8

reveals a pervasive pattern of CCPOA interference with PBSP abuse of force investigations.

9

Given the draft findings, the Special Master decided that it was best to allow the union an

10

opportunity to bring forth its concerns in a public forum by the filing of an amicus brief. Finally,

11

this report demonstrates that certain CDC management decisions are in fact dictated by CCPOA

12

pressure, interference that usually takes place behind closed doors. Given those findings, the

13

Special Master believed it necessary for the objections to his draft report to become part of a

14

public record.

15

The Special Master instructed Ms. Buzzini to tell the CCPOA to file an amicus brief if

16

the union had concerns. As mentioned above, the CCPOA did thereafter file several different

17

briefs concerning the draft report.

18
19

4. The CCPOA’s Amicus Filings.
For the most part, the CCPOA has in the past contributed to remedial plan discussions in

20

a professional and thoughtful manner. The union’s filing concerning this report, however, does

21

not serve as a friend of the court; indeed, the union’s filings primarily serve to deny any CCPOA

22

involvement in the investigation and discipline problems described below. For example, when

23

the code of silence is mentioned, the CCPOA turns a deaf ear. As explained below, while it

24

professes to desire a professional workforce, concerning the code of silence, the CCPOA

25

functions in the opposite direction.

26

The Special Master had hoped to be able to report that the CCPOA acknowledges its role

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in the code of silence, and like YACA and the CDC, the CCPOA had agreed to institute

2

necessary changes in its operation. The CCPOA’s amicus brief has quashed those hopes. The

3

union’s filing indicates, perhaps inadvertently, that the CCPOA will continue to interfere with

4

administrative and criminal investigations of correctional officers who abuse inmates, and that

5

the union will continue to enforce the code of silence in the CDC’s prisons. To a large degree, it

6

appears that the CCPOA’s filing is designed to divert focus on the serious problems that exist

7

with investigations and correctional officer discipline, to turn the attention of the Court to issues

8

that the CCPOA deems important instead of the serious problems at hand.

9

Nevertheless, the Special Master reviewed every aspect of the CCPOA’s amicus filing,

10

including the Declaration of Ronald Yank, the CCPOA’s Points and Authorities (which includes

11

the Declaration of Benjamin Sybesma and two exhibits), and a second Declaration of Ronald

12

Yank Correcting Inadvertent Errors, with attachments. Each of the major arguments raised by

13

the union deserves a response. The CCPOA pleadings make the following contentions:

14

a. Investigation Problems at Other Prisons.

15

First, the CCPOA brings to the Court’s attention a series of serious problems it has

16

encountered with the CDC, including a use of force investigation at Corcoran State Prison where

17

the CCPOA successfully obtained judicial relief to protect the due process rights of its members.

18

(Declaration of Ronald Yank, pgs. 1 - 15, CCPOA exhibits B, C & D). The Special Master finds

19

this portion of the CCPOA’s argument to be well taken. There is no question that the systemic

20

problems identified by the Special Master, and by the OIG, relative to poorly managed

21

investigations and problems within the ELU have had, on occasion, serious and negative impacts

22

on CCPOA members. OIG reports demonstrate, for example, that internal affairs investigations

23

have, in the past, been used for inappropriate purposes by prison administrators.

24

However, the CCPOA membership has also benefitted from these problems, a point

25

ignored in the amicus filings. In many cases correctional officers who should have been

26

punished or terminated because of serious offenses have faced no discipline because OIS and

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ELU failed to complete the case prior to the POBAR one year statute of limitations. For

2

example, significant evidence indicates that Correctional Officers Jones, Matlock, and Tuttle

3

should have faced adverse action discipline, including termination, for their false testimony

4

before Judge Jenkins. Likewise, as explained below, CCPOA representatives Charles “Chuck”

5

Alexander (“Alexander”) and Richard Newton (“Newton”) engaged in very serious misconduct

6

for which they received no sanctions. In fact, as pointed out in the OIG audit report of March

7

2002, forty percent of all adverse action cases in CDC prisons were lost because of the failure to

8

complete investigations and discipline within one year. Thus, while it is fair to say that a few

9

CCPOA members may have been unfairly targeted by bad investigations, many others who were

10

guilty of serious offenses have gone without punishment, and continue to work for the CDC and

11

CCPOA today.

12

Furthermore, neither the investigation problems cited by the CCPOA, nor the findings of

13

the OIG, nor counsel’s frustration about years of problems justify the deliberate pattern of

14

CCPOA interference that has been revealed by the Post Powers investigation and hearings.

15

Without question, the State of California and the United States of America had good cause to

16

investigate Powers, Garcia and Lewis for crimes against the inmates of PBSP. As explained in

17

the factual findings below, problems at other prisons do not justify Alexander using his CCPOA

18

position to thwart these criminal investigations, nor do they provide excuses for Newton to

19

withhold evidence provided to him by another correctional officer, nor does it warrant CCPOA

20

Vice President Lance Corcoran (“Corcoran”) pressuring the CDC to prevent an investigator from

21

effectively assisting the United States Attorney.

22

To some degree, the CCPOA’s first argument is indicative of a pattern that exists

23

throughout the amicus filings. The CCPOA attempts to deflect very serious and specific charges

24

against its representatives by generalized attacks on the CDC and criticisms of prisons other than

25

Pelican Bay. While the Special Master has allowed for amicus participation by the union in the

26

past and will encourage participation by the union in the future, he cannot ignore the record in

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2
3

this case.
b. Objections Concerning Firewall Recommendation.
The second concern raised by the CCPOA relates to the Special Master’s

4

recommendation that the CDC institute a specific and rigorous firewall between the CCPOA and

5

the CDC’s investigation and discipline process at both the institution and Central Office level.

6

(CCPOA Points & Authorities, pgs. 9 - 11). The CCPOA’s objections are premature since the

7

specific provisions of the firewall have not yet been developed by the CDC, however in an

8

abundance of caution the Special Master will respond to the issues raised.

9

The Special Master agrees with the CCPOA that the firewall cannot be so rigorous that it

10

would preclude, for example, the CCPOA’s attorneys from contacting CDC attorneys about the

11

status of discipline cases. On the other hand, to the extent that the CCPOA argues that

12

Alexander and Newton were performing legitimate duties under the Ralph C. Dills Act (codified

13

at California Government Code section 3512 et seq.) when they engaged in the misconduct

14

documented in the Knowles/Palmer report (Exhibit 26), the CCPOA is simply wrong. The

15

Special Master points out that the CCPOA’s generalized argument fails to explain why its

16

representatives engaged in the misconduct that has led the Special Master to recommend a

17

firewall. For example, there was no reason for Alexander to call Alameida about a pending

18

investigation that was already in the hands of attorneys, and Corcoran had no legitimate purpose

19

when he attempted to stop a CDC investigator from assisting the United States Attorney. A

20

firewall will stop an on-going and inappropriate level of CCPOA interference with CDC

21

investigations. A firewall will also protect the confidentiality of investigations, it will protect the

22

privacy rights of the subject officers, it will prevent the CCPOA from “playing” CDC officials as

23

happened in the Post Powers cases, and it will provide written ethical standards for all CDC

24

employees - including CDC employees who serve as CCPOA representatives. The Special

25

Master notes in making this recommendation that neither the CDC nor CCPOA have seen fit,

26

thus far, to implement any effective form of ethical standards for CCPOA representatives.

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Concerning the firewall recommendation itself, defendants have, with the Special

2

Master’s approval, set back the projected implementation date for the firewall to allow for input

3

from the new Inspector General and his staff. In the interim, however, steps can and should be

4

taken at Pelican Bay to institute one portion of a program that is needed at all CDC institutions.

5

At present, CCPOA representatives are invited to observe the weekly Executive Review

6

Committee (“ERC”). Later, these same representatives may represent subject officers whose

7

cases are discussed at the ERC. The title ERC reflects the fact that the meeting should consist of

8

the Warden of PBSP, Associate Wardens, and other prison officials. These officials discuss, in

9

candid terms, all reported use of force cases that have been reviewed for the week. The meeting

10

is for “executives,” not for the union. Given the findings of the Post Powers investigation, there

11

is no justifiable reason to allow the CCPOA to continue to observe a process whereby discipline

12

decisions are discussed and often implemented. Furthermore, well established policies and

13

procedures exist to protect the interests of the subject correctional officers, as well as processes

14

such as “Skelly” hearings. Therefore, the Special Master recommends below that PBSP modify

15

the use of force remedial plans to exclude CCPOA representatives from the ERC.

16

c. The CCPOA’s Continuing Denial of the Code of Silence.

17

The third issue raised by the CCPOA’s amicus pleading concerns the code of silence. To

18

present its position, the union has filed selected portions from the transcript of CCPOA President

19

Mike Jimenez’s (“Jimenez”) testimony before the Senate on January 20, 2004. (See CCPOA

20

Exhibit E to the Declaration of Ronald Yank).

21
22

Asked to testify under oath about the existence of a code of silence in the CDC, Jimenez
dodges the question.

23

Senator Speier: “Do you believe that there is a code of silence in Corrections?”

24

Mike Jimenez: “I believe that there is a code of cowardice with the Department of

25
26

Corrections. I don’t believe it’s properly termed in a code of silence.”
The Special Master finds Jimenez’s “code of cowardice” explanation nothing less than an

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1

attempt to reinforce CCPOA complicity with the code of silence that pervades all CDC

2

institutions. Jimenez’s “code of cowardice” ignores extensive evidence presented by CCPOA

3

members at the Senate hearings about co-worker pressure, and the shunning and intimidation of

4

the few officers who have had the courage to report abuses of force. It also ignores the evidence

5

of a code of silence in the draft report. In effect, Jimenez attempts to brand as cowards the

6

honest correctional officers who are victims of the code of silence, and ridicules those who

7

remain silent because of concern about their personal safety. Jimenez’s statements are a clear

8

signal that the CCPOA continues to support a code of silence about the code of silence itself, and

9

that it will take no action to end the union’s sponsorship of the code of silence in the future.

10

d. The Findings in the Knowles/Palmer Report of Serious Misconduct by

11

CCPOA Representatives Alexander and Newton Are Not Called into

12

Question Because of Subsequent Litigation That Failed to Consider the

13

Court Ordered Remedial Plan.

14

The fourth point made by the CCPOA consists of an argument that extensive litigation

15

filed by the union following the Knowles/Palmer report somehow mitigates the serious factual

16

findings against Alexander and Newton made in that report. (See the Declaration of Ronald

17

Yank at pgs. pages 4 - 7 and CCPOA Exhibit 1 to that declaration; the Declaration of Benjamin

18

Sybesma at pgs. 2 - 3; and CCPOA Exhibits 1 & 2 attached to the Declaration of Ronald Yank

19

Correcting Inadvertent Errors). The Special Master reviewed the materials provided by the

20

CCPOA prior to filing his draft report, he referenced in a general manner the CCPOA’s litigation

21

in the draft report, and referred to the underlying documents in Appendix 4. The CCPOA

22

believes, however, that further discussion concerning their lawsuits is warranted (see, for

23

example, the Declaration of Benjamin Sybesma at pg. 2, para. 7).

24

At the CCPOA’s request, the Special Master has again reviewed Public Employment

25

Relations Board (“PERB”) Decision No. SA-CE-1075-S and the State Personnel Board (“SPB”)

26

Decision on case nos. 98-2768 and 98-2697. He finds nothing in either decision which warrants

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a modification of the findings set forth below. The Special Master bases this decision on the

2

following facts:

3

1. Neither the PERB nor the SPB considered the controlling standard that governs the

4

misconduct by CCPOA representatives Alexander and Newton - the Federal Court approved use

5

of force remedial plan. While the PERB arbitrator touches on the existence of a remedial plan,

6

he fails entirely to examine its controlling provisions, including those sections that prohibit

7

concerted actions to hide the abuse of force. The SPB decision simply ignores the Court’s

8

orders; apparently, neither the CDC nor CCPOA brought the existence of a remedial plan to its

9

attention. To summarize, nothing said by either board changes the facts. The Knowles/Palmer

10

report found that CCPOA representatives Alexander and Newton engaged in a pattern of

11

misconduct that is prohibited by the remedial plan.

12

The CCPOA contends that the investigation was flawed. The CCPOA is correct;

13

however the investigation was flawed only in that it did not go far enough. For example, under

14

the use of force discipline plan in force at PBSP today, the misconduct reported by Knowles and

15

Palmer would mandate some form of adverse action, including possible termination. The Special

16

Master attaches Dr. Maher May 31, 2004 Memorandum entitled “Qualitative Review of 1997

17

Internal Affairs Investigation of PBSP CCPOA Personnel Investigation 105-96” as Exhibit 67.

18

The Special Master agrees with Dr. Maher: Alexander, Newton, and the CCPOA engaged in

19

conduct to promote the code of silence at PBSP in violation of the Court approved use of force

20

remedial plan. In fact, the outcome of the Knowles/Palmer investigation provides yet another

21

example of how CCPOA members benefit from the CDC’s faulty investigation and discipline

22

procedures. In this case, two CCPOA representatives were able to escape punishment despite

23

having committed very serious violations of the Court approved remedial plan.

24

2. Neither board decision makes a finding that the overall investigation was inadequate

25

in any way, or that it was fabricated or false. Both of the decisions touted by the CCPOA are

26

extremely narrow. For example, neither board excuses Newton for withholding, as a CCPOA

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2

representative, relevant evidence of criminal misconduct on the part of Garcia.
3. The draft report points out that the CDC failed to discipline Alexander and Newton

3

under the mandates of the remedial plan after it received the Knowles/Palmer report. The

4

CCPOA’s litigation, filed the year after the CDC’s decision not to discipline is simply not

5

relevant to this finding. Again, the CCPOA attempts to deflect criticism of very serious

6

violations of the Court’s orders on the part of CCPOA representatives by launching a generalized

7

attack against the CDC concerning other, irrelevant issues.

8
9

The remaining comments and objections raised by the CCPOA amicus filing are limited
to the MOU. These concerns are addressed at Section VI. below.

10

G. The Special Master’s Investigations, Review of Reports, and Attendance at State

11

Hearings After The Filing of the Draft Report.

12

The Special Master’s post-draft report meetings and discussions endeavored to obtain

13

relevant and up-to-date information concerning the recommendations set forth below, including

14

an analysis of: (a) what the State of California is attempting to do to solve the problems described

15

below; (b) whether the State’s efforts will correct the problems, and (c) what level of Court

16

oversight is needed to ensure the State’s remedial efforts succeed.

17

For example, the Special Master held numerous meetings with CDC and YACA officials

18

concerning potential corrective action plans. The Special Master received comments about his

19

draft report from numerous CDC employees, including telephone calls from OIS investigators

20

and face-to-face discussions with PBSP and Central Office personnel. The Special Master also

21

met personally with some of the staff directly involved in the Garcia and Powers criminal cases,

22

including, for example, William Schembri (“Schembri”).

23

In addition, the Special Master attended two days of State Senate hearings on January 20-

24

21, 2004 where he heard testimony about the code of silence and problems encountered by CDC

25

“whistle blowers” who report abuses of force at prisons other than Pelican Bay. He attended a

26

subsequent Senate hearing that addressed problems with the CDC/CCPOA MOU. These

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1

hearings proved to be informative, providing testimony that demonstrates the investigation and

2

discipline problems found during the Special Master’s Post Powers hearings are not limited to

3

incidents arising out of Pelican Bay. For example, recent and serious problems with

4

investigations, the code of silence, and the failure to protect whistle blowers have also arisen out

5

of Folsom State Prison, Salinas Valley State Prison, Corcoran State Prison, and the California

6

Institute for Men. Likewise, the hearings demonstrated that limitations imposed on the ability of

7

investigators to conduct fair and effective investigations because of MOU provisions have

8

seriously hampered efforts to improve the performance of the Office of Investigative Services.

9

The Special Master found the testimony of the Honorable Steven White, the former

10

Inspector General and now Superior Court Judge, to be especially helpful in terms of proposing

11

remedial plan recommendations. Judge White told a panel of California Senators the morning of

12

January 21, 2004, that YACA and the CDC has no center or leadership. As a result, the CCPOA

13

permeates all aspects of CDC operations, essentially filling the vacuum created by the absence of

14

leadership within the Department. What should be a wide ranging CDC agenda has, over the

15

years, become instead the CCPOA’s more limited agenda. Judge White predicted there would be

16

the rattling of sabers, sincere commitments to solve the current problem, and the rolling of heads;

17

but that three months later it would be back to the way it was, including more concessions to the

18

CCPOA by the Department of Personnel Administration at the bargaining table - unless YACA

19

and the CDC acquire the type of leadership both organizations so desperately need.

20
21
22
23
24
25
26
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V.

2

FINDINGS

3

A. Introduction.

4

During the course of the Special Master’s hearings evidence came to light that:

5

1. The Post Powers internal investigations were inadequately staffed, began four months

6
7

late, and were shut down by Director Alameida before the investigations were completed.
2. The untimely start of the investigations, the processing of the investigations, and

8

Alameida’s decision to shut down the investigations violated the Use of Force Discipline

9

Remedial Plan, the DOM for the OIS, and the Post Powers Plan.

10

3. In conjunction with closing three active investigations, a false and misleading letter

11

was sent to the Special Master. The investigations were never properly closed-out, and no

12

internal affairs reports were prepared.

13

4. The Post Powers investigations are indicative of serious systemic problems in the OIS

14

and the ELU, problems identified two years ago by the OIG and never corrected by the CDC.

15

5. The criminal and administrative investigations concerning misconduct by Powers,

16

Garcia, and former Correctional Officer David Lewis (“Lewis”), and the Post Powers

17

investigations, were disrupted by representatives of the CCPOA.

18

Much of this evidence is not in dispute. There are disputes, however, with respect to

19

what occurred during the period of March 20-27, 2003, when the decision to shut down the Post

20

Powers cases was made.

21

B. History of the Criminal Prosecutions Against Powers, Garcia and Correctional Officer

22

David Lewis..

23
24

1. The Shut-Down of the PBSP Internal Affairs Investigation.
The initial Department of Corrections investigations into possible administrative and

25

criminal misconduct by Powers and Garcia began in the mid-1990s. At first, the investigations

26

were conducted by a team of PBSP internal affairs investigators reporting to Captain Dan Smith.

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The team involved Joe Reynoso (“Reynoso”), Craig Franklin, Chet Miller and Lt.

2

Roussopoulous. (Reynoso Tr. 484 - 485). Almost immediately, the investigation team

3

encountered resistence from local representatives of the CCPOA. Charges and counter charges

4

were filed, and eventually litigation. The Special Master was working on this case as a Court

5

appointed expert at the time and discussed this issue with Warden Steve Cambra on several

6

occasions from 1995 through 1997. Given the level of CCPOA resistence, Warden Cambra

7

became concerned about the ability of local investigators to complete the investigations. He

8

eventually made the decision to close-down the local case and refer the investigation of Powers

9

and Garcia to the CDC’s Law Enforcement Investigation Unit (“LEIU”). LEIU investigates

10
11
12

criminal misconduct on the part of staff and inmates. See also, Reynoso Tr. 485.
2. The LEIU Investigation and the State Court Criminal Trial of Garcia.
George Ortiz of LEIU assumed responsibility for the investigation. Charges against

13

Officer Garcia were sustained and state court criminal charges were filed alleging a conspiracy to

14

have inmates assaulted, bringing alcohol into a state facility, and assault with a deadly weapon

15

likely to produce great bodily injury. (Reynoso Tr. 486-487). The CDC provided investigative

16

and legal assistance to the District Attorney of Del Norte County in the Garcia criminal

17

prosecution. (Reynoso Tr. 487; Sheldon Tr. 600; Gaultney Tr. 831). The attorneys who

18

represented Garcia in the criminal case were Robert Noel and Marjorie Knoller. Garcia was

19

found guilty of the conspiracy charge, the alcohol charge and the assault charge. Garcia’s state

20

court convictions were later overturned. (Reynoso Tr. 488-489).

21
22

3. The Termination of Correctional Officer David Lewis.
ELU staff attorney Barbara Sheldon (“Sheldon”) worked with the district attorney in the

23

Garcia state criminal prosecution. (Sheldon Tr. 600). Sheldon also handled the administrative

24

case against Lewis (Sheldon Tr. 600). Lewis’ employment with the CDC was terminated on

25

October 4, 1996 because of misconduct that included calling inmates “primates,” “monkeys,”

26

“toads,” and “niggers,” and for demeaning actions toward sex offenders. The termination was

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1

upheld by the SPB which found, among other things, that Lewis’ misconduct included

2

inexcusable neglect of duty, discourteous treatment, and a failure of good behavior which caused

3

discredit to the Department of Correction.

4

4. The Obstruction of Justice Investigation of CCPOA Representatives Alexander

5

and Newton, and the Sustained Findings of the Knowles/Palmer Investigation.

6

Ms. Shelton testified at the hearing of September 25, 2003 about an obstruction of justice

7

investigation that was initiated because of alleged misconduct by CCPOA representatives during

8

the criminal investigation of Garcia. The investigation subjects were PBSP CCPOA

9

representatives Alexander, Newton, and Correctional Officers Robert Rice, Jean Rupert, Roy

10

Alvarado, and Deanna Freitag. At the time of the investigation, Alexander worked at PBSP as a

11

full-time CCPOA representative as part of a pilot project negotiated by the CCPOA and CDC.

12

Although Alexander worked full-time for the union he drew a full-time correctional officer salary

13

from the CDC.

14

The formal internal affairs investigation was authorized by then Regional Administrator

15

Michael Pickett. It was conducted by M.E. Knowles, Chief Deputy Warden of High Desert State

16

Prison, and P.D. Palmer, Facility Captain, Folsom State Prison. Their report, referred to as the

17

“Knowles/Palmer Report,” was completed September 22, 1997 and is attached as Exhibit 26.

18

The report sustained numerous charges against CCPOA representative Alexander,

19

including inappropriate and questionable activity under the guise of Union business, preparing

20

SPB requests for adverse action with malice, and misusing his authority as a CCPOA

21

representative to access confidential information. CCPOA representative Newton had the same

22

sustained charges, plus a sustained charge of having knowledge of Garcia’s illegal and

23

inappropriate behavior and failing to properly report that behavior. Newton possessed this

24

information during the on-going criminal prosecution of Garcia and while Newton assisted in

25

representing Garcia during his SPB hearing. Alexander and Newton received formal notice of

26

the investigation findings of sustained charges via a memorandum from Captain Barry O’Neill

27
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1

dated October 31, 1997. (Exhibits 27 and 51). Alexander and Newton sued the CDC over the

2

Knowles/Palmer Report. (Exhibit 28). The litigation subsequently settled. (Sheldon Tr. 634-

3

635).

4

As reported above, the CCPOA’s amicus pleadings attempt to attack the Knowles/Palmer

5

report by claiming some sort of “whistle blower” protection for Alexander. Despite filing

6

numerous personnel actions and civil suits, however, the CCPOA has failed entirely to find one

7

judicial tribunal who will criticize or otherwise limit any of the factual findings set forth in the

8

Knowles/Palmer report. Without question, the misconduct by Alexander and Newton

9

documented by Knowles and Palmer represent violations of the Court approved use of force

10
11
12

policy. (See Exhibit 67).
5. The Federal Criminal Prosecution of Powers and Garcia.
Investigator Reynoso was assigned to assist with the FBI investigation of criminal

13

misconduct by Powers and Garcia in 1998. (Reynoso Tr. 489 - 490). Sheldon was the

14

department liaison for the grand jury in the case. (Sheldon Tr. 601).

15

CCPOA resistence to the Powers/Garcia criminal investigation continued. At one point

16

during the FBI investigation, the union put out a memo notifying staff that internal affairs was

17

going to be at PBSP and informing correctional officers they did not have to talk to them, in

18

essence sending a message not to cooperate with internal affairs no matter what position they

19

were in. (Reynoso Tr. 495). In order to interview correctional staff, subpoenas had to be issued

20

to force their testimony before the grand jury. (Reynoso Tr. 496). Because of the code of silence

21

one officer did not come forward with any information until he left the CDC’s employment for

22

fear of his safety. (Reynoso Tr. 497; Haag Tr. 794-795). The Special Master became involved

23

with this problem shortly before the federal criminal trial began, when correctional officers who

24

were willing to testify for the prosecution at trial told the FBI they had been informed by CCPOA

25

representatives that if their testimony at trial differed from their reports at the time of the

26

incident, the CCPOA would request the CDC to initiate discipline charges against them.

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1

Furthermore, CCPOA representatives attended the Powers/Garcia criminal trial to monitor

2

correctional officer testimony. The Special Master discussed this problem in two meetings, one

3

at the prison and one in Sacramento with CDC officials from the Central Office.

4
5

6. The Federal Criminal Prosecution of Lewis.
While investigating the allegations against Powers and Garcia, the FBI came across

6

evidence which revealed that in 1994 Lewis (the same officer who had been terminated by the

7

CDC for calling inmates “primates,” “monkeys,” “toads,” and “niggers,” and for demeaning

8

actions toward sex offenders) intentionally shot inmate Harry Long while on duty in a Pelican

9

Bay gun tower. (Reynoso Tr. 490-491). Apparently, Lewis erroneously believed that inmate

10

Long was a child molester.

11

As a result of this investigation federal criminal charges were filed against Lewis.

12

Attorneys Noel and Knoller represented Lewis. He was convicted by a jury in the United States

13

District Court for the Northern District of California for deprivation of rights under color of law

14

in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 242 and use of a firearm in relation to a crime of violence in violation

15

of 18 U.S.C. § 924. Lewis’ conviction was overturned by the Ninth Circuit in an unreported

16

decision filed October 26, 2001. Renewed charges against Lewis are pending in the U.S. District

17

Court for the Northern District of California. Various pretrial appeals filed by Lewis were

18

recently rejected by the Ninth Circuit in an unreported decision on May 25, 2004 (Ninth Circuit

19

Case No. 03-10181).

20

C. Defendants’ Post Powers/Garcia Investigation and Discipline Plan.

21

While the Powers/Garcia federal criminal trial was pending, the Special Master was

22

informed that the CDC had no established program to discipline correctional staff who may have

23

been involved in violations of the use of force remedial plan, which, while not rising to the level

24

of criminal misconduct, were serious enough to require administrative discipline. Indeed, the

25

CDC had no precedent to conduct this form of administrative review. For example, no

26

correctional officer was investigated after the Garcia state court trial, even though some officers

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1
2

did not testify truthfully in the opinion of the CDC’s attorney. (Sheldon Tr. 612).
Therefore, in October 2001 the Special Master requested that CDC officials develop a

3

Post Powers administrative investigation and discipline plan. Sheldon was primarily responsible

4

for preparing the plan, in conjunction with John Sugiyama, then Deputy Director of the Legal

5

Affairs Division. (Sheldon Tr. 602).

6

the OIS. Sheldon was supervised by Gaultney, who, at the time, was the Assistant Chief Counsel

7

of the ELU. Several meetings were held between CDC officials, the Special Master, and counsel

8

for the parties in Madrid during the development of the plan, numerous criticisms were made of

9

early drafts, and extensive changes were made to the final version of the plan. (See e.g. the

The plan was developed by the ELU in conjunction with

10

letters and reports from Court expert Dr. Patrick Maher in Exhibits 22-25; see also Sheldon Tr.

11

604 – 607). Sheldon took her project very seriously. The final version of the Plan is attached as

12

Exhibit 2. No one disputes the fact that the CDC made a commitment to the Special Master to

13

implement the plan as necessary.

14

Some of the more important provisions of the plan required the following:

15

At all times during the process, Assistant Chief Counsel of the
Employment Litigation Unit Robert Gaultney and Supervising Senior Staff
Counsels Debra Ashbrook, Vickie Brewer and Barbara Sheldon will be available
to monitor the process and be available for consultation.

16
17
18
19
20
21

The investigators will follow Department authorized investigation
protocols in completing the investigations.
The expectation is that the investigations will all be completed within 6
months of learning the names of employees who may be subject to discipline.
Staff Counsel will be available for consultation throughout the investigations.

23

When the investigations are completed they will be sent to the Warden of
the institution or the Regional Administrator of the Parole Region where the
employee is assigned. After consultation with the Assistant Chief Counsel and the
Supervisors of Legal Affairs, the hiring authority, whether a Warden or a Regional
Administrator, will make a recommendation regarding discipline.

24

Numerous Central Office officials were aware of the plan, including Gaultney, Beaty

22

25

Parry, ELU Attorney Vicki Brewer, and Moore. (Sheldon Tr. 618; Gaultney Tr. 821 - 822).

26

Alameida and Tristan, however, testified they had not seen the plan at the time of the critical

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1

meeting of March 27, 2003. (Alameida Tr. 695; Tristan Tr. 873). Likewise, as explained below,

2

the investigator and attorney who ended up actually being assigned to the Post Powers

3

administrative cases were kept in the dark about this CDC plan.

4

D. The Meeting Between Melinda Haag and CDC Officials.

5

On June 4, 2002, after Powers and Garcia were found guilty, Assistant United States

6

Attorney Melinda Haag met with Parry (who directed the operations of both LEIU and OIS),

7

Barbara (the ELU attorney assigned to oversee the Post Powers investigations), Moore, and

8

Reynoso. (Barbara Tr. 17; Reynoso Tr. 498-501; Parry Tr. 422-423; Haag Tr. 774).

9

Ms. Haag was told that the CDC was evaluating whether it should conduct administrative

10

investigations to determine whether department employees had been untruthful in their testimony

11

in the Powers/Garcia criminal trial. Ms. Haag was asked if she would meet with various people

12

from the CDC and summarize for them the trial testimony. It was her understanding the

13

Department was particularly interested in circumstances where correctional officers testified

14

contrary to the evidence presented by the government. (Haag Tr. 774 - 776). Ms. Haag provided

15

an oral summary of the evidence presented at trial at the meeting of June 4th. Thereafter, a

16

written summary of seven potential cases was prepared by Parry for Barbara’s signature (Barbara

17

Tr. 20; Parry Tr. 422; see Exhibit 3).

18

A second meeting was held concerning the seven cases a few days later. This meeting

19

was limited to CDC staff, and included Parry, Barbara, Moore, Reynoso, and Gaultney.

20

(Reynoso 502 - 503). Each case was discussed and analyzed. Moore suggested, given the length

21

of time that had expired since the underlying use of force incident, that the CDC should just let

22

the cases go. Gaultney, however, disagreed. Gaultney instructed the other participants to

23

determine what cases should be investigated. (Reynoso Tr. 504; Parry Tr. 424). The decision

24

was made to proceed with three cases. (Barbara Tr. 25, Parry Tr. 424-428; Gaultney Tr. 821 -

25

823). As explained by Parry at the hearing of August 26, 2003, he felt that three cases were

26

strong enough to pursue. He testified that the participants at the meeting were not “forced” by

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the U.S. Attorney’s Office or the Special Master to take the three cases. The CDC’s investigators

2

and attorneys made the decision to pursue the cases because there was alleged misconduct and

3

they were presented in such a way that they were going to have to look at them. (Parry Tr. 471;

4

Haag 789).

5

The CDC thereafter requested transcripts and investigation reports from the U.S. Attorney

6

to commence its review of the three selected cases. These documents were provided to the CDC

7

in a timely manner. (Exhibit 5).

8

E. The Substance of the Administrative Investigations of Correctional Officers Jones,

9

Matlock, and Tuttle.

10

The underlying facts of the three Post Powers investigations and the suspected perjurious

11

testimony of Correctional Officer William Jones (“Jones”), Charles Matlock (“Matlock”), and

12

Owen Tuttle (“Tuttle”) are set forth below:

13

Perez Incident

14

The evidence in the case involving inmate Perez was primarily presented at trial by

15

former C.O. Jim Mather (“Mather”), and by reports and conclusions that could be drawn from

16

those reports. Mather was a PBSP correctional officer at the time of the incident in February

17

1991 and he was assigned to the yard that day. His supervisor was Powers. Mather testified as

18

follows:

19

Powers assigned Mather and Officer Bill Jones to search inmates as they came out of the

20

education area. Mather did not know if there was a particular reason for the searches. Marco

21

Perez (“Perez”) was among the group of inmates to be searched. When it came Perez’s turn to be

22

searched, Perez was not cooperative. In their efforts to make Perez cooperate, they turned him to

23

a wall. Perez spun off the wall and in doing that he ended-up punching or hitting Mather. In

24

response to Mather being hit, a group of officers converged on Perez, including Jones and an

25

officer named Matlock. The officers took Perez to the ground. Mather was also on the ground

26

and he saw that Matlock was kicking Perez. Mather was aware of that because he was afraid he

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was going to be kicked and Mather told Matlock to stop. There was testimony in the trial that

2

kicking is not appropriate under the circumstances of the Perez incident.

3

Perez resisted initially, but the officers were able to control and subdue him. Eventually

4

Mr. Perez was under control and on the ground. At that point, Powers, who was watching,

5

instructed the officers to take Perez into a hallway that led to a chapel nearby. The officers

6

picked Perez up and took him into the hallway. Powers followed. Handcuffs were placed on

7

Perez. Once Perez was in the hallway, Powers ordered that the handcuffs be taken off. Powers

8

said “don’t be doing that to my officer, or don’t ever hit my officer, or something like that” and

9

then Powers punched Perez. At that point, Perez was taken to the ground and strip searched.

10

Nothing was found.

11

In the aftermath, Powers told the officers to write reports. Mather wrote a report and

12

included that Perez was taken into the hallway, he did not, however, include anything about

13

punching in the hallway. Mather testified he did not include the punching because of the code of

14

silence. Mather knew he shouldn’t say that Powers hit Perez. Mather submitted his report to

15

Powers. When he received a typed version of the report back, there was no reference at all to the

16

hallway. The report simply said there was an incident; Perez hit Mather, the officers took him to

17

the ground, subdued him, and transported him to medical - leaving out the hallway incident

18

altogether.

19

At trial the government introduced the reports prepared by each of the officers on duty.

20

All of the reports were written the same way; there was no reference to Perez being taken into the

21

chapel hallway. The suspected perjurious testimony Ms. Haag brought to the attention of the

22

CDC was as follows: When the defense called Jones as a witness, Jones said that Powers did not

23

punch Perez. Matlock was also called by the defense, and he said the same thing. (Haag Tr. 776

24

- 780).

25

Black Incident

26

The testimony concerning the Black incident came from inmate Michael Black (“Black”),

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two other inmates at the prison, a statement made by Powers to the FBI, and statements from Lt.

2

Gary Wise (“Wise”). Black testified about earlier confrontations he had with Garcia and Powers,

3

and with other officers on the Powers’ crew. Black was on the yard when he was approached by

4

Officers Tuttle and Payne, who ordered him to strip out - on the yard. Black testified that in the

5

prison culture, an order to strip out in public is very disrespectful, and not commonly done.

6

Black refused to strip out on the yard and was “hot” with the officers for asking him to do so.

7

The officers called Powers on the radio, Powers instructed the officers to take Black into the gym

8

nearby. Powers ordered that the handcuffs be taken off of Black. Powers said something like,

9

“so you think you are a tough guy,” and then Powers punched Black. At that point, other officers

10
11

joined in and took Black to the ground.
Two other inmates testified. The first was inside the gym, heard a scuffle inside, saw

12

Black go in, saw Black come out and heard what he thought was a scuffle in the gym. Another

13

inmate testified he also heard the scuffle, and saw part of what happened in the gym. Afterwards,

14

Powers instructed the inmate to “clean this mess up,” referring to the inside of the gym. Powers

15

had been interviewed by the FBI at some point during the pre-trial process, and told the FBI he

16

struck Black during that incident in order to bring him under control. Wise testified that he came

17

on duty after the Black incident as a supervisor, checked to see if there had been any incidents

18

that required his attention and found there had been none, nothing was recorded in any way.

19

Soon after Wise started his shift, Payne went to medical and reported an injury. Medical staff

20

then contacted Wise because there were had been no reports to support an incident that would

21

have resulted in an injury to Payne.

22

Wise called Payne to find out what had happened. Payne said there was an incident with

23

an inmate and he had been injured. Wise ordered that reports be written. Those reports were

24

introduced at trial. They all reflected an incident between the group of officers and Black, and

25

they all claimed that Black had assaulted Powers. Wise thought it was very unusual that no

26

administrative action had been taken against Black. Inmate assaults on staff were taken very

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2

seriously.
The suspected perjurious testimony concerning the Black incident was as follows:

3

Correctional Officer Tuttle testified for the defense and said that Powers did not assault Black.

4

(Haag Tr. 780 - 783).

5

Chester Incident

6

The Chester incident was explained to the jury through testimony of Correctional Officer

7

Schembri. Correctional Officer Judy Glover (“Glover”), former Correctional Officer Mather,

8

former Correctional Officer Joe Manzano (“Manzano”) and the inmate/victim, Leonard Chester

9

(“Chester”). A teacher at PBSP and several other witnesses also testified about motive.

10

Schembri testified that he was in a gun tower and was approached by Officer Bill Jones.

11

Jones said something to the effect that Powers wasn’t sure about Schembri and that Powers

12

wanted Jones to come up and check him out and that Jones had told Powers he would take care

13

of it. Jones told Schembri that an inmate was going to be hit on the yard that day and for

14

Schembri to look the other way. Schembri did not know the inmate who Jones was talking

15

about. He didn’t know if Jones was serious or not. Schembri thought it might be a test or a joke.

16

Schembri asked Jones questions about the prisoner and Jones described the inmate as a Black

17

man who normally wore blue sunglasses. Schembri then knew who Jones was talking about.

18

After further questioning, Jones told Schembri the yard was going to be recalled late, and

19

Schembri needed to look the other way. After Jones left the gun tower Schembri called his wife,

20

who also worked at PBSP. Nothing happened that day.

21

The next day Schembri had a different assignment. At some point he left his post and

22

went to run an errand. As Schembri was returning, he heard the yard being called down, looked

23

over and saw that the same inmate whom Jones had been talking about - Chester - had been

24

stabbed on the yard. Schembri responded to the incident. Powers was on-site and ordered

25

Schembri to preserve the crime scene. Schembri saw the weapon that had been used to stab

26

Chester.

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Judy Glover also testified. She was an investigator at the prison and was called to the

2

yard in response to the stabbing. Glover said Powers was in charge of the yard. Glover went out

3

to the yard and saw that an inmate had been stabbed. Schembri pointed out the weapon. Glover

4

asked Powers if he had any suspects and he said he did not. Glover took control of the weapon

5

and went to interview Chester, who had been taken to medical. Glover asked Chester who

6

stabbed him. Chester said he’d already told Powers who did it. Glover returned to Powers and

7

asked about Chester’s statement. Powers said it wasn’t true. Glover again asked Powers if he

8

had a suspect. Powers said he didn’t because there were too many people on the yard. Glover

9

observed that in her absence, Powers had begun to allow inmates go back to their cells. She later

10

determined he had made no effort to record the names of the inmates on the yard at the time of

11

the stabbing, nor did he search them when they returned to their cells.

12

Chester testified that he had been having run-ins with officers who worked with Powers.

13

He had been approached a couple of days before the stabbing by Officers Sanders and Payne,

14

who strip searched him. Sanders said to Chester something to the effect of, “we know what you

15

are up to and we’ll take care of our business on the yard.” That made Chester nervous about the

16

officers. Chester wanted to return to his cell the day he was stabbed. He approached Officer

17

Mather and asked to go back to his cell. Mather called the office, and then told Chester that “per

18

the Lieutenant,” he was not allowed to let Chester go to his cell. Mather told Chester he needed

19

to talk to the Lieutenant. When Chester crossed the yard to talk to the Lieutenant, he was

20

stabbed.

21

Officer Manzano was in the control booth when Jones came in to speak with Schembri.

22

Manzano remembered Jones coming into the control booth and speaking to Schembri. Manzano

23

also testified the discussion had something to do with an inmate being in trouble.

24

The suspected perjurious testimony presented by Ms. Haag was as follows: Jones

25

testified for the defense and denied that he had a conversation in the gun tower with Schembri.

26

(Haag Tr. 784 - 789).

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F. The Failure to Promptly Commence the Administrative Investigations.

2

Parry retired from the Department of Corrections on July 17, 2002. Thereafter, the

3

leadership positions he held in LEIU and OIS were filled by a series of “acting” Assistant

4

Directors. (Parry Tr. 430). For example, George Ortiz served for a short period of time as the

5

acting Assistant Director in LEIU, followed by Rick Rimmer. Moore became the acting

6

Assistant Director of OIS. Meanwhile, investigator Reynoso returned to LEIU and began a series

7

of assignments on the streets (Parry Tr. 431; Reynoso Tr. 523).

8

The Jones, Matlock, and Tuttle investigations, which Parry assured the Special Master

9

would begin in June 2002, did not in fact begin for four months. The reason for the four month

10

delay is not in dispute. Moore, the acting Director of OIS, simply did not prepare the requisite

11

989 forms until October 2002. Although OIS agent Ballard was told in May or June 2002 he

12

would be assigned to investigate the cases, he was not officially assigned until October. (Ballard

13

Tr. 271- 272; Barbara Tr. 31, 32, 35-36). See also the 989's dated October 8, 2002 (Exhibits 4, 6

14

& 7).

15

An internal affairs investigation cannot begin without a signed 989. Sound policy reasons

16

exist for the 989 requirement, to ensure that the nature of the investigation and the specific

17

subjects are carefully documented. (See, e.g. Grout Tr. 559; Ballard Tr. 275, 285). The delay

18

starting the three cases proved critical. Under POBAR, law enforcement personnel have a

19

statutory right to receive formal notice of administrative discipline within one year after the date

20

that management learns of the facts that may justify discipline. The one-year POBAR statute of

21

limitations is “stayed” during criminal prosecutions. Thus, the statute of limitations concerning

22

the investigations of Correctional Officers Jones, Matlock, and Tuttle required that the

23

investigations be completed and the decision to impose discipline or not be made within one year

24

after the Powers/Garcia criminal trial ended. To their credit, the investigator and lawyer team led

25

by Parry made an initial contact with Melinda Haag in a timely manner. Moore’s four month

26

delay, however, dealt the investigations a serious setback from which they never recovered, as

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explained below.

2

The evidence is also undisputed that the 989 forms prepared by Moore in October 2002

3

were vague and repetitive. Indeed, instead of spelling out the different factual situations that

4

required investigations, Moore simply prepared one inaccurate, generic description for all three

5

cases. (Exhibits 4, 6 & 7; Barbara Tr. 37; Ballard T. 295 - 296). See also Court expert Dr.

6

Patrick Maher’s reports concerning the three investigations, Exhibits 46-48.

7

.

Finally, the evidence is uncontradicted that, in addition to failing to prepare the 989's in a

8

timely manner and failing to prepare adequately specific 989's, Moore did not tell investigator

9

Ballard about the Post Powers administrative investigation plan. Likewise, Gaultney, the

10

Assistant Chief Counsel of ELU, failed to inform Barbara, the attorney he assigned to the cases,

11

about the Post Powers administrative investigation plan. Thus, the two men directly responsible

12

for implementing the CDC’s plan were not aware that it existed. (Barbara Tr. 17; Ballard Tr. 277

13

-279).

14

G. The Post Powers/Garcia Investigation.

15

The course of the three investigations are summarized on the investigation chronologies

16

attached as Exhibits 1, 8 & 9. The investigations were woefully inadequate concerning timing,

17

documentation, and completeness. Court expert Dr. Patrick Maher provides an analysis of the

18

cases in Exhibits 46-48. He concludes the cases were understaffed, were not adequately

19

investigated, and that facts existed, at the time the investigations were shut down by the Director

20

of Corrections, that warranted the cases being completed. Simply stated, Ballard and Barbara

21

were placed into an impossible position given the existing time pressures, inadequate assistance,

22

and their lack of knowledge of the Post Powers investigation and discipline plan. As Dr. Maher

23

reports, there was significant evidence that officer misconduct did take place. At the very least,

24

the investigations were improperly stopped before all of the relevant facts were obtained. The

25

Special Master agrees with Dr. Maher’s findings.

26

Some investigative tasks were completed. For example, with respect to Investigation N-

27
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1

PBSP-199-02 involving Correctional Officer Tuttle, Ballard interviewed inmate Black on

2

November 26, 2002 at California State Prison Sacramento. Ballard found Black to be truthful.

3

(Ballard Tr. 300). With respect to Investigation N-PBSP-198-02 involving Correctional Officer

4

Jones, Ballard and Barbara traveled to Southern California to interview Correctional Officer

5

Schembri (Barbara Tr. 45; Ballard Tr. 301-303) on December 18, 2002. Schembri informed

6

them, in a taped interview that he had been told by Jones to look away when inmate Chester was

7

to be stabbed in a Pelican Bay recreation yard, consistent with his testimony at the Powers/Garcia

8

criminal trial. Barbara and Ballard found Schembri to be a credible witness (Barbara Tr. 47 &

9

48). After his interview with Schembri, Barbara came to the conclusion that he could prosecute

10
11
12
13

Officer Jones (Barbara Tr. 48).
With respect to Investigation N-PBSP-200-02 involving Correctional Officers Matlock
and Jones, nothing was completed.
Concerning other necessary elements of all three cases, many facts were not properly

14

followed-up and faulty information was obtained that was not properly verified. For example,

15

Ballard requested the personnel file of Mather from PBSP on January 8, 2003. Mather was a

16

critical witness in the Perez incident. Ballard never received the file. (Ballard Tr. 303 - 304).

17

Ballard was also told that inmate Perez had mental health problems. He conveyed this false

18

information to Barbara. (Barbara Tr. 41-42). Neither Ballard nor Barbara took steps to verify the

19

information with PBSP mental health clinicians; indeed, there was no effort to review Mr.

20

Perez’s medical file (although Mr. Ballard did attempt to schedule a personal interview with

21

Perez, as explained below). These investigative failures would surface later in the letter

22

conveying false information to the Special Master after the Post Powers investigations were shut-

23

down on March 27, 2003.

24

Throughout the five month investigation period, from October 2002 through March 2003,

25

investigator Ballard essentially worked without guidance or supervision from the Office of

26

Investigative Services. For example, at the hearing of July 30, 2003 the Special Master asked

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1

investigator Ballard the following question: “He (referring to Thomas Moore, Ballard’s

2

supervisor) didn’t sit down with you periodically and have like a status conference and ask you

3

what is the state of these cases?” Ballard responded: “No, not at all.” (Ballard Tr. 277: 14 – 21).

4

H. CCPOA Involvement At the Interview Stage of the Post Powers Investigations.

5

Investigator Ballard planned to interview the witnesses and subjects of the investigations

6

at Pelican Bay during the first week of March 2003. (Ballard Tr. 307-308). Under California

7

law, correctional officers who are the subjects of internal affairs investigations have a statutory

8

right to receive advance notice of investigative interviews and to have a union representative

9

present during the interview. This right does not extend to witnesses who are not the subject of

10

an investigation. Pursuant to “Side Letter Number 12" with the CCPOA, however, the CDC

11

provides advance notice and allows representation not only to the subjects of investigations, but

12

to all other witnesses as well. (Barbara Tr. 56). The serious negative impact of Side Letter

13

Number 12; for example, how the side letter can be used to enforce the code of silence, is

14

discussed in Section VI. below.

15

Ballard, therefore, had to provide PBSP with written notice of each and every interview

16

he intended to conduct, including Correctional Officers Joseph Manzano, Ronald Parker, Greg

17

Devos, Lt. Maxwell, Tuttle, Jones, and Matlock. Ballard also intended to look for former

18

Correctional Officer Mark Payne, who had left state service. ( Ballard Tr. 307-310; Barbara Tr.

19

56 - 58; Miller Tr. 843). In addition, Ballard planned to interview inmate Perez. Ballard

20

informed the internal affairs unit at PBSP which then informed the correctional officer witnesses

21

and subjects. (Yaks Tr. 405 - 406).

22

While Ballard and Barbara believed the incident involving the stabbing of inmate Chester

23

to be their strongest case (based in part on their joint interview of William Schembri), as of

24

March 6, 2003 Ballard had not made up his mind that any case did not have merit and intended to

25

go through the investigation process. (Ballard Tr. 311-312). Thus, the subjects and witnesses for

26

all three cases were to be interviewed.

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1

The interviews at PBSP, however, never took place. On March 10, 2003 attorney

2

Christine Albertine of the CCPOA called Ballard and requested he reschedule the interviews.

3

Ballard agreed to postpone the interviews; however, he informed Ms. Albertine that he was under

4

time constraints. A two week postponement was agreed to, subject to a two week extension of

5

the statute of limitations concerning the filing of charges against the subject officers.

6
7
8
9
10
11

Thereafter, Ms. Albertine sent Ballard five letters demanding numerous documents prior
to conducting the interviews. The documents demanded by the CCPOA included:
“[T]he tape of the previous investigatory interview conducted by SSU and trial
transcripts . . . any tapes, documents, etc. of previous interviews that (the officer)
participated in or transcripts of testimony given by (the officer) regarding the
subject of the Federal Trial. These include but are not limited to FBI, grand jury,
Department of Justice, or CDC files the Department of Corrections may have. In
addition, if there is any adverse comment contained in any file maintained by the
Department of Corrections regarding this incident, (the officer) is entitled to know
of that comment and respond to it.”

12
13

Thus, based on the Side Letter Number 12, the CCPOA began a process of demanding

14

documents prior to allowing the interviews of witnesses. Ms. Albertine’s letters are attached as

15

Exhibits 10 – 15.

16

Ballard met and conferred with Barbara about the CCPOA’s demand for documents.

17

Barbara told Ballard the CCPOA was not entitled to any documents. Later, however, after

18

Ballard showed Albertine’s letters to Barbara, Barbara recommended they meet and confer with

19

his supervisor, Assistant Chief Counsel Gaultney. (Ballard Tr. 313-315; Barbara Tr. 58-61).

20

I. The March 20, 2003 Meeting Between Ballard, Barbara, and Gaultney and the

21

Decision to Refer the Jones Investigation to the District Attorney of San Francisco.

22

Ballard, Barbara and Gaultney met to discuss the three investigations in Gaultney’s office

23

on March 20, 2003. Gaultney agreed with Barbara, that the CCPOA was not entitled to any

24

documents. Gaultney, however, wanted to know why the U.S. Attorney had not filed criminal

25

charges concerning the Chester investigation, the case with Schembri as a witness and Jones as a

26

subject. Ballard and Barbara did not know. Gaultney told Ballard and Barbara to just “write up

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1

the cases without any interviews, just take your existing docs, and file criminal – submit the case

2

to the San Francisco D.A.’s office.” Gaultney instructed Ballard to submit that case to the D.A.

3

whether the D.A. wants to file it or not. (Ballard Tr. 319). Concerning the Matlock and Tuttle

4

cases, Gaultney instructed Ballard to close them up, to get them done. Investigator Ballard did

5

not interpret that to mean close them with a specific finding, just get them done. (Ballard Tr. 320

6

- 321). It was Ballard’s understanding he should pursue the remaining two cases (Ballard Tr.

7

320-321; 323-324).

8
9

Two findings are appropriate. First, the side letter agreement that forces CDC
investigators to delay interviewing witnesses and allow for CCPOA lawyers to attend the

10

interviews of witnesses, a practice not provided for by POBAR, and the subsequent barrage of

11

demands by the CCPOA had the practical effect of stopping the Post Powers interviews of both

12

witnesses and subjects. Second, the Special Master finds that the legal component of the CDC’s

13

Post Powers investigation suffered from the same lack of competent leadership that plagued the

14

investigation component. Gaultney’s decision to stop all the interviews and refer one of the three

15

cases to the San Francisco District Attorney was either inexcusably negligent or a deliberate

16

attempt to thwart the Post Powers investigations. Gaultney supervised the preparation of the Post

17

Powers Plan. He was briefed about the administrative investigations in June 2002 by Barbara,

18

Parry, and Reynoso. He had reviewed the final version of the Post Powers Plan. He knew the

19

three investigations were looking into violations of the PBSP force policy, and he should have

20

understood that the focus of the investigations was administrative misconduct and discipline.

21

Despite this, Gaultney testified he did not consider the Post Powers investigative plan for

22

administrative discipline when he recommended the case be referred to the district attorney.

23

(Gaultney Tr. 827).

24

Gaultney’s record of conduct is worsened by the fact that the ELU, under his supervision,

25

has no written policy concerning when to recommend that a case under administrative

26

investigation be referred for criminal prosecution. Furthermore, Gaultney failed entirely to

27
28

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1

document the reasons why he made this decision. Under oath on November 21, 2003, Gaultney

2

admitted he had not looked at the applicable California Penal Code section when he referred the

3

case to the district attorney. (Gaultney Tr. 840). California Penal Code § 118 is attached as

4

Exhibit 53. On its face, it appears the statute applies only to oaths “by law of the State of

5

California.” From a practical perspective, given its workload and budget shortfalls, the chances

6

that a federal court perjury claim would receive attention by the San Francisco District Attorney’s

7

Office is nil. It should also be noted that contrary to his recollections under oath (Gaultney Tr.

8

824 & 827), Gaultney discussed the Post Powers interviews at PBSP with the CCPOA’s Chief

9

Counsel, Benjamin C. Sybesma. See the e-mail attached as Exhibit 54.

10

On the other hand, the testimony demonstrates that both Gaultney and Barbara believed

11

there was significant evidence against Jones. For example, Gaultney made the referral to the

12

D.A. because there was reasonable cause to believe perjury had been committed and most cases

13

are submitted to the district attorney on reasonable cause (Gaultney Tr. 826). On the date of the

14

meeting, March 20, 2003, Barbara believed that there was evidence “beyond a reasonable doubt”

15

concerning the guilt of Correctional Officer Jones in the Chester stabbing incident. (Barbara Tr.

16

67, 68, 112). Barbara also believed he could win the case (Barbara Tr. 113).

17

After leaving Gaultney’s office on Thursday, March 20, 2003, investigator Ballard

18

dutifully opened a “criminal” internal affairs case concerning Correctional Officer Jones.

19

(Ballard Tr. 321; Exhibit 16). Ballard then called Lt. Yax and informed him the case was going

20

criminal (Yax Tr. 413). Ballard also called attorney Christine Albertine of the CCPOA and left

21

her a message on March 24, 2003, stating: “I am canceling our interviews. I am not doing any

22

interviews. I am not giving you any documents and I am taking at least one case criminal.”

23

(Ballard Tr. 326 - 327).

24
25
26
27
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1

J. The Divergence of Testimony Concerning the Events of March 24, 2003 to March 27,

2

2003.

3
4

1. Introduction.
Seven days after Robert Gaultney decided to file criminal charges against Officer Jones,

5

three days after Ballard called Albertine, a meeting was held in the Office of the Director of

6

Corrections, Edward Alameida, where the decision was made to shut-down the three

7

investigations and prepare a “fact finding” letter to the Special Master that emphasized only the

8

negatives of each case. The attendees at the meeting included Ballard, Barbara, Parry, Moore,

9

Alameida, Tristan, Kinser, and Legal Affairs attorney Beaty.

10

There are two very different versions of what transpired between March 24, 2003 and

11

March 27, 2003. The testimony at the Special Master’s hearings differed dramatically depending

12

upon the job position of the witness. The investigator and the lawyer directly involved in the

13

Post Powers investigations, Bob Ballard and Joe Barbara, testified one way. Alameida, Tristan,

14

and Kinser, collectively referred to as “The Directorate,” had a different recollection.

15

All witnesses, however, agree that it was an extraordinary event to be called to the

16

Director’s Office to discuss an internal affairs investigation. For example, Moore testified that

17

the Post Powers investigations were the only investigations where he met with the Director about

18

a pending case and thereafter closed the case before it was completed. (Moore Tr. 169 - 170).

19

Barbara had met with the Director only once before, concerning the David Lewis case. (Barbara

20

Tr. 84). Ballard had never met Director Alameida concerning a work-related matter, and was

21

apprehensive about being called to the Director’s Office. (Ballard Tr. 392). Even Gaultney, the

22

Assistant Chief Counsel over the Employment Law Unit, who was not invited to the meeting of

23

March 27, 2003, could not recall ever being called into the Director’s office to discuss pending

24

staff discipline. (Gaultney Tr. 839).

25
26
27
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1

2. The Testimony of the Investigators and Attorney Directly Involved in the Post

2

Powers Investigations.
a. Bob Ballard, OIS Investigator.

3
4

Investigator Bob Ballard testified that on March 25, 2003 he was in the 19th floor hallway

5

of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California waiting to testify in

6

another case and was informed by two other investigators, Bryan Kingston and Frank King, that

7

his supervisor, Assistant Director of OIS, Thomas Moore, was attempting to reach him by

8

telephone. Frank King told Ballard that Moore was looking for him because the Director wanted

9

to talk to him. (Ballard Tr. 327).

10

Ballard called Moore while he was still in San Francisco. Ballard described the

11

conversation as follows: “[a]nd right off he said, the Director wants to talk to you. Do you know

12

why?” (Ballard Tr. 329). Moore then asked Ballard about the status of the cases, and Ballard

13

informed Moore that he went criminal with one and was not giving the union any documents.

14

Moore asked for an explanation. Ballard told him that Barbara and Gaultney had made the

15

decision to go criminal. Moore told Ballard they would meet with the Director on Thursday. He

16

told Ballard to come to his office early, with Barbara, so they could talk before meeting with the

17

Director. (Ballard Tr. 330). Ballard called Barbara about the meeting. (Ballard Tr. 332).

18

On March 26, 2003, Ballard received an email request from Moore requesting that he

19

show up at 3:00 or 3:30 on March 27th to meet about a confidential matter. Ballard and Barbara

20

discussed the e-mail, commenting about how shortly after Ballard informed the union he was

21

taking the case criminal, the Director of Corrections wanted to see them. (Ballard Tr. 333, 338).

22

Ballard, Barbara, and Moore met at 3:00 p.m. on March 27, 2003. Moore asked Ballard

23

to bring him up to speed on the cases. Barbara told Moore that Schembri was a credible witness.

24

Ballard had the feeling that Moore was not happy with the decision to take the Jones case

25

criminal. Brian Parry showed up right before they were to go into the Director’s office. (Ballard

26

Tr. p. 335-336).

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1

The meeting in the Director’s Office began late. Beaty was the last to arrive. It started

2

with Alameida asking, “Okay, how did we get here?” Ballard and Barbara explained what was

3

going on with the cases. Ballard testified that he started out with an introduction and then started

4

giving a briefing on the Perez, Black, and Chester cases. Someone asked Ballard, “Well,

5

where’re we at? What’s going on?” Ballard testified that he then pulled out notices that been

6

delivered by the CCPOA. But when he attempted to show the Director the letters, both Alameida

7

and Tristan “looked up and away.” (Ballard Tr. 343 – 345). Beaty asked if any of the

8

allegations were true. Ballard said they were all true. The Director said, “How can you say

9

that?” Ballard explained it was because his standard was a preponderance versus reasonable

10

doubt. (Ballard Tr. 346: 14 – 23). Tristan then made a statement about prison gang leader Joe

11

Morgan, which Ballard interpreted as questioning his statement that all of the allegations were

12

true. An exchange of words followed. (Ballard Tr. 346 - 347).

13

Alameida wanted to know where they go from there. Barbara said, “Look, I can take

14

these cases. I’ve had worse.” Alameida became upset and he slammed his fist and said, “That’s

15

the problem with all these cases, we should never have had them in the first place.” Alameida

16

asked, “How do they go away?” Someone suggested closing the cases with a fact finder and

17

Alameida said, “Let’s go with that.” It was discussed that the fact finder would state the negative

18

points of the case. (Ballard Tr. 347-348). Barbara asked about how the Special Master would

19

take the decision. It was decided that Parry would inform the Special Master. Ballard

20

understood that he was to write the fact finder letter. (Ballard Tr. 349-350).

21

On March 31, 2003, Moore left Ballard a message saying that Alameida wanted to know

22

where the cases were at. (Ballard Tr. 353; Exhibit 1). Ballard completed the fact finder letter on

23

April 1, 2003. Moore reviewed the letter and told Ballard he would send it up the chain of

24

command. (Ballard Tr. 354). Moore did not tell Ballard to prepare formal IA reports. (Ballard

25

Tr. 357). The fact finder letter that was prepared for the Special Master focused only on the

26

negatives about each Post Powers investigation. (Ballard Tr. 359).

27
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1
2

b. Joseph Barbara, ELU Staff Counsel
Joe Barbara was contacted by Ballard concerning the meetings of March 27, 2003.

3

(Barbara Tr. 78). Prior to going to the meeting in the Director’s Office, Barbara and Ballard

4

attended a pre-meeting with Moore. Moore specifically wanted to discuss the Chester case,

5

expressing concern that the ELU was going criminal. (Barbara Tr. 81).

6

Barbara characterized the meeting with the Director as focusing solely on the Chester

7

incident, the case involving Correctional Officer Jones that Gaultney recommended be referred to

8

the San Francisco District Attorney. (Barbara Tr. 85-86). Barbara believed he could win the

9

Chester case on March 27, 2003, testifying that he’s taken worse (Barbara Tr. 85). He described

10

his conduct and that of Ballard as neither aggressive nor passive, just presenting the facts.

11

Barbara and Ballard were not defeatist in their discussions with the Director. (Barbara Tr. 89 -

12

90). Barbara testified adamantly that Alameida was told that ELU planned to go criminal

13

concerning Correctional Officer Jones (Barbara Tr. 86, 90).

14

Barbara described the course of the meeting as follows: Ballard was asked whether any

15

of the allegations against the subject officers were true, Ballard responded that everything was

16

true; thereafter, the Director slammed his fist on the desk. Alameida’s response was described

17

as follows: “[h]is response basically was that, that's a problem with these investigations is that

18

they are thrown up in the air and we just go forward with the case.” There was also an exchange

19

between Tristan and Ballard, wherein Tristan made reference to prison gang leader Joe Morgan;

20

Barbara, however, ignored the exchange. (Barbara Tr. 87-88, 123). After additional discussion,

21

Alameida asked something along the lines of “how did we get here?” Parry explained the

22

background of the cases to Alameida. (Barbara Tr. 130). The Director then made his decision.

23

Special Master: After the director slammed his hand and said, "this is the problem

24

with these cases," then what did he say?

25

Mr. Mather: Objection, hearsay.

26

Mr. Barbara: Let's make it go away, basically. (Barbara Tr. 90).

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1

A discussion ensued concerning how to make the cases go away. “[I]t was presented to

2

us what are the negatives in the case, present the negatives in the case.” Ballard was assigned the

3

task of preparing a “fact finding” letter to the Special Master, but Barbara, Gaultney, Beaty and

4

Moore also reviewed the letter. Ballard was told to emphasize the negatives in his letter to the

5

Special Master. Ballard did not prepare a formal IA report because of the decision at the March

6

27, 2003 meeting. (Barbara Tr 90- 91, 94, 100, 104).
c. Brian Parry, Retired Annuitant.

7
8
9

Brian Parry was working in LEIU as a “retired annuitant” in March 2003. He received
notice of the March 27, 2003 Director’s Office meeting via e-mail. (Parry Tr. 418-420, 438). A

10

few minutes before the meeting, Thomas Moore called Parry and asked him to come upstairs.

11

When Parry arrived, Moore and Ballard were on their way to the Director’s office, so Parry went

12

over with them. Parry did not participate in the pre-meeting between Ballard, Barbara, and

13

Moore, and did not know why Moore asked him to come to his office. (Parry Tr. 440). Parry

14

recalls that the Director was late. (Parry Tr. 440). The meeting began with Ballard giving a

15

briefing on the cases. Barbara also chimed in. Parry did not recall whether or not it was made

16

clear they were planning to go criminal with the Chester case. Parry testified that Ballard did

17

have documents from the CCPOA that he placed on the table. (Parry Tr. 443 - 444). Parry did

18

not remember Alameida’s reaction when Ballard showed him the letters from the CCPOA; nor

19

did he recall David Tristan making a reference to Joe Morgan. (Parry Tr. 452). The focus shifted

20

to the Chester case and Parry remembers Barbara saying he could put the case on but he could

21

not win it. (Parry Tr. 443- 444). Parry remembers Alameida reacting, he pushed away from the

22

table and said something like, “Well, that’s the problem, why are we going to put on cases that

23

we can’t win.”

24

Parry saw that Barbara realized Alameida was getting angry. (Parry Tr. 445). Parry

25

described the Director’s reaction as being frustrated. Following Alameida’s reaction, there was a

26

discussion as to how the cases would be finished-up. It was not Parry’s idea to close the cases

27
28

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1

out as a fact finder. (Parry Tr. 445). In response to the Special Master asking: “Did you ever ask,

2

why am I here?” Brian Parry responded: “I thought it. It wasn’t my case anymore. I didn’t have

3

anything to do with it anymore, but I felt Tom Moore dragged me into it. Why, I don’t know, but

4

I was there.” (Parry Tr. 446). “Then I think Agent Ballard was given direction to close it out

5

with a fact finder, and I think that’s the way it was left. When I left there, I am not so sure that I

6

felt Ballard had been given clear direction.” (Parry Tr. 446).

7

Parry was asked to contact the Special Master about the decision made to close down the

8

investigations. Dennis Beaty made this suggestion, after which Alameida said, “Brian would you

9

do me the favor, call Mr. Hagar and tell him it’s my decision is [sic] insufficient evidence to go

10

further on these cases.” Parry was also asked to contact CCPOA Vice President Chuck

11

Alexander and tell him about the decisions. Parry left Alexander a voice mail explaining they

12

were not going further on the cases because of insufficient evidence. (Parry Tr. 448 & 450).

13

Parry called the Special Master a day or two later.

14
15

2. The Testimony of the Directorate.
a. Edward Alameida, Director.

16

Alameida testified that he was contacted by CCPOA Vice President Chuck Alexander in

17

mid-March 2003. He was alone in his office when he received the call. Alexander spoke about

18

three different subjects; fire camp uniforms for staff, employee compensation for a correctional

19

officer who had been in Iraq, and the Post Powers perjury investigation at PBSP. Alexander

20

asked whether the Director knew the status of that case, to which Alameida replied “no.”

21

(Alameida Tr. 696 - 698). Alameida did not recall whether he indicated to Alexander that he

22

would look into the situation, nor did he document the call or receive anything in writing from

23

Alexander. (Alameida Tr. 698). He considered the question to be run-of-the-mill, a conversation

24

that lasted “about a minute or two at the most.” (Alameida Tr. 803 - 804).

25
26

Alameida was not aware of Alexander’s role as the CCPOA representative during the IA
and FBI interviews of correctional officers concerning the Powers/Garcia criminal cases; nor was

27
28

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1

he aware that Alexander had been investigated by the office of investigative services based on a

2

request from Regional Director Pickett, nor was he aware of the findings of the Knowles/Palmer

3

report, nor was he aware that charges had been sustained against Alexander concerning his

4

conduct during the criminal investigations, nor was he aware that Alexander had sued the CDC

5

concerning the investigation. (Alameida Tr. 700- 703). Alameida testified that had he known

6

about the investigation and lawsuit he would not have dealt with Alexander any differently in

7

March 2003. (Alameida Tr. 704).

8

Alameida did not know who set up the March 27, 2003 meeting. He received a card from

9

his secretary on the morning of March 27th showing a 4:00 p.m. meeting with OIS. Tristan and

10

Kinser came to the meeting through Alameida’s intervention. (Alameida Tr. 706) . At the time

11

of the meeting, Alameida did not know what the meeting was about. He was aware that there

12

were problems with the administration of the OIS; however, at the time of the meeting he

13

believed the problems identified by the OIG had been corrected. He subsequently determined

14

that was not correct. (Alameida Tr. 708-709; see also Exhibit 29).

15

The March 27th meeting began with discussion about the CCPOA demand for documents

16

and it was decided that the documents should not be provided. Alameida had the impression that

17

a decision was being sought from him as Director as to how the cases would proceed. Although

18

he was not given a written investigative report, he thought the cases were completed. Alameida

19

never specifically asked Moore if the investigation was completed (Alameida Tr. 712 - 713).

20

Then Ballard and Barbara talked about the merits of the cases that were the focus of the meeting.

21

Two cases did not merit further action, so they focused on one case. There were a number of

22

different facets of the case that were discussed in detail, e.g. a witness was out of state, an

23

inmate’s mental health capacity, and conflicting testimony between officers in a control booth.

24

The personnel at the meeting also discussed why the U.S. Attorney chose not to prosecute the

25

cases, as well as the recanting of testimony. (Alameida Tr. 714). Alameida asked all of the

26

meeting attendees if there were any reservations about not proceeding with the case. He made

27
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1
2

the decision not to proceed, he is the ultimate decision maker. (Alameida Tr. 717).
Alameida did not recall Tristan making a reference to Joe Morgan, he did not recall an

3

argument between Ballard and Tristan. He did recall Barbara saying he didn’t believe he had a

4

winnable case. Alameida did not ask why the case was brought to him rather than Warden

5

McGrath. He assumed it was presented to him as Director because it was high profile.

6

not know about the Post Powers Plan. No one told him that the Post Powers Plan called for the

7

case to be referred to the Warden of the institution where the employee worked. (Alameida Tr.

8

714 - 716). The cases were not presented to him in terms of the allegations being sustained or

9

not sustained, and he did not ask for the cases to be presented to him in those terms because he

He did

10

did not call the meeting. (Alameida Tr. 720 - 721). Had a potential criminal matter been brought

11

to his attention, he would have asked who made the recommendation. If that person was not at

12

the meeting, he would have halted the meeting and had the recommending party join the meeting.

13

If that person could not join the meeting Alameida would not have made the decision he did

14

without first speaking to that person. Alameida was not aware that Gaultney had referred the

15

Chester case to the San Francisco County District Attorney until 3 months later. (Alameida Tr.

16

805 - 807; 728). If Alameida had known he had eight weeks rather than two weeks before the

17

POBAR statute of limitations expired, he would have handled the matter differently. There

18

would have been more opportunity to cull out the issues associated with the case if there were

19

any. It may not have made a difference concerning the actual decision, but they would have had

20

more than forty-five minutes to discuss the investigation. (Alameida Tr. 811 - 812).

21

Once the decision was made not to go forward with the case, a discussion ensued

22

concerning how the decision should be communicated to the Special Master. Beaty mentioned

23

that the Special Master needed to be contacted. There was no discussion to emphasize the

24

negatives of the case. (Alameida Tr. 718-719). The decision was made that Parry would contact

25

the Special Master. Alameida also instructed Parry to contact Alexander. Alameida instructed

26

Parry to contact Alexander because Alameida thought that he should respond to Alexander’s

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earlier inquiries. Specifically, Alameida told Parry, “Would you please contact Chuck Alexander

2

and let him know the outcome of our discussions?” (Alameida Tr. 724). Alameida did not

3

instruct the investigators to provide the Special Master with investigative reports because he felt

4

they were appraising the Special Master of the outcome. He expected a formalized investigative

5

report would be done and transmitted in due course, and that the letter sent to the Special Master

6

was just an initial communication. (Alameida Tr. 719 - 720).

7
8
9
10
11

b. David Tristan, Chief Deputy Director.
David Tristan retired from the CDC in June 2003. In March 2003, he was the Chief
Deputy Director of field operations, with administrative responsibility for the institutions
division, parole, and health care services (Tristan Tr. 853-855).
Tristan arrived at the March 27, 2003 meeting with Alameida and Kinser. The meeting

12

began with the Director asking what was the purpose of the meeting. Moore asked that the

13

Director be briefed on the status of the cases, turning the meeting over to Ballard and Barbara.

14

(Tristan Tr. 856.). Ballard and Barbara presented the strengths and weaknesses of the cases in a

15

general sense, it was not a briefing in terms of specifics. The only case for which Tristan

16

remembers evidence being discussed was the case involving the assault on inmate Chester. The

17

Director did not make the statement, “how do we make these cases go away?” (Tristan Tr. 864).

18

Tristan did not make a reference to Joe Morgan during the meeting. (Tristan Tr. 859 - 860).

19

Tristan recalled that there were discussions about CCPOA requesting documents, however he did

20

not recall any discussion of any witness interviews that were or weren’t held. (Tristan Tr. 859).

21

Someone asked Ballard whether or not the case could be proved and Ballard responded by stating

22

that perjury had occurred, but it would be difficult to prove. Someone also asked whether

23

Barbara could present the case and Barbara replied he has presented worse. (Tristan Tr. 856 -

24

858). Tristan was under the impression that the evidence in the cases was very weak. At the end

25

of the meeting, the Director asked everyone in the meeting individually whether they should

26

move forward with adverse action on the cases. The Directorate, without exception, stated the

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cases should not go forward. Ballard and Barbara remained silent. (Tristan Tr. 861 - 863).

2

Someone at the meeting said the Special Master should be informed of the decision. The

3

Director asked Moore to write a letter to the Special Master, and asked Legal to help with the

4

letter. There was no discussion as to what the letter should say. The Director asked Parry to

5

inform the union. (Tristan Tr. 864 - 865).

6

Mr. Tristan testified there was no mention of specific documents being requested by the

7

CCPOA at the meeting, there was, however, a discussion of a request for documents. He does

8

not know why the Director did not ask for a written investigation report. He acknowledged the

9

CDC rules that require an investigation to have a written report at its conclusion. (Tristan Tr.

10

866 - 867). It wasn’t until after the March 27 meeting that Tristan found out that the

11

investigations had not been concluded. In retrospect Tristan knows there should have been a

12

written report on the investigations before a decision was made. (Tristan Tr. 884). He did not ask

13

why the Directorate was involved in the cases. No one told Tristan the investigations were

14

complete, nevertheless, he made an assumption that they were. (Tristan Tr. 881). Considering

15

the high profile of the cases, Tristan did not know why he hadn’t heard anything about the cases

16

before the March 27, 2003 meeting. He did not get the details about the evidence that had been

17

presented or discovered because he took everything that was being presented at face value. He

18

did not realize the magnitude of the problem until the Special Master’s Post Powers hearings

19

began. Only then did Tristan start asking specific questions about the three Post Powers internal

20

affairs investigations. (Tristan Tr. 871 - 872). Tristan has determined that no case conferences

21

were held by Moore concerning the investigation, and no one was monitoring the cases. He

22

believes that even if a case does not proceed criminally, it does not absolve the CDC of the

23

responsibility to handle it administratively. (Tristan Tr. 884 - 885). He now knows that there are

24

systemic problems with OIS. His knowledge of these problems, however, stems from the Post

25

Powers hearings conducted by the Special Master, department reviews, the OIG’s review, senate

26

hearings and a review by Mike Pickett. Some of Pickett’s findings indicated the corrective

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actions that had been presented to the Director from Moore were not in place. (Tristan Tr. 885 -

2

886).
c. Kathy Kinser, Chief Deputy Director.

3
4

Kinser was notified by computer scheduling about the March 27, 2003 meeting in the

5

Director’s Office. The meeting appeared on her calendar as an OIS case review (Kinser Tr. 232-

6

235). She perceived the meeting as requiring a decision whether to go forward on three cases.

7

At the time of the meeting Kinser did not know of the CDC’s Post-Powers Plan. (Kinser Tr. 226-

8

227). The plan was not discussed at the meeting. (Kinser Tr. 228). The meeting involved

9

Ballard and Barbara describing the three cases; however, it was not made clear to Kinser that the

10

investigations were not yet completed. She did not know of the decision to go criminal. (Kinser

11

Tr. 236).

12

In Kinser’s opinion, the Directorate should not have held a meeting if the investigations

13

were not completed. (Kinser Tr. 237). Kinser did not recall Alameida’s exact words when he

14

made the decision not to go forward, did not recall a discussion about providing the Special

15

Master with a letter containing more negatives than positives, did not recall a discussion between

16

Tristan and Ballard about Joe Morgan, and she did not recall Alameida putting his fist into his

17

hand or being frustrated. (Kinser Tr. 242-246). She admits Alameida “challenges” participants

18

at meetings and recalled that Parry was to contact the Special Master after the meeting. (Kinser

19

Tr. 243 - 245). Kinser testified that the Special Master received an inaccurate memo about three

20

very important investigations that were never completed. (Kinser Tr. 246-247).

21

3. The Testimony of Dennis Beaty and Thomas Moore.

22

a. Dennis Beaty, Legal Affairs Attorney,

23

Beaty came to the meeting in the Director’s Office because of a telephone message from

24

Moore on his answering machine. He denied being responsible for setting up the meeting with

25

the director. (Beaty Tr. 648 - 650). Beaty arrived at the meeting approximately 20 minutes late.

26

He summarized that portion of the meeting he observed as follows: there were a lot of comments

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1

about the evidence and there was no real confidence that there was a “criminal” case in view of

2

the evidence. Beaty attempted to get a consensus that the case was a good administrative case,

3

where the standard is a preponderance of the evidence rather than beyond a reasonable doubt.

4

(Beaty Tr. 651-652). He recalled Barbara’s statement that he had taken worse cases to trial;

5

however, Beaty had the impression that Barbara meant he would give it the “old college try” but

6

the case was not strong. (Beaty Tr. 654). According to Beaty, Alameida’s reaction was to

7

grimace and back away from the table while holding his fist in his hand, and then asked everyone

8

in the room what they thought. There was a consensus among the Directorate not to proceed on

9

the cases for lack of evidence. (Beaty Tr. 654 - 655).

10

At the time of the meeting, Beaty thought the investigations were complete. It was

11

decided that Parry would inform the Special Master that they were closing the investigations.

12

(Beaty Tr. 658-659). After the meeting Beaty walked out with Ballard and Barbara. Ballard and

13

Barbara were a bit disturbed and didn’t seem happy with the decision to close out. Beaty

14

testified Ballard and Barbara seemed “unsettled.” (Beaty Tr. 661). Beaty did not remember who

15

was to prepare the letter to the Special Master, did not recall Parry being instructed to call

16

Alexander, did not recall a statement that referenced Joe Morgan, did not recall an argument

17

about the difference between an administrator and an investigator, did not recall Brian Parry

18

talking to the director about the Post Powers Plan nor hearing the Director say “how did we get

19

here,” and he did not see Ballard put the letters from the CCPOA on the table at the meeting.

20

(Beaty Tr. 657, 658, 660, 662).

21
22

b. Thomas Moore, Deputy Director OIS.
Thomas Moore testified to three different explanations as to why he calendared a 4:00

23

p.m. meeting for the Director’s Office on March 27, 2003. First, he claimed that Brian Parry had

24

contacted him in the hallway of his office and this led to the need for a meeting (Moore Tr. 155-

25

156). After additional questions, however, Moore retracted this testimony (Moore Tr. 156 at 17-

26

23). Moore then testified that after he and Parry heard the briefing from Ballard and Barbara at

27
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1

the “pre-meeting of March 27th, “that we realized we had to brief Mr. Alameida now.” Moore

2

had checked the Director’s calendar and knew that he was available. (Moore Tr. 159 at 22-25).

3

Finally, Moore also testified that he called Ballard for a status report on March 25, 2003 based on

4

a call from Dennis Beaty, and this led to the meeting. (Moore Tr. 154, 155). Moore also

5

testified that “on my recall” the Director didn’t contact him to set up the meeting. (Moore Tr.

6

155).

7

At the meeting itself, Moore testified that Mr. Ballard was not passive, indicated he had

8

some work to be done and the case would be difficult to prove, while Barbara said it was a bad

9

case but that he had worse, it was 50/50. (Moore Tr. 167). According to Moore, Ballard stated

10

at the meeting that “I think there’s perjury here but I can’t prove it.” (Moore Tr. 195-196).

11

Moore testified he did not know one of the cases had been referred for criminal prosecution, and

12

that the referral to the D.A. was not mentioned at the meeting. He also did not recall Alameida

13

hitting his fist in his hand. (Moore Tr. 166 & 190). Moore believed they had done enough to

14

draw the conclusion that the cases had no merit, although he also admitted he did not tell the

15

Director the investigations were not completed. (Moore Tr. 168, 193-194). He testified it

16

appears the Special Master “got the negatives” in the close out letter (Moore Tr. 175). Moore

17

expected a formal closure report, the letter to the Special Master was only a cover memo.

18

(Moore Tr. 177-179, 203).

19

K. The Special Master’s Credibility Determination.

20

The Special Master finds the testimony of Ballard and Barbara to be credible. The

21

testimony of Edward Alameida and Thomas Moore, on the other hand, is not believable. In

22

addition to making this assessment based on the demeanor of the witnesses and their credibility

23

during direct and cross examination, the Special Master considered the following factors:

24

1. Ballard and Barbara testified about details. It was apparent, from their

25

perspective, that the events of March 27, 2003 were traumatic. They recalled critical events with

26

more specificity than did Alameida, Moore, Kinser, and Tristan. To a significant degree, the

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testimony of Brian Parry supported Ballard and Barbara’s versions of the events of March 25-27,

2

2003. Ballard’s testimony is also consistent with his contemporaneously prepared investigation

3

summary (Exhibit 1). Exhibit 1 contradicts Thomas Moore’s version of events.

4

2. Ballard and Barbara testified against their career interests. They had nothing to

5

gain by contradicting the statements of the Director of Corrections. Ballard and Barbara admitted

6

being involved in the preparation of a misleading letter to the Special Master. There was no

7

reason for either man to make admissions relating to the letter except to testify honestly,

8

regardless of the consequences. Alameida, and Moore, on the other hand, had much to gain by

9

attempting to convince the Special Master that the meeting in the Director’s Office of March 27,

10
11

2003 did not come about through the influence of the CCPOA.
3. It is difficult to believe Alameida’s, Moore’s, Kinser’s, and Tristan’s version

12

of what transpired at the meeting of March 27th. Even the most gross incompetence by the

13

Directorate does not excuse their collective failure to inquire whether the investigations were

14

complete. Nor does mere negligence explain the decision to shut-down the investigations

15

without consulting the hiring authority at PBSP, the failure to ensure the preparation of a formal

16

IA report, and their complicity in preparing a misleading letter to be sent to the Federal Court.

17

(Exhibits 18 & 19).

18

4. Mr. Alameida’s explanation about his conversation with CCPOA Vice

19

President Chuck Alexander is not believable. Mr. Alexander is an aggressive and intelligent

20

advocate for correctional officer interests. He has been at the forefront of the CCPOA resistance

21

to both the State and Federal criminal investigations of Powers, Garcia, and Lewis for more than

22

a decade. Alexander was investigated by the CDC. Charges were sustained concerning

23

Alexander’s inappropriate activity under the guise of Union business (for example, for preparing

24

a SPB request for adverse action with malice, and for misusing his authority as a CCPOA

25

representative to access confidential information). (See Exhibit 26). It is not believable that

26

Alexander would call the Director of Corrections, ask about the status of investigations directly

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1

related to the Powers and Garcia cases, and simply accept Mr. Alameida’s statement that he had

2

no knowledge of the matter. Alameida’s claim that he suddenly remembered a brief telephone

3

conversation with Alexander that had taken place weeks earlier, and based on this memory, told

4

Parry to call the CCPOA to inform Alexander the investigations had been shut down, is also not

5

believable.

6

5. Moore told Ballard that the Director wanted to see him when he contacted

7

Ballard by telephone on March 25, 2003. OIS investigator King, who was also called by Moore

8

on March 25th, likewise testified that Moore made specific reference to the Director when he

9

received a call from Moore looking for Ballard. “We were at this courthouse outside this

10

courtroom on another case involving Pelican Bay, and I received a phone call from Mr. Moore

11

asking me if I knew where Agent Ballard was. I said he’s here somewhere in the courthouse, he

12

may be testifying. He said, ‘I need to get ahold of him, the Director needs to speak with him.”

13

(King Tr. 948). Moore and Ballard discussed the decision to file criminal charges on March 25,

14

2003. (Ballard Tr. 331). Moore also referenced the decision to go criminal when he called

15

Barbara and told him to attend the meeting in the Director’s office. (Barbara Tr. 81 at 5-6).

16

Moore specifically wanted to discuss the Chester incident, the case that was being referred to the

17

District Attorney, at the pre-meeting of March 27th.

18

The weight of the evidence, and the circumstances surrounding the meeting of March

19

27th indicate that Thomas Moore set up the meeting at the request of Edward Alameida. Moore

20

would have known that Alameida reserved 4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. every afternoon for time to

21

work on his “in-basket,” and for meetings that need to be arranged on short notice. (Clifford Tr.

22

979; Exhibits 32 & 42). Alameida was called by Alexander not a few weeks prior to the

23

meeting, but a day or two prior, after Ballard left a message on CCPOA attorney Christine

24

Albertine’s answering machine on March 24, 2003 about the decision to file criminal charges.

25

When Moore contacted Ballard, who was in Federal Court, and determined Ballard’s and

26

Barbara’s availability, he set up the meeting with the Director through his secretary Dottie

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1
2

Perkins. (Perkins Tr. 961, 963; Clifford Tr. 978 - 979; Exhibits 32, 39, 40).
6. There are numerous inconsistencies in the testimony of the members of the

3

Directorate concerning critical aspects of the March 27, 2003 meeting. For example,

4

inconsistencies exist concerning the Directorate’s collective recollection of whether Bob Ballard

5

showed Alameida and Tristan the CCPOA letters from Albertine. Inconsistencies also exist

6

concerning whether Alameida told Parry to call Alexander. In addition, the recollection of events

7

by Kinser and Tristan is not as complete as the memory of Bob Ballard and Joseph Barbara. For

8

example, Ms. Kinser responded “I don’t recall” or “I do not recall” nine times during her

9

testimony (Kinser Tr. 234:21; 235:22; 242:15; 242:18; 245:23; 246:8; 246:14; 250:24; 259:14).

10

Kinser also testified that it was unclear whether the investigations were completed or not.

11

(Kinser Tr. 276-277). On March 11, 2003, however, Kinser was a recipient of an e-mail from

12

Dennis Beaty wherein Mr. Beaty made it perfectly clear to Moore, Gaultney and Kinser that the

13

cases were not completed. As emphasized by Mr. Beaty: “Blowing the statute of limitations will

14

have major adverse consequences for the Department in the Madrid litigation.” Beaty concluded

15

his e-mail by requesting that Moore “make every effort to see that the investigation is concluded

16

quickly and that it is processed expeditiously.” (Exhibit 52). Kinser, however, failed to inquire

17

whether the investigations were in fact completed.

18

7. The Special Master finds that Thomas Moore testified falsely. His false

19

testimony was in response to critical questions going to the heart of the Special Master’s

20

investigation. For example:

21

a. Moore testified Ballard was tasked in June 2002 with reviewing transcripts, legwork,

22

and giving a report if there was sufficient cause for the three cases to go forward. (Moore Tr.

23

143). Moore testified under oath that Ballard had taken time in July and August to review the

24

Powers’ criminal case files and was giving periodic feedback. (Moore Tr. 145). These

25

statements are false. Ballard did not conduct any case review in June 2002. Ballard did not

26

begin to conduct an internal affairs investigation until he received a 989, and Moore did not

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prepare the 989 until October 2002. (Ballard Tr. 274 - 275; Exhibits 4, 6, 7).

2

b. Moore testified: “Agent Ballard was not assigned any other cases and I was

3

transitioning his existing cases off of him.” (Moore Tr. 140). This statement is false. Moore

4

assigned Ballard to the Lewis case between October 2002 and January 2003, telling him he was

5

to be re-assigned to San Francisco and become the liaison between the CDC and the federal

6

government in assisting with the prosecution of Lewis. The Lewis case was not one that Ballard

7

could take on a part-time basis, and Moore told Ballard the Powers/Garcia cases would be

8

reassigned to someone else. Ballard worked on the Lewis case for about three weeks. The case

9

was eventually reassigned to Joe Reynoso. (Ballard 281- 283; Reynoso 514). Thus, not only was

10

Ballard assigned to three Post Powers investigations that were so complicated they were

11

impossible to complete in eight months, he was actually removed from the Post Powers cases for

12

several weeks during October 2002 and temporarily assigned to another complicated matter.

13

c. Moore testified he called Ballard on March 25, 2003 based on a call from Dennis

14

Beaty (Moore Tr. 154, 172). This statement is false. Beaty did not instruct Moore to call Ballard

15

in March 2003 (Beaty Tr. 649-650).

16

d. Moore testified that after he and Parry were briefed about the Post Powers

17

investigations by Ballard and Barbara on March 27, 2003, they realized that they had to “brief

18

Mr. Alameida now.” Moore goes on to state that he had checked Mr. Alameida’s calendar and

19

knew that he was available. (Moore Tr. 159). This explanation concerning why Ballard and

20

Barbara were suddenly called before the Director is false. Moore arranged the March 27th

21

meeting the day prior, on March 26, 2003. The meeting was calendared the day prior, on March

22

26, 2003, and was confirmed by both Moore’s and Alameida’s secretaries (Perkins Tr. 963 -

23

964; Clifford Tr. 979; Exhibits 32, 39, 40). In addition, Ballard received a telephone call from

24

Moore about the meeting on March 25th and also received an e-mail on March 26th about the

25

meeting. (Ballard Tr. 338). Furthermore, Brian Parry did not attend the pre-meeting on March

26

27, 2003, and had nothing to do with calendaring the meeting with the Director. (“No, it wasn’t

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1

my case. I wouldn’t have set the meeting up with the Director on this.” (Parry Tr. 439). Parry

2

also received prior notice of the meeting from Thomas Moore via e-mail. (Parry Tr. 438).

3

Likewise, Beaty received prior notice through a telephone message. (Beaty Tr. 649-650).

4

e. Moore testified that one of the problems with the Post Powers investigations was a

5

lack of supervision by the Special Agent in Charge of the Northern Region, Art Smith. He

6

testified Mr. Smith was inundated with other duties and therefore did not oversee the cases in an

7

adequate manner. (Moore Tr. 138). These statements are false. The Post Powers cases were

8

supervised by Thomas Moore himself. Mr. Smith had no supervisory responsibility for the Post

9

Powers investigations. (Grout Tr. 545; Ballard Tr. 276-277, 380).

10

8. Alameida seriously undermined his credibility by providing the Special Master

11

with two different and incomplete versions of how the decision was made by the CDC to pay for

12

the criminal defense of former Correctional Officer David Lewis’ retrial. The first version

13

occurred in the Fall of 2002 after the Special Master was contacted by Assistant United States

14

Attorney Miranda Kane concerning Lewis’ retrial. Ms. Kane expressed concerns to the Special

15

Master about the ability of the United States to effectively prosecute the Lewis case after being

16

told by the CDC that Agent Joe Reynoso would not be assigned to assist her. The Special Master

17

had a second meeting with Ms. Kane, Assistant United States Attorney Ismail J. Ramsey, and

18

Agent Joe Reynoso. He was told that the CDC had informed the U.S. Attorney that if another

19

agent was assigned to the Lewis case, the agent would not be allowed to sit at counsel’s table.

20

Apparently, the agent would have to wait in the hallway for instructions. In addition, the Special

21

Master was told that the CDC would be paying for the criminal defense of Lewis. This decision

22

was contrary to the position taken at the first Lewis trial, when Acting Director of Corrections

23

Steve Cambra made the decision not to pay for Lewis’ defense.

24

Because of these concerns, the Special Master arranged for a meeting with Alameida in

25

late October 2002. After a series of delays, the Director and Special Master met in the Special

26

Master’s office in San Francisco. After the one-on-one meeting, Alameida, the Special Master,

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and counsel for the parties discussed this issue. Alameida told the Special Master that he had

2

made the decision that the CDC should pay for the criminal defense of Lewis. He stated it was a

3

difficult decision, but one that he felt appropriate pursuant to the terms of the recently negotiated

4

CCPOA contract, and because Lewis had been found by a Shooting Review Board (“SRB”) to

5

have shot inmate Long pursuant to CDC policy. He emphasized he made the decision after

6

discussions with his staff, including attorneys. Alameida also stated his belief that the CDC

7

should appear “neutral” at the trial, and it would not be appropriate to have a CDC investigator

8

sitting with the prosecution because it might send a signal that the CDC believed Lewis was

9

guilty. Both Alameida and the CDC’s attorneys told the Special Master that no documents had

10

been prepared concerning the decision. The Director did agree to re-visit the issue of assigning

11

Reynoso to the Lewis case. Thereafter, Alameida and Beaty met with Ms. Kane. Some time

12

later Reynoso was re-assigned to the Lewis prosecution.

13

During his testimony under oath on November 21, 2003, however, Mr. Alameida told an

14

entirely different story. Alameida testified that YACA asked him to look into a request for

15

representation in the Lewis case. Thereafter, Alameida had conversations with Parry and maybe

16

Barbara about the case. He sought the advice of counsel and presented all of the information he

17

had gathered to YACA who then made the decision to pay for Lewis’ representation. His

18

viewpoint was not to represent Lewis. To the best of Alameida’s knowledge, the person who

19

made the decision to pay for Lewis’ defense was Peter Jensen (“Jensen”), the person with

20

ultimate authority at YACA at the time. (Alameida Tr. 739). Mr. Alameida provided no

21

explanation for the version of events he told the Special Master approximately one year before.

22

Both of these versions, moreover, are inconsistent with evidence relating to the decision to fund

23

Lewis’ second defense, as discussed below.

24

9. Summary.

25
26

Given all of the above, and after weighing the evidence and the credibility of witnesses,
the Special Master concludes that the weight of the relevant evidence demonstrates that the

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meeting of March 27, 2003 was calendared by Thomas Moore in response to a request from

2

Edward Alameida – after Alameida received a telephone inquiry from CCPOA Vice President

3

Chuck Alexander shortly after Ballard notified the CCPOA of the decision to go criminal in the

4

Chester case on March 24, 2003. Thereafter, the Director shut-down the Post Powers

5

investigations at the March 27, 2003 meeting. The Directorate and Thomas Moore instructed

6

Ballard and Barbara to send a letter to the Special Master that contained only those facts which

7

supported the Director’s decision, a letter that emphasized only the “negatives” of each case.

8

L. The Department of Corrections’ Failure to Comply With the Post Powers

9

Administrative Investigation and Discipline Plan.

10

The evidence is undisputed that the CDC failed to comply with every critical element of

11

the Post Powers Investigative Plan and Disciplinary Review Process plan submitted to the

12

Special Master. (Exhibit 2). Rather than monitoring the plan, Robert Gaultney simply ignored it,

13

and recommended that one of the three investigations “go criminal.” Rather than assigning a

14

team of investigators, only one was assigned. Neither the investigator nor the attorney assigned

15

to the case were told about the plan. Department protocols and procedures were ignored. Instead

16

of completing the investigation in six months, it did not start for four months. The investigations

17

were not completed within the POBAR statute of limitations, thereby precluding administrative

18

employee discipline. Finally, instead of referring completed cases to the Pelican Bay Warden, as

19

called for by the plan, the cases were shut down by the Director of Corrections. No one disputes

20

these facts; indeed Alameida, Tristan, and Kinser admit that problems and misunderstandings

21

adversely affected their decision making process on March 27, 2003. (Alameida Tr. 708 - 709,

22

714 - 716, 805 - 807, 811 - 812; Tristan Tr. 866 - 877, 884, 871 - 872, 885 - 886; Kinser Tr. 226 -

23

227, 236, 246 - 247).

24

While the Special Master is convinced that Barbara Sheldon prepared the plan with the

25

best of intentions, in terms of its implementation, the CDC’s submission to the Special Master

26

was a sham. After the retirement of Brian Parry, no one at the highest level of the Department

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displayed either the will or competence to put the plan into effect. Moore, Gaultney, and the

2

Directorate knew that the criminal acts of Powers and Garcia implicated the most serious of

3

problems at Pelican Bay. Despite this knowledge, they did nothing to pursue three necessary

4

administrative investigations. Collectively, their failure is more than mere negligence, it is

5

nothing less than the awareness of a serious integrity related problem and the subsequent

6

deliberate disregard of that problem.

7

M. The Department of Corrections’ Failure to Comply with Department Operating

8

Procedures and OIS Policies Concerning the Post Powers/Garcia Internal Affairs

9

Investigations.

10

The evidence is also undisputed that the CDC failed to comply with almost every critical

11

DOM section and OIS policy during the Post Powers administrative investigations. (Exhibit 20).

12

The cases were started in an untimely manner, the 989's were not adequate, there were no case

13

conferences, and no supervision by Moore. (Moore Tr. 135). None of the cases were

14

completed, none complied with OIS protocols, and every critical step of the normal investigative

15

process did not take place. (Moore Tr. 146-150; Barbara Tr. 26-27; Parry Tr. 447). Even worse,

16

the cases were shut-down by the Director of Corrections without a formal report, and without

17

informing the hiring authority at Pelican Bay State Prison.

18

N. The Department of Corrections’ Failure to Comply With the Court Ordered PBSP

19

Use of Force Remedial Plan.

20
21

1. Introduction.
As explained at page 4 above, under the Court approved remedial plan, all managers and

22

supervisors involved with PBSP investigations and discipline have the responsibility to

23

investigate incidents of abuse of force, including incidents where correctional officers cover-up,

24

withhold, or act in concert with others to prohibit factual information from being reported as

25

required by the Use of Force Policy.

26
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2. Defendants Violated the Remedial Plan By Failing to Adequately Investigate

2

the Perjury Allegations Against Correctional Officers Jones, Matlock, and Tuttle.

3

Uncontradicted evidence proves that defendants violated the PBSP remedial plan.

4

Simply stated, the CDC failed to investigate the evidence they obtained from the U.S. Attorney

5

that Correctional Officer Jones, Matlock, and Tuttle perjured themselves during the

6

Powers/Garcia criminal case. The investigation began four months late, it was inadequately

7

staffed, Department protocols were ignored, Moore failed to manage the investigations, and the

8

Director of Corrections shut-down the investigations prior to their completion. As Brian Parry

9

testified:

10

Special Master: Have you ever had a Director before March 27, 2003 issue

11

instructions that a pending IA would be closed out through a letter?

12

Brian Parry: Not that I recall.

13

Special Master: And have you ever been at a meeting with a director about a

14

pending IA case when, after the Director made his decision to end the

15

investigation, you were instructed to call the union representative?

16

Brian Parry: No, I don’t ever recall that before. (Parry Tr. 472: 9 – 17; see also

17

472: 21-25).

18

What happened in the Director’s office on March 27, 2003 meeting was reminiscent of

19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26

what used to take place at Pelican Bay State Prison.
It is clear to the Court that while the IAD goes through the necessary
motions, it is invariably a counterfeit investigation pursued with one outcome in
mind: to avoid finding officer misconduct as often as possible. As described
below, not only are all presumptions in favor of the officer, but evidence is
routinely strained, twisted or ignored to reached the desired result . . . the IAD
applies standards more consistent with criminal than civil or administrative
proceedings. Defendants’ witnesses testified that an inmate allegation of
excessive force will only be sustained if the wrongdoing was "clearly prove[d]
with certainty," or "beyond a reasonable doubt." Long Tr. 17-2801; Beckwith Tr.
17-2764. Suspicions that officers are withholding information are ignored unless
such misconduct can be "absolutely prove[d]." Beckwith Tr. 17-2752-53. As
Nathan observed, ?If the inmate must establish the misuse of force <conclusively’
and by evidence that excludes every <possibility’ other than officer misconduct, he
will never prevail." Nathan Decl. at 88.

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5

Second, not only are the above standards exacting on their face, but the
manner in which they are applied at Pelican Bay makes them almost impossible to
meet. Internal Affairs routinely minimizes or ignores evidence adverse to staff,
and strains to find explanations (however implausible) that can be used to reject
allegations of excessive force. Thus, as long as some theoretically possible
version of events exculpates the officer, it will be relied upon to avoid a finding of
culpability, even though it may be highly improbable and lack any credible basis
in the record. Madrid v. Gomez, supra, 889 F. 1146, 1192-93 (N.D. Cal. 1995)

6

The March 2003 violations of the remedial plan are especially serious because the

2
3
4

7

underlying offenses involve the most egregious form of the code of silence; lying in Federal

8

Court. Furthermore, the CDC employees responsible for the failure to adequately investigate

9

Officers Jones, Matlock, and Tuttle were the Director of Corrections, Edward Alameida, and his

10

highest ranking investigator, Thomas Moore. Nine years after the Order of January 10, 1995 it is

11

apparent that top officials of the Department of Corrections neither understand nor care about the

12

need for fair investigations, nor are they likely to impose discipline in the face of CCPOA

13

objections.

14

3. Defendants Violated the Remedial Plan By Failing to Prepare a Report of the

15

Investigations on the CDC Forms 989 A and B.

16

Defendants further violated the remedial plan by failing to close out the four open internal

17

affairs investigations with a formal investigative report. The evidence supporting this factual

18

finding is not in dispute: instead of completing a Form 989 A and B report, the CDC sent a

19

misleading and false letter to the Special Master.

20

While a fact finder letter can never substitute for a formal internal affairs report under

21

either the remedial plan or the DOM sections that pertain to OIS, there are circumstances where a

22

fact finder level of review is an appropriate form of investigation. However, as pointed out by

23

Dr. Maher in Exhibit 49, a fact finder investigation under the remedial plan requires the

24

following:

25

1. The allegations made

26

2. An explanation of the incident

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3. The written or verbal statements of the witnesses

2

4. The health care information

3

5. A conclusive recommendation.

4

Exhibits 18 & 19 contained the allegations and an explanation of each incident. However,

5

they did not contain written or verbal statements of the witnesses, the health care information, or

6

a recommendation, and they do not conform with the remedial plan. Use of Force Procedures

7

Reporting Allegations of Unnecessary or Excessive Use of Force, Section I.C.

8

4. Alameida and Moore Violated the Remedial Plan By Organizing and

9

Condoning a Cover-Up Concerning the Shut-Down of the Post Powers
Investigations.

10
11

The false and misleading letters sent to the Special Master in April 2003 (Exhibits 18 &

12

19) violate the Court’s use of force remedial orders. The decision to shut down the

13

investigations and subsequently send the Special Master a letter emphasizing only the negatives

14

was an attempt by the Director of Corrections and the Deputy Director of OIS to act in concert

15

with others to prohibit accurate factual information from being reported as required by the Use of

16

Force Policy. Alameida ordered the fact finding letters. Moore not only supervised their

17

completion, he also controlled the actual mailing. In addition, Moore testified that he briefed

18

Alameida about the letters. (Moore Tr. page 185 at 18-21). Consistent with this testimony,

19

Moore’s cover letter is dated seven days after the date of the letter signed by Ballard. (Compare

20

Exhibits 18 & 19). Ballard’s testimony, as well as his contemporaneously entered notes in

21

Exhibit 1 also affirm that Alameida followed-up with Moore at least once to verify the letters

22

were being completed. Finally, neither Moore, nor any member of the Directorate, including

23

Alameida, Tristan, and Kinser, took action to ensure that the requisite internal affairs reports

24

were prepared.

25

The errors, omissions, and false statements in Exhibits 18 & 19 are serious. They go

26

directly to the question of whether charges against Correctional Officers Jones, Matlock, and

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Tuttle should be sustained. Assistant U.S. Attorney Melinda Haag summarized the major

2

inaccuracies in Exhibit 19 as follows:

3

Perez Incident (2nd Paragraph of Exhibit 19)

4

The information in the letter concerning this incident is not complete. It fails to include

5

Jim Mather’s testimony which, other than the reports themselves, provided essentially all of the

6

evidence in support of the incident at trial. The prosecution did not present any evidence to CDC

7

officials in the meeting in June 2002 that Mr. Perez had a history of mental illness. The

8

government did not call Perez as a witness at trial; they relied solely on Mather’’s testimony and

9

the reports themselves.

10

Chester Incident (3rd Paragraph of Exhibit 19)

11

This is not a complete summary of the facts concerning this incident. Prior to his

12

appearance at trial, Officer Manzano had made statements that he did not hear the conversation

13

or did not remember the conversation. When Manzano testified at trial, he said he remembered

14

something about it, which was that it had something to do with an inmate in trouble. With

15

respect to Schembri being delinquent in reporting the conversation, he testified that he was

16

troubled by the stabbing and introduced a note he had written and carried in his wallet. Schembri

17

testified at trial that because of the code of silence at the prison that he did not come forward, but

18

when asked four years later in an internal affairs interview, he told the truth.

19

Black Incident (1st Paragraph of Exhibit 20)

20

The first paragraph of the letter does not completely summarize what Ms. Haag told the

21

CDC representatives in the meeting. It doe not address Powers telling the FBI agents that he had

22

hit Black. It also does not include the testimony regarding Wise and his concerns about the fact

23

that no reports had been written, as well as the conclusions to be drawn from Wise’s testimony.

24

(Haag Tr. 776 - 789).

25

Court expert Dr. Patrick Maher’s Memoranda entitled “Review of OIA Northern Region

26

April 1, 2003 Fact Finder - Powers/Garcia Perjury Issues” is attached as Exhibit 49. Dr. Maher

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summarizes the defects of Exhibit 19, and concludes it does not conform to the remedial plan,

2

was an inappropriate method of closing an internal affairs investigation, was misleading and

3

inaccurate, failed to indicate the cases were closed with incomplete investigations, failed to

4

provide any of the evidence that supported the fact there was sufficient evidence to at least

5

warrant the completion of the investigations, and did not meet the industry standard for reporting

6

on investigations. The Special Master agrees with each of Dr. Maher’s conclusions.

7

O. The OIS Failure to Conduct Adequate Post Powers Investigations is Indicative of

8

Serious Systemic Problems the Department of Corrections has Failed to Correct for More

9

Than Two Years.

10

There is undisputed evidence that the Department of Corrections’ failures with the Post

11

Powers investigation are indicative of serious systemic shortfalls that impact all OIS

12

investigations. In October 2001, the OIG completed an audit/assessment of OIS and found a

13

series of very serious systemic problems that included the following: an inaccurate and unreliable

14

management reporting system, the absence of a system for assessing case priority, inadequate

15

controls to prevent abuse of overtime pay, ineffective oversight of regional offices, inadequate

16

background checks of investigators, failure to conduct background checks of borrowed staff,

17

inadequate staff training, inadequate control over access to the case tracking system, inadequate

18

documentation in case files, inconsistencies among regional offices in rejecting cases for

19

investigation, deficiencies in handling and storing evidence, and deficiencies in armory policies

20

and procedures. (Exhibit 29).

21

The OIG’s report was submitted directly from the then Inspector General, Steve White, to

22

Alameida. Parry was the acting Assistant Director of OIS when the report issued. He reviewed

23

the report at the Director’s request and prepared a responsive letter. Parry agreed with the

24

findings of the Inspector General. (Parry Tr. 457-458). After Parry’s retirement, Moore was

25

charged with preparing a corrective action plan to correct the problems found by the OIG.

26

Moore’s January 21, 2003 report about the status of the corrective action plan is attached as

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Exhibit 21. The information reported by Mr. Moore in this document is almost entirely false.

2

There has been no real corrective action. Concerning almost every major problem found by the

3

OIG, nothing had changed from October 30, 2001, the date of Mr. White’s letter, to July 30,

4

2003, the date of the first of the Special Master’s hearings.

5

For example, when Moore wrote his report there was not an approved OIS policy manual

6

available for OIS agents, a problem that has existed since the beginning of the unit. (Grout Tr.

7

555). Thus, some offices utilized a six month standard for completing cases, while others

8

attempt to comply with a ninety day standard. There had been changes to the management

9

information system, but it is not much different from the old format. (Grout Tr. 564). There

10

were no written procedures for prioritizing cases, nor was there a standardized policy or

11

procedure to control overtime abuse that exists in the three OIS offices. (Grout Tr. 565-568).

12

There was no formalized plan for training for OIS agents, and while a system for the tracking of

13

training existed, not all offices utilized it. (Grout Tr. 572-573). There were no instructive

14

memoranda to ensure that the three OIS regional offices process category II rejections

15

consistently and properly. (Grout Tr. 574). OIS was also not meeting its mandate to review the

16

category I investigations completed by the prisons, and there was no quarterly report to track

17

category I investigations. (Grout Tr. 575).

18

One of the OIG’s findings may have public safety implications. The OIG discovered that

19

the CDC has placed an “eleven hour” hour limit on conducting background investigations of

20

potential OIS agents. This limitation apparently applies to all applicants for California

21

correctional officer positions. Sandy Grout, the Agent in Charge of the OIS’s Northern Region,

22

has also served the CDC as the Captain over the background check unit. To her knowledge, the

23

eleven hour limitation has not been corrected. (Grout Tr. 586-589).

24

The CDC is required by California Penal Code section 1029.1 to utilize the standards

25

established by the Commission on Peace Office Standards and Training (“POST”) as guidelines

26

concerning correctional officer background investigations. A survey of California law

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enforcement agencies indicate that approximately forty hours is required to complete an adequate

2

peace officer background check. Thus, forty hours is the standard benchmark for completing an

3

adequate background investigation of a potential peace officer candidate.

4

The CDC, however, is allocated only eleven hours per correctional officer candidate for

5

this task. Two POST audits of CDC recruitment found that the elements of the background

6

checks of potential correctional officers that were being completed by the CDC were done in an

7

appropriate manner; however, not all of the fieldwork required by POST is completed by the

8

CDC, including credit checks and the critical door to door reference check. CDC has recognized

9

the need for additional funding to correct this problem. Two prior Budget Change Proposals

10

(“BCP”) to obtain the funds necessary to staff an adequate background check unit have, however,

11

been rejected.

12

Important policy considerations mandate the forty hour minimum for background checks

13

for peace officers, including the need to verify the applicant’s background, his mental health, and

14

possible affiliation with criminal gangs. (Grout Tr. 570). If CDC correctional officers are being

15

hired without adequate background checks, both institutional and public safety are compromised.

16

The Special Master finds Moore’s “corrective action summary” dated January 31, 2003

17

(Exhibit 21) to be defective on its face. Even a cursory evaluation of the document puts a reader

18

on notice that no real corrective actions were envisioned. For example, Moore responded to the

19

OIG’s finding about investigation time limits by stating that the DOM has been changed. This

20

statement is false, and reasonable CDC officials should have known it was false. Moore

21

responded to the OIG’s findings about problems with management information by stating: “A

22

completion date in December 2002 was targeted but may be delayed if the project requires

23

additional findings and unforeseen problems with other Divisions impacted by the rewrite.” It is

24

not clear what Moore actually meant by this statement; however, since his update was provided

25

to Alameida in January 2003, it was obvious the target date was not met. No one in the

26

Directorate, however, questioned this explanation. Concerning the OIG’s finding of inconsistent

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policies, Moore’s report was non-responsive, stating: “A review of the operating procedures

2

revealed the three (3) regional offices are fairly consistent but have some differences due to

3

differences in workload, nature of cases, geography, and available resources.” Moore’s response

4

to the OIG’s finding of a Departmentally imposed 11-hour limit on background checks was also

5

non-responsive, stating: “All investigations are completed within 45-days; however,

6

psychological interviews take longer as they are scheduled and controlled by the State Personnel

7

Board.”

8
9

The Special Master finds almost all of Moore’s responses to be either inadequate or nonresponsive. Nonetheless, Alameida and Tristan testified that they were unaware of problems

10

with OIS. They believed, until the Special Master’s hearings began, that the corrective actions

11

instituted by Thomas Moore were in place. (Alameida Tr. 709; Tristan Tr. 885-886). The

12

CDC’s complete failure to develop and implement an adequate OIG corrective action program

13

after a period of more than two years, indicates that the State of California, without assistance,

14

may be unable to fix the investigation problems that plague the CDC.

15

P. The ELU Failure to Manage Adequate Post Powers/Garcia Administrative

16

Investigations and Discipline is Indicative of Serious Systemic Problems With ELU

17

Operations that the Department of Corrections has Failed to Correct for Two Years.

18

The Special Master finds the Department of Corrections’ failure to complete the Post

19

Powers/Garcia investigations in a timely manner, and its failure to commence discipline, is not

20

an isolated problem. Rather, what happened to the Post Powers investigations are examples of

21

serious systemic shortfalls in the CDC’s adverse action discipline process.

22

The Special Master previously reported to the Court about the Mayo cases, which

23

involved MTA’s at PBSP who were not disciplined for very serious violations of CDC policy

24

because the CDC’s investigation and discipline process took more than one year. Because of the

25

Mayo cases, in 2001 the Special Master requested that the OIG conduct an audit of the CDC’s

26

adverse action process. Similar to the OIG’s findings in the OIS audit, the OIG audit report of

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March 2002 (which has previously been filed under seal with the Court), found numerous

2

systemic problems with the processing of adverse action cases, including a lack of coordination

3

between ELU and OIS, inadequate or non-existent policies concerning important issues such as

4

when to file an appeal or how to settle a case, inadequate training for OIS agents and the

5

Employee Relations Officers in the prisons, inadequate tracking of discipline related processes,

6

confusion about the POBAR one year statute of limitations, and a lack of clarity concerning the

7

roles and responsibilities of the CDC officials involved with employee discipline. The OIG

8

found that these problems led to forty percent of all adverse actions being dismissed or otherwise

9

compromised because the CDC was unable to complete the cases in a one year period of time.

10

In subsequent reports the Special Master informed the Court of the CDC’s effort to

11

develop and implement an adequate corrective action plan, and how the CDC’s efforts were beset

12

with untimely actions and inadequate responses. While the Special Master has been assured by

13

the highest levels of CDC officials, and their attorneys, that adequate controls now exist on

14

adverse action cases, what happened with the Post Powers investigations reveals the ELU

15

corrective actions are simply not working. Two years have passed since the OIG issued its

16

report. While the CDC attempts to argue that losing forty percent of cases is mere incompetence,

17

its failure to fix the problem is tantamount to a deliberate decision to continue business as usual,

18

untimely investigations, untimely discipline, and the failure to track and manage casework,

19

despite the findings of the Court and the Inspector General.

20

The CDC’s failure is not a matter of funding; rather, it represents serious management

21

problems at the Directorate level of the Department. The solution is not more money, it is a

22

question of will. Similar to the systemic problems with OIS, the failure to discipline employees

23

in a timely manner presents a serious threat to institutional and public safety. The CDC’s

24

inability to fix the ELU indicate that the State of California may be unable to solve the serious

25

problems identified by the Federal Court and the OIG.

26
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Q. The Problems Encountered During the Post Powers Investigations are Representative

2

of a Systemic Failure to Adequately Discipline PBSP Correction Officers by the Highest

3

Level of CDC Officials.

4

1. Introduction.

5

The Post Powers investigative failures were caused by faulty leadership in the OIS and

6

ELU and the shut-down of three investigations by Alameida. As demonstrated above, this

7

conduct violated the Court’s Orders, the Post Powers Plan, and the Departmental Operations

8

Manual. The Post Powers cases, however, are far from unique. Indeed, in the course of the

9

Special Master’s hearings, the testimony by a number of witnesses brought at least four other

10

cases to light where the highest levels of CDC officials failed to discipline correctional officers

11

because of their fear of a CCPOA reaction. The acquiescence by the CDC to CCPOA demands,

12

no matter how intrusive, an active code of silence, inept CDC officials, and retaliation against

13

whistle blowers and the investigators brave enough to attempt to enforce the law, has rendered

14

the adverse action process in the California Department of Corrections almost entirely

15

ineffective. The Special Master describes below the four PBSP specific examples of the type of

16

interaction that goes on between the CCPOA and the CDC’s top officials.

17

2. The Director of Correction’s Failure to Discipline CCPOA Representatives

18

Alexander and Newton.

19

As documented in the Knowles/Palmer internal affairs report, the charges sustained

20

against CCPOA representatives Alexander and Newton were extremely serious. For example,

21

CCPOA representative Newton received information about Correctional Officer Garcia’s illegal

22

conduct and failed to report that conduct. During the same time period, Newton represented

23

Garcia at Garcia’s State Personnel Board hearing. The evidence also indicates that Newton lied

24

during the IA investigation itself. Likewise, both Alexander and Newton repeatedly engaged in

25

inappropriate business under the guise of CCPOA business. Essentially, both CCPOA

26

representatives attempted to use the excuse of union representation as cover for their concerted

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program to thwart the PBSP investigation into the criminal activities of Garcia and Powers.

2

Alexander and Newton also filed false SPB complaints with malice, dishonest actions that call

3

into question whether either representative has the ethics required of a California Peace Officer.

4

(See Exhibit 26). All in all, the interviews recorded in the Knowles/Palmer report present a

5

frightening portrait of union representatives bent on covering-up the criminal abuse of prisoners.

6

Nevertheless, neither CCPOA representative was disciplined in any manner (Exhibit 57).

7

Newton remains the CCPOA representative at Pelican Bay. Alexander is now a CCPOA Vice

8

President employed at CCPOA headquarters in Sacramento. He continues to draw a full-time

9

correctional officer salary from Pelican Bay State Prison.

10

3. The Decision To Pay For the Criminal Defense of Former PBSP Correctional

11

Officer David Lewis.

12

a. The Court’s Findings Re CDC Shooting Reviews.

13

In its Order of January 10, 1995, the Court found as follows concerning lethal force

14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26

shooting reviews at Pelican Bay State Prison:
As an initial matter, we note that a significant number of shootings go
unreviewed altogether. Department regulations require that all firearm discharges
be reviewed to determine whether staff actions comply with policy guidelines
governing the use of firearms. When the shooting incident results in serious
injury or death, the review must be conducted by a departmental Shooting Review
Board ("SRB"). Shootings that do not result in serious injury or death must be
reviewed by an institutional Shooting Review Team ("SRT"). DOM § 55050.13.
Prison records show, however, that at least 24 rifle shots in 19 separate incidents
(between December 1989 and March 31, 1993) were never reviewed at all. Trial
Exh. P- 5571. Some of these shots were shots "for effect" (i.e. shots intended to
hit a person) or shots resulting in injury. In an additional 17 incidents, involving
30 shots, a shooting review number was assigned to the incident, but there is no
evidence that the shooting was ever actually reviewed. Trial Exh. P-5571. Given
defendants' failure to refute the apparent lack of review in these incidents, we
conclude that no such review occurred.
Nor have regulations concerning the composition of SRTs been adhered
to. Pursuant to the DOM, SRTs must consist of a chairperson plus three officers
from different correctional ranks. DOM § 55050.13.1. Yet, until three months
before trial, SRTs at Pelican Bay inexplicably consisted of only one administrator.
Not only does a one person "team" clearly defeat the very purpose behind the
group approach to shooting reviews, but it also signals that such shootings are not
considered serious enough to warrant review by more than one person.

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2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

Of most concern, however, is that the actual review process has been
rendered a mockery of its intended purpose. The shooting officer's incident report
is typically taken at face value and given little scrutiny, even where it fails to
identify any facts that would justify use of lethal force. One administrator
candidly expressed the prevailing deferential attitude toward incident reports: "I
can't second- guess the officer . . . . The only person who can make the
determination on whether to fire or not is the officer at the time of the incident.”
Lopez Tr. 14-2223. Nor is it a matter of practice to interview persons who either
witnessed or were directly involved in the incident. And although reviewers are
charged with determining whether a shooting was in complete compliance with
relevant policies and procedures, they are not always aware of what those policies
are. Consequently, shooting reviews at Pelican Bay are little more than a
perfunctory validation of the incident report itself.
A notable illustration of the lack of meaningful review is provided by the
administration’s response to officer claims of ?stabbing motions” to justify the use
of lethal force. As plaintiffs’ expert observed, ?nobody ever makes a stabbing
motion if they don’t have a weapon,” yet officers at Pelican Bay repeatedly
attribute such motions to inmates to explain shooting incidents when after the fact
no weapon is found and no one has been cut. Fenton Tr. 5-759. Such a claim
suggests that the officer has either made an honest mistake or is engaged in afterthe-fact justification. Under either circumstance, some supervisory action is
warranted (further training in the former, or training and discipline for lack of
candor in the latter). There is no evidence in the record, however, that such action
ever took place; on the contrary, a statement that an officer saw ?stabbing
motions” appears to automatically sanction the shooting.

14
15
16
17
18

Plaintiffs' expert Nathan joined in Fenton's condemnation of the shooting
review process, calling it a "farce." Tr. 13-2038. Defendants’ expert also had
little positive to say about the shooting review process, and agreed that shootings
?could stand more scrutiny” at Pelican Bay. DuBois Tr. 29-4766-4767. The
Warden, however, expressed no dissatisfaction with shooting review practices at
the prison. Although Warden Marshall receives a copy of all shooting reviews, he
could not recall a single review that he had found unsatisfactory. Tr. 22-3815.
(Madrid v. Gomez, supra, 889 F. Supp. 1190-1192 (footnotes deleted).

19

b. The Lewis Shooting Review Failed To Select An Appropriate Review Board,

20

Failed to Assess Witness Credibility, Failed to Call Inmate Witnesses, Failed to

21

Call the Correctional Officers Who Observed the Shooting, and Failed Entirely to

22

Make an Adequate Assessment of Whether Lewis’ Shooting of Inmate Long

23

Complied With CDC Policy.

24

The SRB concerning Officer Lewis’ shooting of inmate Long is a classic example of the

25

inadequate lethal force reviews found by the Court in its 1995 opinion. The 1994 SRB (attached

26

as Exhibit 55) failed to interview the following inmates who were on the yard at the time of the

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incident and who later provided information to the FBI that Long and Willis (the two inmates

2

who had been fighting) were standing between eight and fifteen feet apart when Lewis shot

3

Long: Levert Brookshire, Lou Costa, Kenny Green, and Steve Conklin. The following staff

4

members were on duty during the incident, they witnessed the incident, and later told the FBI the

5

altercation appeared to be “a weak, sissy fight” or a “fight between a couple of girls:” Noel

6

Patton, Kip Wentz, Rick Aguirre, and Ronald Parker. These correctional officers, however, were

7

also not interviewed by the SRB. The SRB also took no steps to interview staff and inmates

8

about Lewis’ widely know hatred of child molesters, nor did the SRB conduct any form of

9

review of Lewis’ extensive post-incident comments such as, “Long had it coming, he should

10

have died.” Just as important, the SRB failed to review the PBSP “shoot don’t shoot” training

11

video tape. (See also, Reynoso Tr. 942-943). Finally, neither the victim, inmate Long, nor

12

inmate Willis, who was allegedly fighting with Long, were interviewed by the SRB.

13

The Special Master has reviewed numerous shooting reviews. He finds the Lewis/Long

14

SRB review entirely inadequate; indeed, there appears to have been an orchestrated attempt to

15

focus the majority of its evaluation on the testimony of PBSP staff who arrived on the scene after

16

the warning shot. For example, Lt. Larry Scribner testified he responded to the yard only after

17

the first shot, as did Sergeant Madrid, MTA Gordon, Correctional Officer Rice, and Correctional

18

Officer Gonzales. According to the report, however, the second shot was fired within 10 to 30

19

seconds. The SRB asked no questions concerning how, in each of these cases, the reporting

20

officer had time to leave his post, run to the yard, accurately assess what had happened, then

21

watch the second shot and its consequences in a 10 to 30 second time frame.

22

Dr. Patrick Maher’s Memorandum entitled “Lewis SRB Decision Dated July 28, 1994" is

23

attached as Exhibit 59. It points out additional deficiencies in the Board’s composition, the

24

failure to call witnesses, the failure to assess credibility and bias, the failure to properly evaluate

25

the shooting, and the failure to cite relevant policy when making its determination. The Special

26

Master agrees with these findings, including Dr. Maher’s finding that “[n]o competent manager

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would use the SRB report as a valid basis for finding Lewis acted in conformance with policy in

2

the use of lethal force against inmate Long.”

3

c. Director Terhune’s Overhaul of the SRB Process and Acting Director

4

Cambra’s Decision Not to Pay for Lewis’ Criminal Trial.

5

After 1995, the CDC determined that its shooting review process was deeply flawed.

6

Under Cal Terhune’s direction, an entirely new procedure was implemented which requires the

7

prompt investigation of all deadly use of force by LEIU, and the evaluation of all completed

8

investigations by an independent group of law enforcement experts in the context of a Deadly

9

Force Review Board. Given all of this, and after being briefed on the facts surrounding Lewis

10

shooting Harry Long, Acting Director Cambra made the decision, after Lewis was charged with a

11

civil rights violation, not to pay for Long’s criminal defense. (See Parry Tr. 458).

12

Under California law, government entities have no obligation to reimburse their

13

employees for the cost of their criminal defense. (See California Government Code §995.8).

14

Government Code §996.6, however allows a government entity to negotiate with a labor

15

organization a more generous standard of reimbursement. During the Davis administration, the

16

Department of Personnel Administration and the CDC agreed to modify the MOU with the

17

CCPOA to utilize the civil reimbursement standard set forth in Government Code § 995.2 for all

18

claims for criminal defense reimbursement. No explanation has been provided for this change.

19
20

Even under the civil standard, however, certain types of misconduct, including malice,
may preclude an entity from paying for the employee’s defense, as discussed below.

21

d. Alameida’s and Jensen’s Contacts With the CCPOA and Their

22

Decision to Pay For Lewis’ Criminal Defense at the Retrial.

23

When Lewis’ conviction was overturned by the Ninth Circuit, Alameida, Jensen, and

24

YACA Secretary Robert Presley reversed Cambra’s decision. At the hearing of January 9, 2004,

25

Jensen, the former Under Secretary of YACA, testified that he made the decision to pay for

26

Lewis’ criminal defense at the request of the President of the CCPOA, Mike Jimenez (Jensen Tr.

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2

906-908).
Jensen was apparently not aware that on June 7, 2002 Benjamin C. Sybesma, Chief

3

Counsel for the CCPOA had meanwhile also sent a letter to Alameida requesting the CDC pay

4

for Lewis’ representation. Indeed, the CCPOA had already selected the attorney they wanted to

5

defend Lewis. (Exhibit 35). The CCPOA letter focused entirely on a recently negotiated

6

provision of the union contract, and ignored Government Code § 995.2.

7

Thus, at the same time that Jensen was dealing with CCPOA President Jimenez,

8

Alameida was responding to CCPOA Chief Counsel Sybesma, almost identical to what

9

transpired during the stoppage of the Post Powers interviews at PBSP: Ballard received a series

10

of letters and demands from CCPOA attorney Albertine (Exhibits 10-15), Gaultney was

11

contacted by CCPOA Chief Counsel Sybesma (Exhibit 54), and Alameida was talking with

12

CCPOA Vice President Chuck Alexander.

13

While Jensen’s memory has faded (Jensen Tr. 911), CDC documents indicate at least two

14

meetings between CDC/ YACA officials and the CCPOA, the first on June 25, 2002 (see the fax

15

face sheet and legal analysis dated June 24, 2002 attached as Exhibit 36), and the second

16

sometime after July 15, 2002 (see the fax face sheet and legal opinion of Mark A Mustybrook

17

(“Mustybrook”), Senior Staff Counsel, attached as Exhibit 37). Mustybrook prepared a four page

18

written legal opinion on July 12, 2002 for Alameida that considered both the contract provision

19

and the requirements of the Government Code § 995.2. Mustybrook recommended that “the

20

Department refuse to provide Lewis with a defense in his pending criminal action.” (Exhibit 37).

21

At first, Jensen testified that he did not recall seeing Mustybrook’s legal opinion prior to

22

making the decision that the CDC should pay for Lewis’ retrial. (Jensen Tr. 909). However,

23

after the Special Master showed Jensen a copy of Mustybrook’s opinion appended with Jensen’s

24

own handwritten notes, he admitted reviewing the opinion. Jensen testified, however, that he

25

relied upon recent revisions to the CCPOA MOU, his discussions with CCPOA President Mike

26

Jimenez, and the fact that the 1994 SRB found the Lewis/Long shooting within policy when he

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made the decision to pay for Lewis’ criminal defense - notwithstanding the contrary legal

2

opinion. Jensen justified the CDC paying for Lewis’ criminal defense because he believed the

3

CCPOA Memorandum of Understanding (“MOU”) “compelled us to pay for his defense unless

4

there was some uncontradicted evidence to one of these (statutory) exceptions” (Jensen Tr. 938).

5

To Jensen, the MOU established an “uncontradicted evidence” standard of proof that is absent

6

from California Government Code § 995.2. Thus, despite the findings of this Court discussed

7

above, despite the dramatic changes in lethal force reviews initiated by former Director Cal

8

Terhune, despite the compelling evidence that Lewis intentionally shot Long, and the advice of

9

CDC legal counsel, Alameida, Jensen, and Secretary Robert Presley began the process of

10

obtaining a Governor’s Action Request (“GAR”) to pay for Lewis’ defense. A GAR, if

11

approved, would have obligated California taxpayers to fund Lewis’ defense by an attorney

12

selected by the CCPOA.

13

Alameida testified that Jensen, not he, made this decision (Alameida Tr. 738-739).

14

Jensen also claims responsibility for the decision. (Jensen Tr. 907). However, an e-mail dated

15

July 25, 2002 from the CDC’s Deputy Director of Legal Affairs, John Sugiyama, casts doubt on

16

both claims. Mr. Sugiyama informs two of his attorneys that: “Ed [Alameida] has decided that

17

we will pay for Officer Lewis’s representation. According to Kathy Kinser, Ed apparently has in

18

mind that the start date for our obligation will extend backwards only about a month and go

19

forward from that date. Does that time frame correspond to a discrete identifiable event that

20

makes sense? In any event, please prepare the GAR, and alert Bruce that he will need to explain

21

that this is a Unit 6 bargaining matter to the Governor’s Office.” (See the July 25, 2002 e-mail

22

from John Sugiyama to Catherine Bernstein and Mark Mustybrook attached as Exhibit 38).

23
24

e. Summary.
The Special Master finds that the decision to reverse course and pay for Lewis’ second

25

defense was based entirely on concerns about the CCPOA. The facts, as well as the legal opinion

26

by the Department’s own attorney, mandate the opposite decision. The Special Master notes,

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however, that neither Jensen nor Alameida followed-up on their decision and no GAR was sent

2

to Governor Davis. (Keeshen Tr. 957). The new administration has indicated publically that it

3

will not in fact reimburse David Lewis for the cost of his criminal re-trial at this time.

4

4. CCPOA Vice President Lance Corcoran’s Objections to Joe Reynoso Sitting

5

At Counsel’s Table During the Lewis Re-Trial.

6

The long arm of the CCPOA’s influence over the highest level of CDC officials is also

7

reflected in John Sugiyama’s July 25, 2002 e-mail. (Exhibit 38). As the Special Master

8

explained above, in the Fall of 2002 the U.S. Attorney and Joe Reynoso were informed by CDC

9

officials that Reynoso would not be allowed to sit at counsel’s table during the re-trial of David

10

Lewis. Alameida told the Special Master he believed this to be important to impart an aura of

11

“neutrality” to the jury.

12

It is now clear, however, that the Director’s decision was in fact made because of

13

objections by “Lance.” Lance is a reference to Lance Corcoran, the CCPOA Vice President who

14

represents the union before the press. In July 2000 Corcoran apparently also functioned as the

15

CCPOA official who imposed limitations on the CDC’s assistance to the United States Attorney.

16

As stated by Mr. Sugiyama, “Lance apparently objected to the fact that CDC personnel in the

17

earlier trial sat at the prosecutor’s table. Ed was unclear about the reference - I think Lance was

18

probably referring to CDC investigators who for several years now have been working

19

exclusively for the U.S. Attorney.”

20

That the Director of Corrections would entertain and act upon such an objection from a

21

Vice President of the CCPOA, given the history of the union’s interference with the

22

Powers/Garcia/Lewis cases, is nothing less than shocking. Mr. Sugiyama continues his e-mail

23

with a practical and valid argument: “If in fact these are the ‘CDC’ people whom Lance finds

24

objectionable, we (CDC) can do nothing about where the U.S. Attorney may want them to sit.”

25
26

Similar to ignoring Mr. Mustybrook’s legal opinion, however, CDC officials ignored Mr.
Sugiyama. Joe Reynoso, assigned after several months of delay to assist the U.S. Attorney with

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the Lewis re-trial, testified as follows: “I had a conversation with the then assistant director of

2

internal affairs, Thomas Moore, that one of the conditions, one of the conditions being placed

3

upon my assisting the United States Attorney in the prosecution of David Lewis was that I was

4

not to sit at the Government’s table; that I was to stand outside the courtroom. And if the

5

Government lawyer had a question, they can somehow get word to me that they had a question

6

and I was supposed to come back into the courtroom see what the question was and then go try

7

and deal with it somehow.” (Reynoso Tr. 944-945). Fortunately, the new administration at

8

YACA and CDC have reversed this CCPOA influenced decision. Mr. Reynoso will assist the

9

United States Attorney in the Lewis retrial in the manner deemed appropriate by the United

10

States Attorney.

11

5. Sergeant George Arquilla’s Incompatible Practice of Testifying as a CCPOA

12

Expert and the CDC’s Failure To Investigate Possible Violations of California

13

Code of Regulations, Title 15, Section 3413.

14

Counsel for the CDC have argued during the hearings that recommendations issued by

15

the Special Master should be limited because violations of the use of force policy at PBSP are

16

rare, as are adverse action discipline cases at the prison. Defendants correctly argue that over the

17

course of several years of Court monitoring, through the effective use of the ERC and corrective

18

actions, PBSP has significantly reduced the amount of force used to control inmates. The prison

19

is far safer today for both inmates and staff than it was at any time between 1990 and 1995.

20

However, the shortfall with defendants’ argument is that the Central Office ELU unit has lost

21

almost every case it has taken to the SPB. Furthermore, in almost every case, the loss is caused

22

by something that could and should have been prevented. The June 30, 2003 SPB decision in the

23

case of PBSP Correctional Officer Jerry Reynoso, Case number 03-0405, is a typical example of

24

the ELU’s inability to counter the tactics used by the CCPOA during SPB hearings.

25
26

Jerry Reynoso (no relationship to Joe Reynoso) was appointed at PBSP on October 31,
1998. On February 6, 2002 he was found to have used unreasonable force when striking an

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inmate in the face while the prisoner was restrained and wearing a spit hood. Reynoso was

2

disciplined by Warden McGrath (five percent salary reduction for six months). He appealed his

3

decision to the SPB.

4

At the SPB hearing of April 16, 2003, George Arquilla, Senior Training Sergeant at the

5

Richard A. McGee Correctional Training Center testified as an expert CDC witness for the

6

CCPOA. (See Exhibit 61). Diane Robbins, the ELU Staff Counsel representing Warden

7

McGrath, told the Special Master she received no notice from the CCPOA of Sergeant Arquilla’s

8

appearance. Ms. Robbins did not, however, object to Sergeant Arquilla’s testimony. (Exhibit 61

9

at pages 29-30).

10

The Special Master reviewed other SPB records concerning PBSP cases and discovered

11

that Arquilla testified as a CDC expert for the CCPOA in at least one prior PBSP SPB matter

12

involving Correctional Officer Bridges. Records have not yet been reviewed to determine the

13

number times Arquilla testified as a CCPOA expert in cases at other prisons. The Special Master

14

met with Alameida, counsel for the parties, and two attorneys from the Legal Affairs Division to

15

discuss, among other things, Arquilla’s appearance as a CCPOA expert. Alameida and his

16

attorneys informed the Special Master that they were powerless to stop an employee from

17

working as an expert for the CCPOA.

18

The California Code of Regulations contains specific provisions that address the

19

incompatible employment of CDC employees. CDC policy should require obtaining formal

20

approval prior to engaging in any outside activity, and limitations should be imposed on working

21

as an outside expert with formal approval of the CDC. The CDC is not, in fact, powerless to

22

prevent an employee from working as a CDC “expert” for the CCPOA. Apparently, there are no

23

effective CDC policies relating to incompatible outside employment that provide guidance for

24

the wardens and other administrators.

25
26

The negative outcome of the Reynoso case raises numerous questions relevant to the use
of force discipline plan. How may times has Arquilla testified for the CCPOA? How many

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times has he informed his superiors prior to testifying? Do Arquilla’s time records reflect his

2

testimony, or has he fraudulently doctored those records? In each of Sergeant Arquilla’s

3

appearances as a CCPOA “expert,” did he testify under the compulsion of a subpoena? When

4

did he receive the subpoena, and when did he inform his superiors? Did the Sergeant obtain the

5

appropriate approval prior to working for the CCPOA as a CDC expert against the CDC itself?

6

Did the CDC pay for Arquilla to testify as a CDC expert against itself? Why? Who paid for

7

Arquilla’s plane flights from Sacramento to Crescent City? When did Arquilla receive the funds

8

for the travel, before or after the issuance of the subpoena (if in fact a subpoena was utilized)?

9

Why didn’t the approving administrator inform the ELU? Why hasn’t Arquilla been disciplined?

10

After the issuance of the Special Master’s draft report, defendants opened an internal

11

affairs case concerning Arquilla’s conduct relative to one incident of his testifying as an expert

12

for the CCPOA. That report, completed on March 15, 2004, was not provided to the Special

13

Master until the Special Master requested a copy in early June 2004. After review, the Special

14

Master finds that the IA report, and the ELU legal opinion upon which the report was based, to

15

be entirely inadequate. Defendants have requested a brief period of additional time to perform a

16

second investigation that addresses the full scope of Arquilla’s conduct, including the legal and

17

ethical consequences that arise when a CDC trainer serves as an expert witness for the CCPOA at

18

the expense of California taxpayers. After receiving assurances that the second investigation will

19

be provided with appropriate level of legal assistance from the ELU, the Special Master has

20

granted defendants’ request. A supplemental report concerning Sergeant Arquilla’s conduct will

21

be filed at a later date.

22
23

6. Summary
The Special Master finds the above cases to be indicative of a pattern of interaction

24

between the CCPOA and the highest levels of corrections officials that have adversely affected

25

the implementation of the Use of Force Remedial Plans.

26
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R. The Directorate of the Department of Corrections Sanctioned the Code of Silence By

2

Their Decision to Shut-Down the Post Powers/Garcia Administrative Investigations.

3
4

1. The CCPOA and the Code of Silence at Pelican Bay
LEIU Agent Joe Reynoso encountered a code of silence on numerous occasions during

5

the course of his investigations at PBSP. Reynoso defined the code of silence as follows:

6

“[W]hen a staff member is aware of misconduct, observed misconduct and fails to come forward

7

or is aware of it and when asked about it refuses to tell the truth.” (Reynoso Tr. 494). As

8

Reynoso testified at the Special Master’s hearing of September 25, 2003:

9

Steven Fama: Why wouldn’t an officer want to provide information that was

10

critical of another officer in your opinion?

11

Joe Reynoso: That’s part of working in a job where you have code of silence

12

issues; you don’t talk about an officer because it could come back to put you in a

13

situation where those officers who you count on may see you as a rat or an

14

informant and they might not come to your assistance. (Reynoso Tr. 527- 528).

15

During the Powers/Garcia/Lewis criminal interviews at PBSP, the CCPOA put out a

16

memo notifying staff that IA was going to be at PBSP and that staff did not have to talk to them

17

if they did not want to. Thus, the union sent a message to correctional officers not to cooperate

18

with IA no matter what position they were in (in other words, even if a correctional officer was a

19

witness to an abuse of force). Because the CCPOA’s intervention resulted in officers refusing to

20

be interviewed by the FBI, the FBI was required to issue subpoenas to force officers to testify

21

before the grand jury. (Reynoso Tr. 496). Reynoso also described the adverse impact of the code

22

of silence on potential witnesses. For example, because of the code of silence one officer did not

23

come forward with any information until he left the CDC’s employment for fear of his safety.

24

(Reynoso Tr. 497).

25

Likewise, Assistant United States Attorney Melinda Haag found a code of silence among

26

PBSP correctional officers that adversely affected the United States’ attempt to prosecute Powers

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and Garcia. During the June 2002 meeting with the CDC officials, Ms. Haag discussed the code

2

of silence as it related to Officer Schembri and why he did not come forward initially. The code

3

of silence was also discussed with respect to Correctional Officer Mather, who was no longer

4

employed by the Department when he finally came forward and told the truth. Mather had been

5

previously untruthful about the incident; for example, when he provided a declaration in

6

connection with a civil lawsuit that had been filed by inmate Perez. Mather testified he was

7

untruthful in that case because of the code of silence. Since he was still employed by the

8

Department he did not feel like he could tell the truth. (Haag Tr. 794 - 795).

9

Correctional Officer Matlock, one of the three subjects in the Post Powers internal affairs

10

investigations, testified under oath about the process established by the CCPOA for PBSP

11

correctional officers to respond to FBI requests for interviews. Matlock was originally contacted

12

by the FBI in the Fall of 1999. The FBI asked him if they could talk about allegations of staff

13

misconduct. Matlock called the FBI back and told the FBI that after talking to the union, he did

14

not want to talk with them. Matlock told the FBI he would prefer to talk in front of the grand

15

jury, based on the advice from an attorney from CCPOA headquarters. Pursuant to a subpoena,

16

Matlock came to the U.S. Courthouse in San Francisco. He was represented by an attorney hired

17

by the CCPOA for his grand jury appearance. Matlock came to the courthouse in response to the

18

grand jury subpoena involuntarily. He stated on the record that he did not want to be there.

19

[Criminal Trial Transcript, Volume 15 at 2963:1-2966:2].

20

2. Alameida, Tristan, and Kinser Sanctioned the Code of Silence When They Shut

21

Down the Post Powers Investigations on March 27, 2003.

22

The code of silence, while pervasive, is not a reflection of the ethics and sense of duty of

23

the majority of Pelican Bay correctional officers. A minority of rogue officers can establish a

24

code of silence, threaten the majority, damage cars, isolate uncooperative co-workers, and create

25

an overall atmosphere of deceit and corruption. And if the minority are supported by a powerful

26

CCPOA, and management as well as the CCPOA condones the code of silence, the consequences

27
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are severe. For this reason, the highest level of CDC officials must take decisive steps to control

2

the code. Concerning the Post Powers investigations, the Directorate did the very opposite.

3

In many respects, what took place the during the Post Powers internal affairs investigation

4

is identical to the cover-up of the abuse of force detailed at trial. As noted by the Court more

5

than nine years ago:

6

8

[W]hen (prison administrators) let highly suspicious incidents and investigative
reports go unchallenged, and when they promote the code of silence by failing to
support those who come forward, they lead us to conclude that they have
implicitly sanctioned the misuse of force and acted with a knowing willingness
that harm occur. Madrid v. Gomez, supra, 889 F.Supp. 1200.

9

The only significant difference between the Post-Powers cases and the testimony at trial

7

10

is that the Post Powers investigations were shut-down not by prison personnel, but by the highest

11

ranking leaders of the California Department of Corrections, working closely with the Deputy

12

Director of the Office of Investigative Services. The March 27, 2003 meeting in the Director’s

13

Office was designed to shut down the investigations. Neither the investigator nor the attorney

14

assigned to the cases were provided an opportunity to prepare for the meeting, the concerns they

15

expressed at the meeting were essentially ignored, and they were excluded from the decision

16

making process.

17

Dr. Maher’s Report entitled “Analysis of Organization Culture and Structural Influences

18

on Reporting and Decision Making” is attached as Exhibit 50. As Dr. Maher points out, the code

19

of silence is encouraged by inaction on the part of a correctional leader. Investigating those who

20

are willing to come forward, despite the code of silence, for minor infractions that they readily

21

admit to is one way that staff are discouraged from resisting the code of silence. Likewise,

22

ignoring or not pro-actively obtaining the evidence of misconduct, especially if that misconduct

23

involves the covering-up of serious misconduct, sends a clear message that the administration is

24

indifferent to such actions. If correctional officers are not supported for honesty, and if they

25

observe cover-ups being tolerated by CDC leadership, they will conform to pressure from their

26

peers to conform to the code of silence.

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For example, while the CDC failed to properly investigate Officers Jones, Matlock, and

2

Tuttle for perjury in Federal Court, the CDC completed a timely investigation of Schembri for

3

having minimal contact with his lieutenant when he was first served notice of his interview with

4

the FBI. The charges against Schembri were sustained; indeed, Schembri never denied them.

5

However, once the investigation was complete, the CDC did nothing. In fact, the CDC is unable

6

to provide documents showing the resolution of the Schembri investigation. See Exhibit 56:

7

Letter from Reynando J. Accooe stating that the CDC is unable to provide any documents that

8

summarize the disposition of IA Report No. 40-002-96 - subject William Schembri. See also

9

Exhibit 50. As Dr. Maher points out, investigating a whistle-blower for an act he readily admits

10

to, finding misconduct, then ignoring the alleged misconduct is an all too typical method used to

11

foster the code of silence.

12
13
14
15
16
17
18

3. Summary
Based on all the evidence, the Special Master finds that the CDC’s Directorate sanctioned
the code of silence in the following manner with respect to the Post Powers investigations.
1. Failing to properly investigate potentially egregious examples of the code of silence:
perjury in Federal Court to cover-up misconduct of a fellow officer.
2. Shutting down internal affairs investigations without consulting the prison hiring
authority and in violation of the DOM and the Court ordered Use of Force Remedial Plan.

19

3. Punishing the Post Powers whistle-blower, William Schembri.

20

4. Attempting to hide the facts supporting misconduct by Correctional Officers Jones,

21
22

Matlock, and Tuttle by submitting a false and misleading document to the Special Master.
The Special Master also finds there is a code of silence about the code of silence in the

23

CDC’s Central Office, an attitude of benign neglect concerning the history of CCPOA’s

24

interference with criminal investigations, which in turn allows continued interference by the

25

union that causes many investigations and adverse action cases to end without success.

26
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S. Summary of Factual Findings.

2

The Post Powers investigation was riddled with failures. Indeed, the evidence

3

demonstrates that the Post Powers Investigation Plan, submitted by the Department of

4

Corrections to the Court through the Special Master, was a sham which high-ranking CDC

5

officials never intended to follow. The investigations started four months late, they were grossly

6

understaffed, and the Office of Investigative Services agent and the Employment Law Unit

7

attorney assigned to investigate Correctional Officers Jones, Tuttle, and Matlock were never even

8

informed by their superiors of the CDC’s Post Powers Investigation Plan. The three

9

investigations were shut down by Edward Alameida, the Director of Corrections, well before

10

their completion and only days after the investigator informed the CCPOA that one of the cases

11

was being referred to the San Francisco District Attorney. The Plan’s mandate to focus on

12

administrative, rather than criminal, discipline was also ignored. Thereafter, Alameida and the

13

Deputy Director of the Office of Investigative Services, Thomas Moore, conspired to submit a

14

misleading and false letter to the Court.

15

The failures of the Post Powers investigation are also illustrative of a pattern of conduct

16

in which CDC officials at the highest level demonstrate an unwillingness and inability to

17

investigate and discipline serious abuses of force by correctional officers. This became apparent

18

during the course of the hearings in this matter which brought to light numerous examples of a

19

failure of leadership in this crucial area including: (1) The failure to discipline CCPOA

20

representatives Chuck Alexander and Richard Newton after the Knowles/Palmer internal affairs

21

investigation sustained serious charges against them regarding CCPOA interference with

22

investigations into staff misconduct; (2) the decision to reverse course and pay for the criminal

23

defense of Officer Lewis despite evidence that Lewis intentionally shot an inmate because he

24

thought the inmate was a convicted child molester, and despite a contrary legal opinion from the

25

CDC’s own attorney; (3) acquiescence to CCPOA demands that a CDC investigator assisting the

26

Assistant United States Attorney in the Lewis retrial be precluded from the courtroom during the

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retrial, and (4) failure to stop a CDC Training Sergeant from repeatedly testifying as a CDC

2

expert witness for the CCPOA against the CDC, in violation of California Code of Regulations

3

Title 15. This evidence, combined with the failures in the Post Powers investigation, and the

4

comprehensive reports from the Office of Inspector General finding serious systemic failings in

5

both the Office of Investigative Services and the Employment Law Unit, demonstrates that the

6

California Department of Corrections has lost control of its investigative and discipline

7

processes.

8
9

Perhaps most importantly, the evidence demonstrates that without the Special Master’s
hearings the investigation and discipline problems discussed in this report would never have

10

come to light. This underscores the fact that the State of California has no effective mechanism

11

for monitoring and correcting abuses when they occur within the Department of Corrections’

12

investigation and discipline system. Without question, a competent, independent review process

13

is needed to oversee CDC investigations and discipline, an organization with the authority to

14

provide oversight on a real time basis and to report its monitoring findings to government

15

officials and the public.

16

VI.

17

DISCUSSION OF RECOMMENDATIONS

18

A. Introduction.

19

The formulation of recommendations that adequately address the pervasive CDC

20

problems concerning investigations and adverse action discipline cases presents serious

21

challenges. On the one hand, the imposition of correctional officer discipline is governed by

22

California statutes and the CDC/CCPOA MOU. To a significant degree, employee discipline is

23

peculiarly a matter of State law.

24

On the other hand, the CDC’s failure to properly investigate Correctional Officers Jones,

25

Matlock, and Tuttle represents a blatant violation of the remedial plan. Simply stated, significant

26

evidence existed that three correctional officers perjured themselves in Federal Court about

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incidents where PBSP employees beat two prisoners, and set up an incident where one prisoner

2

stabbed another. The Post Powers hearings demonstrate that after nine years of remedial work,

3

the CDC’s Central Office still is unable to discipline correctional officers for their involvement

4

in the abuse of inmates.

5

To make matters worse, this failure was initiated and condoned by the highest levels of

6

CDC management, and it was followed by an attempt to deceive the Special Master and Federal

7

Court. Furthermore, the Post Powers cases are not isolated examples, they are indicative of a

8

pattern of inadequate investigations and the failure to discipline correctional officers for serious

9

abuses of force, as reflected in the OIG audit reports.

10

The evidence also reveals a long standing and pervasive pattern of interference by the

11

CCPOA, the most powerful labor organization in the State of California. Instead of working to

12

correct these problems, the union denies that they exist. To complicate matters, the CDC and

13

Department of Personnel Administration, with the approval of the California Legislature, have

14

entered into a series of MOU modifications whereby the delicate balance struck by California

15

statutes between holding a peace officer to the high standards expected by the public and

16

safeguarding that peace officer’s due process rights, has been prejudiced to a degree where

17

timely, fair, and effective investigations of inmate abuse may well be impossible. As detailed

18

below, the MOU places inmate victims in immediate jeopardy whenever they report the abuse of

19

force. It also serves to prevent timely and cost effective investigations, and provides the CCPOA

20

with the ideal instrument to enforce the code of silence.

21

As the Court is aware, the Special Master has steadily recommended the cessation of

22

monitoring at Pelican Bay State Prison. As a result, the scope of Madrid monitoring is today

23

only a small fraction of the monitoring which began in 1995. However, after completion of the

24

Post Powers hearings, after working with State officials, attending Senate Hearings, and

25

reviewing the amicus submission of the CCPOA, the Special Master is convinced that the Court

26

must take firm steps to ensure the fairness and effectiveness of the CDC’s adverse action process.

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Without some level of intervention by the Federal Court, the problems described above will not

2

be corrected by the State of California at Pelican Bay State Prison or at any other CDC

3

institution.

4

An important additional factor justifies Court intervention. Bad investigations and the

5

failure to discipline staff who abuse prisoners jeopardizes prison security. Likewise, an active

6

code of silence threatens inmates, honest officers, security, and public safety. The Special

7

Master has, over the course of seven years, talked with numerous PBSP employees, including

8

recently hired correctional officers, nurses, and MTAs. The correctional officer recruits who

9

seek employment within the CDC do so with high expectations. They come to the CDC with

10

positive motives, consistent with other applicants who seek a career in law enforcement. The

11

young men and women who seek CDC employment do not apply for peace officer jobs to

12

commit crimes, or to lie, or to cover-up the abuses of individuals like Powers or Garcia. Rookie

13

correctional officers, however, are forced to adopt the code of silence in order to survive. Rather

14

than CDC staff correcting the prisoners, some correctional officers end up acquiring a prisoner’s

15

mentality: they form gangs, align with gangs, and spread the code of silence.

16

The code of silence is taught to new recruits because of a longstanding CDC culture,

17

turning good officers bad. The Department has failed to address the situation in any effective

18

manner; indeed, the evidence demonstrates that the Directorate turned its head when confronted

19

with the code of silence, especially if the CCPOA was involved. To make matters worse, the

20

CCPOA, as explained above, continues to deny that a code of silence exists. It cannot be

21

emphasized too strongly that the code of silence is always accompanied by corruption. It serves

22

no legitimate penological purpose. It harms inmates and destroys the careers of correctional

23

officers. If the CDC cannot correct a serious problem that threatens the security of its prisons

24

and allows for abuse of prisoners by correctional officers in violation of the long standing

25

remedial orders, the Court has the obligation to intervene.

26
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B. Defendants’ Initial Response to the Problems Uncovered by the Post Powers

2

Investigations.

3

The CDC’s initial response to the Court’s scrutiny of the Post Powers investigation shut-

4

down was poor. CDC officials focused their attention downward, suggesting the OIS agent was

5

responsible instead of a lack of leadership within the Central Office. Promises were made of a

6

review of OIS by a retired annuitant, while Moore and Alameida put great stock in ordering the

7

three administrative investigations to be re-opened as criminal investigations. The Office of the

8

Inspector General, which had done a diligent and professional job auditing and analyzing the

9

serious systemic shortfalls of both OIS and ELU, was essentially gutted by budget cuts. At first,

10

there was no indication that the CDC had an interest in solving the investigation and discipline

11

shortfalls described above.

12

C. Defendants’ Response to the Special Master’s Draft Report Following the Election of

13

Arnold Schwarzenegger.

14

The State of California’s response to the problems described in the draft report changed

15

significantly for the better after Arnold Schwarzenegger was elected as Governor. Roderick

16

Hickman has replaced Robert Presley as the Secretary of YACA. Thomas Moore, Robert

17

Gaultney, and Edward Alameida either transferred to new positions or retired. Jeanne Woodford,

18

the former Warden of San Quentin, has been appointed as Director of Corrections.

19

Under Mr. Hickman’s leadership, a Post Powers remedial team was established in

20

YACA. Warden Joe McGrath from PBSP was placed on a special assignment to help develop

21

this remedial plan. Martin Hoshino, formerly of OIG, was appointed as Assistant Director of

22

OIS and has brought in a team of former OIG staff to make improvements to OIS operations. To

23

date, significant progress has been made in terms of policies, procedures, consistency, and

24

computer controls over case work. Kathleen Keeshen, Deputy Director of Legal Affairs, has

25

begun a series of corrective actions in ELU and started work developing a plan for long term

26

changes to the unit.

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Mr. Hickman has announced a “zero tolerance” policy concerning the code of silence

2

(Exhibit 65). YACA and CDC officials, counsel for plaintiffs, and the Special Master have

3

engaged in a series of meetings concerning possible remedial efforts. The Special Master

4

characterizes the progress as positive. All in all, defendants’ effort to formulate an adequate

5

remedial plan is better organized and staffed today than at any time in the past nine years.

6

In addition, Governor Schwarzenegger made the decision to re-institute a strong Office of

7

the Inspector General. Matthew Cate has been nominated as the Inspector General and has

8

actively participated in the Post Powers remedial process. Michael Gennaco, an experienced

9

civil rights litigator who manages the Office of Independent Review that monitors the internal

10

affairs investigations of the Los Angeles County Sheriff, has been appointed the Court’s expert to

11

assist the parties with the remedial process.

12
13

D. Summary and Evaluation of the CDC’s Proposed Post Powers Remedial Plan.
1. Introduction.

14

As of the date of the filing of this report, defendants, working with the Special Master,

15

the Court experts, the lawyers for the parties, and the Inspector General, have proposed a Post

16

Powers remedial plan that contains the following elements:

17

1. A program to improve the integrity, quality, efficiency, and timeliness of

18

investigations in OIS, including new management; the preparation of consistent

19

polices, procedures and expectations; improvements with both recruitment and

20

training; the implementation of policies to protect investigation confidentiality;

21

establishing adequate computerized controls to monitor case processing and to

22

interface more efficiently with ELU and the prisons; the development of an

23

Administrative Support Unit; and the development of more effective and open

24

reporting mechanisms for the legislature and other interested agencies.

25

2. A program to improve the integrity, quality, efficiency, and timeliness of the

26

ELU, including short term and long term restructuring of the unit, new

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management, and the implementation of vertical prosecution of employee

2

discipline cases at all CDC correctional institutions.

3

3. The re-structuring of the employee discipline process, including the

4

streamlining and simplification of the process; the establishment of adequate

5

computerized controls to track and monitor discipline processing; and the

6

establishment and implementation of a discipline matrix whereby specific acts of

7

employee misconduct will be assigned an associated punishment that will apply

8

regardless of the rank of the employee to be disciplined.

9

4. The development of discipline related policies and procedures, including

10

modifications to the DOM, that will set forth specific requirements to settle cases,

11

to appeal cases, and punish employees who violate Title 15 or who fail to observe

12

and properly report correctional officer misconduct.

13

5. Enhanced training and improved selection procedures for Employment

14

Relations Officers and ELU Attorneys.

15

6. A comprehensive program to address the code of silence, including the

16

implementation of a range of punishments for code of silence violations, the

17

training of management staff on code of silence issues, the development of a code

18

of ethics program to be taught to all employee at all CDC facilities, and an

19

evaluation of the CDC’s “prison culture” by the National Institute of Corrections.

20

7. Last, but perhaps most important, a Bureau of Independent Review (“BIR”)

21

will be established within the Office of the Inspector General. After an initial roll

22

out period, BIR lawyers and investigators will be assigned to each of the three OIS

23

offices. The BIR will perform a real time evaluation of every CDC abuse of force

24

and employee ethics related internal affairs case, including all code of silence

25

cases. The real time evaluation will include reviewing the charging documents,

26

the investigation plan, the progress, quality, and timeliness of the investigation,

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the investigative findings, the discipline imposed by the hiring authority, and all

2

SPB hearings, appeals, and other actions related to employee discipline. The BIR

3

will also have authority to initiate special investigations and to investigate the

4

absence of charging documents where appropriate. The BIR will prepare periodic

5

reports to the Governor, Legislature, and the Court and provide a transparency to

6

the employee discipline process that has been lacking in the past.

7
8
9
10

A chart providing more detail and estimated project completion dates is attached as
Exhibit 66.
2. Evaluation and Recommendations.
The Special Master finds that defendants are making a strong effort to address the serious

11

and persistent problems with inadequate investigations and correctional officer discipline. The

12

right people have been assembled to continue the remedial effort, and there has been a consistent

13

effort to work with the Special Master and plaintiffs. At this point in time, the Special Master

14

does not believe the remedial process will benefit from the appointment of a receiver; nor will it

15

be served by citing newly appointed Director Woodford with civil contempt. Instead, the Special

16

Master recommends that he continue to work with YACA and the CDC to: (1) complete the

17

development of an adequate remedial program; and (2) monitor the implementation of the

18

remedial program to ensure that it corrects all of the problems identified in this report.

19

The Special Master emphasizes that defendants were in civil contempt of court when the

20

draft recommendations issued because the evidence showed that defendants were in clear

21

violation of the Court’s orders, and it appeared that coercive measures would be required to

22

secure defendants’ compliance. The Special Master has concluded, however, that holding Ms.

23

Woodford in contempt will not assist the remedial process given the concrete remedial activities

24

that have taken place since the draft report. The Special Master’s decision not to recommend

25

holding Ms. Woodford in civil contempt should not be construed to mean that the problems have

26

been corrected. Powerful outside forces oppose the implementation of fair and effective

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investigations and discipline in the Department of Corrections, and development and

2

implementation of an effective remedy is far from complete.

3

In fact, it is now clear that two barriers exist which, if not removed, will prevent the

4

State’s remedial plan from being implemented. The Court should not assume that defendants

5

will be able to solve the problems set forth in this report until the barriers discussed below are

6

overcome. Furthermore, if the barriers that are preventing adequate CDC investigations and

7

discipline cannot be overcome, more intrusive intervention by the Court will be necessary to fully

8

implement its long standing use of force remedial orders.

9
10
11

E. Barriers to State’s Implementation of an Remedial Plan that the Court Must Consider
When Issuing its Remedial Orders.
1. Introduction.

12

Two problems have an adverse impact on the YACA/CDC attempt to remedy the

13

problems described in this report. The first is the fact that legislation and funding are needed to

14

implement defendants’ remedial plan. The second are provisions within the CDC/CCPOA MOU

15

which prevent inmates from reporting abuses of force and render timely, cost efficient and fair

16

investigations very difficult, if not impossible, to complete.

17
18

2. Necessary Legislation and Funding.
There are several different remedial options available to correct the problems described in

19

this report. For example, the Court can appoint a group of attorneys, investigators, and use of

20

force experts who review, on a real time basis, every OIS case that involved the abuse of inmates

21

or ethical problems (such as correctional officers promoting or hiding behind the code of

22

silence). The State of California can retain a law firm, or a panel of civil rights attorneys, who

23

perform the same real time function on a contract basis. The State can also establish an agency

24

to perform this function, and thereby provide the Governor and Legislature with a renewed sense

25

of confidence in the adequacy of CDC investigations and discipline.

26

The choice between these competing options should be left to defendants. In this case,

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State officials have determined that the best way to fix investigation and discipline problems is

2

for the State to re-organize an existing agency, the OIG, and establish a new watchdog agency,

3

the Bureau of Independent Review, within the OIG. In practice, the State’s plan, as described

4

above, also calls for the CDC to overhaul both the OIS and the ELU.

5

While this policy choice appropriately belongs to the State, the Special Master

6

emphasizes that he agrees with the State’s decision. If the State can fix this problem through

7

State agencies, it will provide assurances that mechanisms exist to prevent the problems from

8

reoccurring, which should lead to a more rapid cessation of Federal Court monitoring. In

9

addition, rather than the Special Master monitoring investigations and correctional officer

10

discipline, the Special Master can limit his monitoring to verifying that the BIR is doing its

11

function appropriately, which will reduce the scope and expense of Federal Court monitoring. In

12

a very real and practical way, the State can impact on the extent of Federal Court oversight by the

13

manner and timeliness with which it remedies the problems described in this report.

14

To accomplish this goal, however, the State officials working on the remedial plan need

15

to obtain changes in legislation to implement changes in CDC and OIG operations. In addition,

16

the OIG and BIR require funding. This process takes time, and the cooperation of different

17

branches of State government. The Special Master recommends that the Court allow defendants

18

the opportunity to implement their remedial plan during the current State budget cycle, which

19

should be completed during July 2004. To this end, an in-chambers status conference has been

20

scheduled for July 7, 2004 for defendants to report on their progress.

21

Defendants proposed remedial program will not be easy to implement. As emphasized by

22

Court expert Michael Gennaco, who has first hand experience establishing a real time

23

independent review process, “the devil is in the details.” For example, OIG investigations,

24

including the BIR’s investigations, should be entirely transparent. In fact, the BIR’s findings

25

should be made public to the degree that the status and finding of every BIR monitored internal

26

affairs case be available for review at a website on the internet. Likewise, once the BIR is

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operational, inmates and correctional officers will report abuses of force and code of silence

2

cases in greater number than are presently reported, because the BIR should ensure timely, fair,

3

and effective use of force investigations. Thus, it is essential that the BIR be staffed

4

appropriately right from the start. It is also critical that the Inspector General remain independent

5

of political pressures; for example, it is important that threats of funding reductions cannot be

6

made in retaliation for honest reports. In addition, it is essential that the State of California

7

provide real protections for CDC whistle blowers, services and guarantees of safety that actually

8

work.

9

The Special Master has been kept appraised of pending legislation concerning these and

10

other issues. He will report to the Court about the adequacy of the operational capabilities of

11

defendants’ remedial plan after the enabling legislation is enacted. If necessary, that report will

12

include additional recommendations for more specific Federal Court remedial orders.

13

3. Provisions of the CDC/CCPOA MOU that Preclude the Reporting of Abuses of

14

Force and Impedes the Completion of Timely, Fair, and Cost Effective

15

Investigations.

16
17

a. Introduction.
As discussed below, considerable evidence exists indicating that the current MOU

18

between the CDC and CCPOA renders fair investigations into the abuse of force almost

19

impossible. The Special Master, however, is not proposing recommendations about the MOU in

20

this report. He recommends only that the Court issue an order allowing him to investigate this

21

problem further; that he examine, for example, how the MOU functions in practice. The

22

evidence indicates that the MOU cannot be adequately examined by focusing only upon its

23

written provisions. An adequate review must encompass how the CCPOA has interpreted the

24

MOU, and how, given their extensive financial resources, the CCPOA deals with investigations

25

in practice. In addition, an impartial evaluation of the MOU’s impact on inmates’ ability to

26

report officer misconduct is warranted, given the potential dangers faced by inmates who dare to

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report abuses under the provisions of the MOU that exist today. At the completion of this

2

investigation the Special Master will report to the Court and issue recommendations, if

3

appropriate.

4

The Special Master addresses three sections of the MOU below. This analysis is not all

5

inclusive, it focuses only on a few of the problematic MOU provisions in order to explain why

6

further investigation is needed.

7

2. Examples of Problematic MOU Provisions.

8

i. MOU Section 9.09(d).

9

Section 9.09(d) requires the CDC to immediately turn over to correctional officers all

10

inmate grievances that could result in adverse action. For example, if during the Powers

11

investigation an inmate had submitted a grievance which stated: “Help. I am a convicted sex

12

offender. Powers, Garcia, and Lewis have told the prison gang leaders in my yard that I was

13

convicted for child molestation. I am now being threatened,” the CDC would have immediately

14

provided a copy of this grievance to Powers, Garcia, and Lewis.

15

The consequences are obvious. First, an inmate who wants to report an abuse of force

16

knows that the officer who abused him will immediately receive a copy of his complaint. In

17

essence, the victim is required to notify the perpetrator that he has informed on his misbehavior.

18

The MOU also requires turning over all documents, even video taped interviews. Second,

19

because neither the CDC nor the CCPOA have policies, procedures, or rules to the contrary, the

20

officer who receives the complaint can tell other officers at the prison. Third, in the event of an

21

internal affairs investigation, the investigation is immediately compromised. The subject officer,

22

and his CCPOA representative, now have details of the claims against him; enabling the subject

23

and fellow officers to develop consistent alibis to thwart the investigation.

24

The CCPOA’s amicus filings addresses section 909(d) at pages 5 - 9 of their Points &

25

Authorities. The union offers several justifications for the provision, none of which are

26

convincing given the section’s application in day-to-day life in the prisons. First, the CCPOA

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argues that correctional officers should be informed of inmate threats. The Special Master

2

agrees, all verbal and written threats against a peace officer must be reported to him or her as

3

soon as possible. The Special Master has, however, reviewed hundreds if not thousands of

4

grievances. Prisoners do not issue threats through the CDC 602 process. There appears to be no

5

real evidence that warrants an MOU provision with the scope of 909(d)’s provisions to be based

6

on some alleged fear of threats. The Special Master’s investigation, however, may produce

7

contrary information.

8
9

Second, the CCPOA contends the provision is needed to enhance correctional officer
memories. The Special Master disagrees. The involved correctional officer should have

10

prepared a report about the incident; indeed, his or her failure to do so is a relevant factor to

11

consider in a subsequent investigation.

12

Third, the CCPOA cites section 909(e) which allows the CDC not to provide a report to

13

the alleged perpetrator in the event of a surveillance, undercover operation, or sting. Therefore,

14

the CCPOA contends, legitimate investigations may proceed as necessary. This argument misses

15

the point. If a correctional officer who is the subject of an investigation requests the grievance of

16

the inmate he has abused, and he is told that he will not receive that grievance pursuant to section

17

909(e), the underlying investigation is immediately compromised. The abusing officer now

18

knows that some form of undercover or sting operation is in place. Evidence of how 909(c) and

19

909(e) have operated in practice will be relevant to the Court’s evaluation of the actual impact of

20

the MOU on the remedial plan.

21
22

ii. MOU Side Letter Number 12.
MOU Side Letter Number 12 requires the CDC to give written notice to any employee

23

ordered to attend an investigative interview, whether the employee is a subject of the

24

investigation or simply a witness. It also mandates that the CDC allow reasonable time for a

25

CCPOA representative to travel to and attend the interview. Side Letter Number 12 exceeds the

26

requirements of POBAR. Numerous real life problems flow from the side letter.

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First, the provision can be utilized by CCPOA representatives to ensure a strict code of

2

silence concerning inmate abuse cases. Correctional officers who meet with investigators do so

3

under the watchful eye of their CCPOA representatives. Correctional Officers who meet with an

4

investigator without their CCPOA representation are readily identified by the CCPOA, and can

5

be subjected to shunning and other misconduct by the correctional officers under investigation.

6

(In similar fashion the CCPOA continues to post instructions at PBSP for correctional officers to

7

call the union in the event they are contacted by the Federal Bureau of Investigations, even

8

though the FBI investigation concerning the Powers and Garcia cases concluded three years ago.

9

(See Exhibit 71)).

10

Second, the same CCPOA representative is allowed to attend each witness interview and

11

thereafter attend the subject officer’s interview. Thus, by the time the subject is interviewed, he

12

not only has the original complaint by the inmate, he also has knowledge of what each of the

13

witnesses said. This problem is aggravated by the fact that neither the CDC nor the CCPOA

14

have issued policies that govern the behavior of CCPOA representatives who serve as

15

representatives during both witness and subject officer interviews.

16

Third, what should be a relatively simple and straightforward process becomes extremely

17

time consuming (creating delays which jeopardize the one year statute of limitations) and overly

18

expensive, often taxing the limited resources of the CDC. In addition, Side Letter Number 12

19

can become a procedural hurdle whereby the CCPOA simply refuses to produce correctional

20

officers for testimony until and unless the CDC complies with demands that are both

21

unwarranted and not called for by the MOU. This, for example, is exactly what took place

22

during the CDC’s attempt to calendar Post Powers interviews when CCPOA attorney Albertine

23

demanded a host of documents prior to making witnesses and subjects available for an interview

24

with Bob Ballard. (Exhibits 10 - 15). Again, the real life problems created by Side Letter

25

Number 12 are aggravated by the fact that neither the CCPOA nor the CDC have written policies

26

and standards concerning document requests demands by the union. An investigation and report

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that details the impact of this MOU section operated in practice will provide the Court with

2

relevant information to determine whether the MOU renders fair investigations impossible.

3
4

iii. MOU Section 9.16.
As explained above, MOU Section 9.16, requires the CDC to utilize the civil standards of

5

Government Code §995.2 when considering whether to reimburse a correctional officer for his

6

defense in a criminal case, rather than the more restrictive standard for criminal cases set forth in

7

Government Code §995.8. The CCPOA argues, in its amicus filings, that section 9.16 is

8

compatible with Government Code §996.6 (CCPOA Points and Authorities, pgs. 2 - 5). This

9

section of the Government Code does provide for labor contracts that gives employees more

10

defense than the statutory minimum. The CCPOA thus is correct that section 9.16 of the MOU is

11

supported by Government Code §996.6.

12

The problem, however, is not the statute; it is in the language of section 9.16 and how that

13

language is interpreted by the CCPOA. The CCPOA position in the David Lewis case, as set

14

forth in Exhibit 35, exemplifies how Section 9.16 can be utilized to force the State of California

15

to pay for unconstitutional and criminal misconduct by correctional officers.

16

This Court found the CDC shooting review process constitutionally flawed. The Special

17

Master and Court expert Dr. Patrick Maher found the specific shooting review in the Lewis case

18

to be so flawed it should not have been relied upon by a reasonable correctional manager.

19

Nevertheless, under Section 9.16 (2), the State of California was required, according to the

20

CCPOA, to pay for Lewis’ criminal defense because he was “cleared” by the very same faulty

21

shooting review process. Section 9.16 appears to conflict with a number of important remedial

22

plan and legal principles, and a further investigation into its actual impact is warranted.

23
24

3. Summary.
The Special Master has addressed only three of numerous MOU provisions that appear to

25

preclude fair, timely, efficient, and cost effective investigations in the CDC. In requesting that

26

the Court instruct him to conduct a formal investigation into MOU related problems, the Special

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Master notes that many of the problems presented by the MOU do not represent a conflict

2

between state contracts and federal concerns. Indeed, the MOU sections at issue may conflict

3

with important principles of California law as well as the use of force remedial plan. In this

4

regard, the Special Master brings to the Court’s attention Chief Deputy Attorney General Peter

5

Siggins’ July 9, 2003 letter to the Honorable Jackie Speier, Chair, Government Oversight

6

Committee and the Honorable Gloria Romero, Chair, California Correctional System Committee

7

re the Attorney General’s Investigation of Incident at California Institution for Men in Chino

8

(Exhibit 68).

9
10

F. Posting.
The final recommendation considered by the Special Master concerns the posting of the

11

Court’s orders, this final report, and the appropriate exhibits in the prisoner law libraries at

12

PBSP. Over the past nine years the Special Master has utilized a posting policy that has never

13

led to a security related concern on the part of the CDC. Pursuant to this policy , the Special

14

Master’s reports and Court remedial orders have been made available for prisoner review in the

15

inmate law libraries. Exhibits are screened for the following: (1) security concerns; (2) staff

16

privacy concerns; and (3) inmate privacy concerns (primarily centered around medical/mental

17

health information). For example, no internal affairs reports, even if the report was an exhibit to

18

the Special Master’s report, are posted in the inmate law libraries. Staff who are involved in

19

non-adverse action discipline (the great majority of PBSP cases) are not referred to by name in

20

the Special Master’s or Dr. Maher’s reports. Staff who choose to make their case part of a public

21

record, for example by deciding to file a public SPB appeal, are referred to by name in the

22

reports, and if relevant the public record of the SPB proceeding is posted in the inmate law

23

libraries. In addition to all of the above, the PBSP Madrid Unit performs a security review of all

24

filings, excising, for example, sensitive personal information, documents which may pose a

25

special concern, etc. The Madrid Unit discusses these deletions with counsel for plaintiffs. To

26

the Special Master’s best recollection, plaintiffs have never disputed a Madrid Unit decision to

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2

the degree whereby the dispute had to be brought to the Special Master’s attention.
The Special Master finds that a similar approach to posting is appropriate concerning this

3

report. However, in an abundance of caution, and because this report was filed in its draft form,

4

the Special Master requested comments from the parties. Defendants’ letter of May 17, 2004 is

5

attached as Exhibit 68. Plaintiffs’ letter of May 25, 2004 is attached as Exhibit 69.

6

The Special Master agrees with defendants’ concern about the posting of the draft report.

7

That issue, however, is now moot at this point. The Special Master does take exception to

8

defendants’ generalized and non-specific claims that the filing of this report and certain public

9

exhibits will somehow jeopardize security or inmate/staff hierarchy.

10

First, defendants should point to specific problems that they believe jeopardize the

11

“security and safety” of PBSP given that no problem has arisen in the nine year experience with

12

the present policy. Generalized comments do not justify exclusion from prisoner review. As

13

plaintiffs’ letter points out, the Court rejected an almost identical argument from defendants in its

14

Order filed April 17, 2001 (attached as part of Exhibit 69). Second, this report is about

15

correctional officers who engaged in serious misconduct and who, because of poor investigations

16

and a faulty discipline system, were not subjected to sanctions. In many respects, as plaintiffs

17

emphasize, this report identifies and describes cases similar to those reported in the Court’s 1995

18

published opinion. If the Special Master excised all reference to correctional officers who were

19

not properly disciplined, as urged by the defendants, the heart of this report would be excised.

20

Finally, censoring exhibits that do not pose security concerns from inmates serves no legitimate

21

correctional interest; indeed, hiding the truth from the prisoners at Pelican Bay State Prison may

22

jeopardize prison security. For example, prisoners will not know whether legitimate complaints

23

against correctional officers are being dealt with in an appropriate manner by the CDC, and may

24

come to believe the entire grievance system serves no purpose. Furthermore, the inmate

25

plaintiffs in this class action have a right to know what happened at Pelican Bay and in the

26

Central Office concerning cases of officer misconduct that posed very serious dangers to them.

27
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1

As class members, they also need to understand that the State is now attempting to provide for

2

fair and timely investigations into allegations of abuses of force at the prison.

3

Given the above, and after evaluating the arguments raised by both parties, the Special

4

Master recommends the posting of all orders, this final report, and certain of the exhibits, as set

5

forth in the Recommendations section below. He also recommends a review by the Madrid Unit

6

of all exhibits, and the excising of specific data that may jeopardize PBSP security.

7

VII.

8

RECOMMENDATIONS

9
10
11

Considering all of the evidence and the findings above, the Special Master recommends
as follows:
1. The Court should consider issuing an Order to Show Cause re Criminal Contempt for

12

Edward Alameida and Thomas Moore because of willful violations of the Court approved Use of

13

Force Discipline Remedial Policy, Use of Force Disciplinary Procedure, and the Use of Force

14

Investigation Policy and Procedure, specifically:

15

A. Failing to adequately investigate the perjury allegations against Correctional

16

Officers Jones, Matlock, and Tuttle in violation of PBSP Use of Force

17

Disciplinary Policy Section II.D, adopted by the Court in its Order of December 2,

18

2002.

19

B.

20

Forms 989 A and B in violation of Use of Force Investigation Policy and

21

Procedure Section VIII.B.3, adopted by the Court in its Order of June 21, 2000

22

and approved by the Special Master in his “Report Concerning Defendants’

23

Compliance With the Court’s Orders re Use of Force Investigations and

24

Discipline filed June 21 2000," filed October 17, 2000, and adopted by the Court

25

in the Order Re Use of Force Investigation Policies filed April 24. 1998.

26

C. Failing to set forth findings concerning each of the allegations against Officers

Failing to prepare a report of the Post Powers investigations on the CDC

27
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1

Jones, Tuttle, and Matlock in a manner where it was noted whether the inquiry

2

supports or refutes the allegations, and failing to arrive at one of the findings

3

identified in Section VII, Subsection B, (5), (b), of the Use of Force Investigation

4

policy and procedure, violations of Use of Force Investigation Policy and

5

Procedure Section VIII.B.4, adopted by the Court in its Order of June 21, 2000

6

and approved by the Special Master in his “Report Concerning Defendants’

7

Compliance With the Court’s Orders re Use of Force Investigations and

8

Discipline filed June 21 2000," filed October 17, 2000, and adopted by the Court

9

in the Order Re Use of Force Investigation Policies filed April 24. 1998.

10

D. Organizing and condoning a cover-up concerning Director Alameida’s

11

decision to shut-down the Post Powers investigations on March 27, 2003 through

12

the submission of a false and misleading letter to the Special Master, and thereby

13

to the Court, in violation of Use of Force Disciplinary Procedure Section V.C. 2-

14

3, adopted by the Court in its Order of December 2, 2002.

15

On June 15, 2004 Alameida filed a “Supplemental Submission” to his objections (CR

16

1752). This submission, submitted after the close of the Special Master’s investigation and

17

hearings, brings to the Court’s attention new information. First, the supplemental pleading

18

describes a history of adversity between Alameida and the CCPOA. It provides new information

19

disclosing the extensive degree to which the CCPOA influences the day to day management of

20

the Department of Corrections; for example, how the CCPOA attempted to stop the closure of

21

the Northern California Womens’ Facility (“NCWF”) and the CCPOA’s subsequent attempt to

22

convince the Gray administration to reduce 120 management positions in the CDC. Specifically,

23

the report describes a breakfast between Alameida and Alexander during which Alexander made

24

it clear that the CCPOA intended to reduce the CDC by 120 management positions in retaliation

25

against Alameida because of his decision to close NCWF.

26

Second, the supplemental pleading provides new information concerning Alameida’s

27
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1

mental health problems and his current psychiatric treatment. Third, the pleading expresses a

2

willingness to publicly apologize. The Court can consider this new information when it

3

considers the recommendation above as it pertains to Alameida. The Special Master does not

4

believe it appropriate to comment on this pleading given the date of its submission.

5

2. The Court should consider referring this report and the Transcript of the July 30, 2003

6

hearing to the United States Attorney of the Northern District of California for the filing of

7

perjury charges against Thomas Moore because of the following false testimony:

8

A. Moore testified: “Agent Ballard was not assigned any other cases and I was

9

transitioning his existing cases off of him.” (Moore Tr. 140: 2-3).

10

B. Moore testified: “And Mr. Ballard was tasked with reviewing the transcripts,

11

doing as much legwork as possible, and giving a report as to whether there would

12

be sufficient cause to go forward in the investigative process.” (Moore Tr. 143:

13

22 - 25).

14

C. Moore testified: “But I must qualify that statement by saying that Ballard had

15

taken time in month of July and August, I believe, he was down there reviewing

16

the files and me giving periodic feedback.” (Moore Tr. 145: 6 - 9).

17

D. Moore testified: “I told him I wanted a status report on the investigation. I

18

believe staff counsel, Dennis Beaty, had contacted me and wanted to know the

19

status of the case.” (Moore Tr. 154: 20 - 22).

20

E. Moore testified: “He gave myself a briefing as to, meaning Ballard and

21

Barbara gave myself and Brian Parry, Parry was privy to the briefing. And it was

22

then that we realized we had to brief Mr. Alameida now. I believe the day before

23

I contacted Mr. Alameida to make sure his calendar would be available because I

24

knew this case had to be reviewed.” (Moore Tr. 159: 19 - 25).

25

3. The Court should order the following:

26

A. Special Master should continue to work with defendants concerning the development

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1

and implementation of an adequate remedial plan to address the problems with investigations,

2

adverse action discipline and the code of silence identified in the Special Master’s Final Report

3

re Department of Corrections “Post Powers” Investigations and Employee Discipline. The

4

Special Master should report to the Court as necessary during this process, and submit

5

recommendations for further Court orders if warranted.

6

B. Defendants should modify, within ten days, the use of force remedial plans to exclude

7

CCPOA participation from Executive Review Committee evaluations of the use of force at

8

PBSP.

9

C. Special Master should investigate, hold hearings if necessary, prepare a report,

10

consider comments from the parties and CCPOA, and issue recommendations concerning

11

CCPOA/CDC MOU provisions that violate, by their terms or practice, the Court’s use of force

12

remedial plans.

13

D. The Special Master, working with the parties, should develop and implement an

14

appropriate program to evaluate the status of CDC use of force investigations and discipline, and

15

to monitor the progress of defendants’ implementation of Post Powers remedial programs. The

16

Special Master should report to the Court concerning this monitoring program within sixty days.

17
18
19

When developing the monitoring program, the Special Master recommends that the Court
instruct the parties to consider the following:
Scope of Monitoring: The Special Master’s monitoring should encompass investigations

20

and discipline cases arising from violations of use of force policies, including integrity issues

21

such as the code of silence. This monitoring should, of necessity, involve monitoring

22

defendants’ and the BIR’s handling of casework from prisons other than PBSP. For example, if

23

defendants or the BIR fail to adequately manage statute of limitations issues concerning

24

employee discipline that arise from use of force cases on a systemic basis, or fail to adequately

25

monitor the scope of internal affairs investigations, that failure is subject to monitoring and may

26

be the basis of a report by the Special Master to the Court. Neither counsel for plaintiffs nor the

27
28

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1

Special Master, however, should have the authority to conduct on-site inspections of any CDC

2

prison other than Pelican Bay State Prison. Likewise, neither counsel for plaintiffs nor the

3

Special Master should have the authority to oversee the investigations or discipline of specific

4

use of force cases that arise from CDC prisons other than Pelican Bay State Prison. The parties

5

agree that monitoring of defendants’ Post Powers remedial plan efforts and of the BIR should

6

focus on the adequacy of defendants’ and the BIR’s monitoring rather than the specific

7

investigations being reviewed by BIR. This does not, however, preclude discussion with

8

defendants and/or the BIR about individual cases when the systemic problems identified in the

9

Special Master’s Final Report re Department of Corrections “Post Powers” Investigations and

10

Employee Discipline are implicated.

11

Modification of Monitoring: If, at any time, either party believes the Post Powers

12

monitoring plan is ineffective in operation, unnecessarily intrusive, or that it exceeds in operation

13

the jurisdictional limitations of the Madrid v. Woodford class action, that party shall notify

14

opposing counsel and the Special Master of its concerns. Thereafter, the Special Master shall

15

hold a timely meeting to address the party’s concerns. If consensus cannot be reached for a

16

prompt resolution of the dispute, either party may request relief from the Court.

17

Cessation of Monitoring: The Special Master should report to the Court when each of the

18

specific corrective actions set forth in Exhibit 66 to the Special Master’s Final Report re

19

Department of Corrections “Post Powers” Investigations and Employee Discipline has been

20

implemented. The Special Master should also report to the Court when the BIR is operational in

21

each of its three regional offices. Following the implementation of each corrective action, and

22

after the BIR is operational in all three regional offices, monitoring will continue for a period of

23

no more than two years, unless serious systemic problems arise or the corrective action fails to

24

meet the goals established by defendants to a degree that justify an additional period of

25

monitoring. The Special Master may issue recommendations to the Court to cease monitoring at

26

the request of either party or based upon his own motion. Consistent with present practices, the

27
28

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1

Special Master may recommend cessation of monitoring of certain elements of defendants’ Post

2

Powers remedial plan while continuing to monitor other elements. All reports prepared by the

3

Special Master concerning the implementation, operation, and cessation of monitoring of this

4

remedial plan should conform to the terms of the Order of Reference of January 23, 1995.

5

E. Defendants should post in the prisoner law libraries at PBSP, within ten business days,

6

the Court’s Order re the Special Master’s Final Report re Department of Corrections “Post

7

Powers” Investigations and Employee Discipline; the Special Master’s Final Report re

8

Department of Corrections “Post Powers” Investigations and Employee Discipline; and the

9

following exhibits to that report: Exhibits 2-7 (subject to redaction of personal information), 10-

10

16, 18-25, 28-44, 46-50, and 52-72. The Madrid Unit should examine each of the exhibits and

11

report to the Special Master if it believes any exhibit should be subject to additional redaction

12

prior to placement in the prisoner law libraries at Pelican Bay State Prison.

13

VIII.

14

CONCLUSION

15

It is important not to lose sight of the toll on personal lives and correctional officer

16

careers created by the code of silence. This report concludes by returning to where the United

17

States began its criminal case against Powers and Garcia, with Correctional Officer William

18

Schembri.

19

In 1996 Schembri was subpoenaed to testify about his knowledge of the 1992 assault on

20

inmate Chester. As explained above, the first consequence of Schembri telling the truth was that

21

the CDC investigated him for discussing what he knew with his lieutenant. After the

22

investigation was complete, however, the CDC did nothing (Exhibit 56).

23

Schembri made the decision to tell the truth at his interview. Prior to meeting with LEIU

24

investigators Schembri requested an emergency transfer to another CDC prison for both he and

25

his wife, who was also a correctional officer at PBSP. Schembri’s request was denied.

26

Meanwhile, a sergeant at PBSP instructed Schembri’s wife to tell Schembri to “keep his mouth

27
28

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1
2

shut.”
Following the interview, Schembri noticed that correctional officers began to avoid him,

3

although some showed support for what he had done. Schembri began to feel as if he had a

4

target on his back. As a result of the tension he felt following the interview, he developed

5

serious stomach ailments that at one point required stomach surgery based on a doctor’s

6

recommendation. While Schembri and his wife had planned to raise their children in Crescent

7

City, they decided to transfer to another prison.

8

On April 21, 1997 Schembri was promoted to Sergeant at R. J Donovan Correctional

9

Facility (“RJDCF”). Immediately following Schembri’s transfer, his wife, who planned to follow

10

him to RJDCF after their children completed the school semester, was moved from her duty post

11

in the PBSP visiting area (where she had worked for a number of years) to a new position

12

directly under Sergeant Powers, against whom Schembri had testified during the investigative

13

interviews. Mrs. Schembri resigned from the CDC rather than work for Powers.

14

Schembri encountered a series of problems at RJDCF. For example, he was assigned to

15

vacation relief and first watch positions, the most undesirable jobs in the prison, for much longer

16

periods than normal for newly appointed sergeants. He continued to be shunned by other

17

officers. He continued to be concerned about his personal safety.

18

On November 3, 1998 Schembri was interviewed by CDC and FBI investigators about

19

the Chester stabbing. Thereafter, he was assigned to a shift relief position that on occasion

20

required him to return to work at the prison eight hours after he left his prior duty assignment.

21

Schembri began to experience more severe stomach problems, and left work for a period of time

22

due to stress. No effort was made by the CDC to provide Schembri with whistle blower

23

protections or any other form of support during the six year period between 1996 and 2002. No

24

effort was made to provide him with protection or other assistance when he testified for the

25

United States at the criminal trial of Powers and Garcia. Schembri left CDC employment on

26

permanent disability in early 2003.

27
28

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1

In 1996, when Schembri asked CCPOA representative Chuck Alexander for a attorney to

2

accompany him to his interview with LEIU agents, Alexander recommended the same attorney

3

who was representing Powers. Schembri refused. He told Alexander that he needed a separate

4

lawyer from everyone else because he was going to be telling the full truth. Eventually, a

5

Crescent City lawyer was provided for Schembri by the CCPOA. After his interview, however,

6

Schembri found himself being shunned by CCPOA representatives Alexander and Newton.

7

Sometime after he transferred to RJDCF, Schembri was told by the RJDCF CCPOA

8

Chapter President, K. Laird that Alexander told him Schembri testified against fellow

9

correctional officers, that Schembri was a “RAT,” and to keep his distance from Schembri. At

10

no time did the CCPOA provide Schembri with assistance concerning the stress related disorders

11

created by his telling the truth to the FBI. At no time did the CCPOA provide support for

12

Schembri when he testified for the United States at the Powers/Garcia criminal trial.

13

Opposite of how it treated William Schembri, the CCPOA gave a hero’s welcome to

14

David Lewis, the former PBSP correctional officer who was terminated for calling inmates

15

“primates,” “monkeys,” “toads,” and “niggers.” As explained above, Lewis faces a retrial in

16

Federal Court for the shooting of inmate Harry Long. To the CCPOA, however, Lewis is a hero.

17

Two weeks after the Twin Towers were destroyed by terrorists, the California

18

Correctional Peace Officers’ Association traveled to Sparks, Nevada for its 2001 Annual

19

Convention. The theme for this conference was “a time for healing, and a time to honor our

20

heros” (see Exhibit 70, End of Year 2001 issue of the CCPOA “PeaceKeeper”).

21

One of the CCPOA’s heros was David Lewis, who gave a speech on the subject of

22

professionalism to the union representatives gathered at the meeting. Falsely telling CCPOA

23

members that Lewis is “now retired,” the Peacekeeper article includes a photograph of the

24

terminated officer standing alongside Pelican Bay CCPOA representatives Alexander and

25

Newton, and words of praise from then CCPOA Vice President, Mike Jimenez. (Exhibit 70).

26

What happened to William Schembri when he told the truth, contrasted to the CCPOA’s

27
28

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1

designation of David Lewis as a hero, provide real life examples of the almost impossible to

2

overcome barriers that prevent honest investigations in the CDC. Without question, a number of

3

very fundamental changes in leadership, operations, and attitudes are necessary before the

4

California Department of Corrections achieves compliance with the Court’s use of force remedial

5

orders. Given the findings described above and the powerful outside forces arrayed to defeat all

6

efforts to reform the Department of Corrections, continued Court oversight, and perhaps

7

additional orders, will be necessary to assist defendants with the implementation of the remedial

8

plan they have selected.

9
10

Dated: June 24, 2004

11
12
13
14

John Hagar
Special Master

15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28

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1

Appendix 1

2

POST POWERS WITNESS LIST AND DATES OF TESTIMONY

3
4

Transcript Vol. 1 – July 30, 2003

5

Witness

From page #

To page #

6

Thomas Moore

7

13

7

Joseph Barbara

13

94

8

Patrick Maher

95

96

9

Joseph Barbara

96

132

10

Thomas Moore

132

222

11

Kathy Kinser

223

265

12
13

Transcript Vol. 2 – August 26, 2003

14

Witness

From page #

To page #

15

Robert Ballard

270

402

16

Mark Yax

402

416

17

Brian Parry

418

474

18
19

Transcript Vol. 3 – September 25, 2003

20

Witness

From page #

To page #

21

Jose Reynoso

481

539

22

Cassandra Grout

539

597

23

Barbara Sheldon

598

638

24

Dennis Beaty

638

677

25
26
27
28

128

1

Transcript Vol. 4 – November 21, 2003

2

Witness

From page #

To page #

3

Edward Alameida

693

770

4

Melinda Haag

771

799

5

Edward Alameida

800

819

6

Robert Gaultney

820

840

7

Michael Miller

842

852

8

David Tristan

853

893

9
10

Transcript Vol. 5 – January 9, 2004

11

Witness

From page #

To page #

12

Peter Jensen

901

940

13

Joe Reynoso

941

947

14

Francis King

947

951

15

Dorothy Perkins

958

973

16

Linda Clifford

973

992

17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28

129

1

Appendix 2

2

EXHIBITS PLACED INTO EVIDENCE DURING THE HEARINGS

3

Transcript Vol. 1 – Hearing of 7/30/03

4

Exhibit Number:

5

1. Bob Ballard’s Chronological Summary of the Jones IA investigation

6

2. Post Powers Investigative Plan and Disciplinary Review Process dated October 2001

7

3. 6 unsigned letters to Bob Gaultney dated June 19, 2002. Each letter addresses a different
incident. The incidents were the Williford, Perez, Black, Chester, Smith and Longacre
incidents.

8
9

4. Internal Affairs Investigation Request, subject, Charles Matlock, dated 10/8/02 and Case
Assignment Sheet for case # N-PBSP-200-02 dated 10/16/02

10
11

5. Letter to Brian Parry from U.S. Attorney dated June 28, 2002 that was sent with the
Powers/Garcia trial transcripts that had been requested by the CDC.

12

6. Internal Affairs Investigation Request, subject, Owen Tuttle, dated 10/8/02 and Case
Assignment Sheet for case # N-PBSP-199-02 dated 10/16/02

13
14

7. Internal Affairs Investigation Request, subject, William Jones, dated 10/8/02 and Case
Assignment Sheet for case # N-PBSP-198-02 dated 10/16/02

15

8. Bob Ballard’s Chronological Summary for the Tuttle IA investigation (refers back to the
Jones Chronological Summary)

16
17

9. Bob Ballard’s Chronological Summary of the Matlock IA investigation (refers back to the
Jones Chronological Summary)

18

10. Letter to Bob Ballard from CCPOA lawyer Christine Albertine requesting documents
regarding William Jones (case 198-02) dated March 18, 2003.

19
20

11. Letter to Bob Ballard from CCPOA lawyer Christine Albertine requesting documents
regarding Greg Devos (case 199-02) dated March 17, 2003.

21

12. Letter to Bob Ballard from CCPOA lawyer Christine Albertine requesting documents
regarding Ronald Parker (case 199-02) dated March 18, 2003.

22
23

13. Letter to Bob Ballard from CCPOA lawyer Christine Albertine requesting documents
regarding Mark Maxwell (cases 198/200-02) dated March 18, 2003.

24

14. Letter to Bob Ballard from CCPOA lawyer Christine Albertine requesting documents
regarding Owen Tuttle (case 199-02) dated March 18, 2003.

25
26

15. Letter to Bob Ballard from CCPOA lawyer Christine Albertine requesting documents
regarding Charles Matlock (case 200-02) dated March 18, 2003.

27
28

130

1

16. Internal Affairs Investigation Request, subject, William Jones, dated 10/8/02 and Case
Assignment Sheet for case #’s N-PBSP-036-03 and N-PBSP-198-02 dated 10/16/02

2
17. Chronological Summary of investigation for case #’s N-PBSP-036-03 and N-PBSP-198-02
3
4

18. Letter to Special Master from Thomas Moore regarding the decision made at the 3/27/03
meeting, dated April 8, 2003.

5

19. Fact Finder Memorandum from Bob Ballard to Thomas Moore re the Powers/Garcia perjury
cases, dated April 1, 2003.

6
Transcript Vol. 3 – Hearing of 9/25/03
7
8
9
10
11
12

20. Article 13 of the Department Operation Manual (Employee Misconduct
Investigations/Inquiries).
21. Memo from Thomas Moore to Ed Alameida regarding the Updated Corrective Action Plan –
Office of Investigative Services dated January 31, 2003 and the Updated Corrective Action
Plan
22. Letter to Counsel from Special Master re the CDC Investigation and Follow-Up Plan, dated
November 21, 2001 and a Memorandum from Pat Maher to the Special Master re Dr.
Maher’s review of the follow-up investigation plan and disciplinary review process for cases
arising out of the Powers/Garcia trial.

13
14

23. Letter to the Special Master from Scott Mather re Response to Dr. Maher’s review of the
follow-up investigation plan and the disciplinary review process, dated January 24, 2001
(should be 2002).

15
16

24. Letter from the Special Master to Pat Maher re the Revised Post Powers Trial Discipline
Plan, dated February 5, 2002 and the Revised Post Powers Trial Discipline Plan.

17

Transcript Vol. 4 – Hearing of 11/21/03

18

25. Court Order from Judge Henderson re the Use of Force Investigation Policies, dated April 21,
1998; Special Master’s Initial Report Re Phase-Out of Monitoring of Use of Force Remedial
Plan – Recommendations Re Phase-Out of Use of Force Monitoring and the Partial
Termination of Force Related Orders, dated August 24, 1999; Attorney General’s Stipulation
and [Proposed] Order for Periodic Production of Documents, dated August 18, 1999; Special
Master’s Report and Recommendations Re Phase-Out of Use of Force Monitoring, and the
Partial Termination of Force Related Orders, dated June 5, 2000; Court Order from Judge
Henderson re Defendants Revised Use of Force Policies, Phase-Out of Use of Force
Monitoring, and Partial Termination of Force Related Orders, dated July 7, 2000

19
20
21
22
23

26. 9/22/97 IA investigation, subjects: Chuck Alexander, Richard Newton, Robert Rice, Jean
Rupert, Roy Alvarado and Deanna Freitag

24
25

27. Memo to Chuck Alexander from Barry O’Neill re the IA investigation of Alexander and the
findings of that investigation, dated October 31, 1997

26
27
28

131

1
2
3

28. Complaint in the case of Alexander and Newton v. CDC, dated August 10, 1998; two copies
of Memo to Chuck Alexander from Barry O’Neill re the IA investigation of Alexander and
the findings of that investigation, dated October 31, 1997.
29. Letter to Ed Alameida from Steve White re Special Review of the CDC OIS (filed under
seal), dated October 29, 2001.

4
5
6
7

30. Letter to U.S. Attorney for the Northern District Kevin Ryan from the Special Master re
anticipated testimony of Melinda Haag in Post Powers hearing, dated November 14, 2003;
Fact Finder Memorandum from Bob Ballard to Thomas Moore re the Powers/Garcia perjury
cases, dated April 1, 2003.
31. Letter to Special Master from Kevin Ryan authorizing the testimony of Melinda Haag in the
Post Powers hearing, dated November 19, 2003 (two copies).

8

10

32. Starts with note from Linda Clifford (Ed Alameida’s secretary) explaining the following
documents; Copy of page of Ed Alameida’s calendar from 3/27/03; Copy of 3/27 meeting
request from Dottie Perkins (Tom Moore’s secretary); Copy of Ed Alameida’s calendar from
Schedule Plus showing that the meeting had been accepted.

11

Transcript Vol. 5 – Hearing of 1/9/04

12

33. Special Master’s letter of December 8, 2003 re: Document Request Re January 9, 2004 PostPowers Hearing.

9

13
14
15
16
17

34. Letter to Special Master from Sara Turner, Supervising Deputy Attorney General re:
Document Production – Post-Powers/Garcia Hearing.
35. Letter to Edward Alameida, Director, California Department of Corrections from Benjamin
Sybesma re: David G. Lewis, Request for Representation in United States of America v.
David Gene Lewis Criminal Matter CR-99-00186-MMC, enclosures included.
36. Fax Transmittal to Peter Jensen from Edward Alameida re: CCPOA’s Request for
Reimbursement of Fees and Costs for the Criminal Defense of David Lewis.

18
19

37. Memorandum to Edward Alameida from Mark Mustybrook re: CCPOA’s Request for
Reimbursement of Fees and Costs for the Criminal Defense of Former Correctional Officer
David Lewis.

20
21
22
23
24

38. E-mail Transmittal from John Sugiyama to Catherine Bernstein and Mark Mustybrook re:
Officer Lewis Representation.
39. E-mail Transmittal from Dottie Perkins on behalf of Thomas Moore to Linda Clifford re:
Meeting on OIS Confidential Matter in Director’s Office for March 27, 2003. Meeting Status
– Not yet responded
40. E-mail Transmittal from Dottie Perkins on behalf of Thomas Moore to Linda Clifford re: OIS
Confidential Matter in Director’s Office for March 27, 2003. Meeting Status – Accepted.

25
41. Computerized Appointment Calendar of Kathy Kinser for March 25 – 27, 2003
26
42. Linda Clifford’s Appointment Calendar for Edward Alameida for March 24 – 27, 2003
27
28

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43. Microsoft Outlook History Document
2
44. Microsoft Outlook History Document with Modification Pop-Up
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
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Appendix 3

2

EXHIBITS NOT PLACED INTO EVIDENCE DURING THE HEARINGS

3

Exhibit 45: Memorandum from Dr. Patrick T. Maher re Interview of William Schembri.

4

Exhibit 46: Memorandum from Dr. Patrick T. Maher re Northern Region Investigation N-PBSP198-02.

5
6

Exhibit 47: Memorandum from Dr. Patrick T. Maher re Northern Region Investigation N-PBSP199-02

7

Exhibit 48: Memorandum from Dr. Patrick T. Maher re Northern Region Investigation N-PBSP200-02

8
9
10

Exhibit 49: Memorandum from Dr. Patrick T. Maher re Northern Region Fact Finder Powers/Garcia Perjury Issues.
Exhibit 50: Memorandum from Dr. Patrick T. Maher re Analysis of Organization Culture and
Structural Influences on Reporting and Decision Making.

11
12

Exhibit 51: Memorandum to Richard Newton from Barry O’Neill re the IA investigation of
Alexander and the findings of that investigation, dated October 31, 1997

13

Exhibit 52: E-mail from Dennis Beaty to Tom Moore, with Ccs. to Kathy M. Kinser, Kathleen
Keeshen, and Robert Gaultney dated March 11, 2003.

14
Exhibit 53: California Penal Code § 118.
15
16

Exhibit 54: E-mail from Robert Gaultney to Joseph Barbara with Cc. to Robert Ballard dated
March 10, 2003.

17

Exhibit 55: David Lewis Shooting Review Board decision dated July 28, 1994.

18
19

Exhibit 56: Letter from Reynando J. Accooe stating that the CDC is unable to provide any
documents that summarize the disposition of IA Report No. 40-002-96 - subject William
Schembri.

20

Exhibit 57: Declaration of Director of Corrections Cal Terhune dated November 25, 1998.

21

Exhibit 58: California Code of Regulations: Title 15, section 3413 “Incompatible Activity”

22

Exhibit 59: Dr. Patrick Maher’s Memorandum re Lewis SRB Decision dated July 28, 1994.

23

Exhibit 60: Transcript of the Reynoso (SPB Case # 030046) hearing of April 16, 2003.

24

Exhibit 61: February 20, 2004 letter from Ronald Yank to the Special Master.

25

Exhibit 62: February 24, 2004 letter from the Special Master to Ronald Yank and Benjamin C.
Sybesma.

26
27
28

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Exhibit 63: Special Master’s letter of August 21, 2003 re David Lewis to the Honorable Thelton
E. Henderson.

2
Exhibit 64: Order re Special Master’s Request filed September 23, 2003.
3
4

Exhibit 65: February 17, 2004 Memorandum entitled Zero Tolerance Regarding the “Code of
Silence” signed by Richard Rimmer and Roderick Q. Hickman.

5

Exhibit 66: Chart detailing the status of defendants’ Post Powers remedial plans.

6

Exhibit 67: Patrick Maher’s Memorandum of May 31, 2004 entitled: “Qualitative Review of
1997 Internal Affairs Investigation of PBSP CCPOA Personnel Investigation 105-96.”

7
8

Exhibit 68: Chief Deputy Attorney General Peter Siggins’ letter of July 9, 2003 to the Honorable
Jackie Speier and the Honorable Gloria Romero.

9

Exhibit 69: Defendants’ Comments and Objections re the posting of Post Powers reports and
exhibits in the prisoner law libraries at PBSP.

10
11

Exhibit 70: Plaintiffs Comments re the posting of Post Powers reports and exhibits in the
prisoner law libraries at PBSP.

12

Exhibit 71: End of Year 2001 CCPOA Peacekeeper Magazine article entitled “The Season of
Heros and Healing.”

13
Exhibit 72: CCPOA Memorandum dated June 31, 2001 re FBI investigation at PBSP.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
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Appendix 4

2

DOCUMENTS REVIEWED BY THE SPECIAL MASTER
BUT NOT ATTACHED AS EXHIBITS

3
1. U.S. v. M. Powers and J. Garcia (CR-00-0105-MJJ) Criminal Trial Transcript Vols. 1 – 22
4
2. Personnel File of Correctional Officer James Mather
5
3. PBSP Internal Affairs Transcript of Interview with Christopher Caldwell – October 6, 1995
6
7

4. PBSP Internal Affairs Transcript of Interview with Christopher Caldwell – November 1,
1995

8

5. Testimony of Christopher Caldwell in First Powers/Garcia Criminal Trial – pages 1906
through 1947

9
10

6. In the Matter of Pelican Bay State Prison: Interview with Christopher Caldwell – October 2,
1995

11

7. In the Matter of Pelican Bay State Prison: Interview with Christopher Caldwell – October 6,
1995

12
8. Internal Affairs Investigation Request re: Case no. N-PBSP-198-02 – October 8, 2002
13
14

9. Internal Affairs Investigation Case Assignment: Case no. N-PBSP-198-02 – October 16,
2002

15

10. Internal Affairs Northern Region Investigation Worksheet – Case no. N-PBSP-198-02

16

11. CDC Special Service Unit Sacramento Personnel Investigation Report no. 40-002-96 –
February 9, 1996

17
12. FBI Investigation Report 282A-SF-116046 – November 3, 1998
18
13. CDC Special Service Unit Personnel Investigation Report no. 40-003-96 – March 21, 1996
19
20

14. Memorandum to M.T. Pickett from Warden Steven Cambra re: Internal Affairs Investigation
# 40-003-96 – April 22, 1996

21

15. Office of Investigative Services Investigation Plan re: Case no. N-PBSP-198-02 – October
16, 2002

22
23

16. PBSP Internal Affairs Transcript of Interview with Officer William Schembri – January 11,
1996

24

17. PBSP Internal Affairs Transcript of Interview with Officer Joseph Manzano – January 18,
1996

25
26

18. Memorandum to FBI Agents Stan Walker and Brent Miller from OIS Special Agent C.A.
Franklin re: Interview of William Schembri – June 21, 1998

27
28

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19. PBSP Internal Affairs Transcript of Interview with Officer William Jones – January 11, 1996

2

20. Internal Affairs Investigation Request re: Edward Powers – September 28, 1995

3

21. Internal Affairs Case Assignment: Case no. N-PBSP-199-02 – October 16, 2002

4

22. Office of Investigative Services Investigative Plan re: Case no. N-PBSP-199-02 – October
16, 2002

5
23. Internal Affairs Investigation Request re: Case no. N-PBSP-199-02 – October 8, 2002
6
7

24. Internal Affairs Northern Region Investigation Worksheet re: Case no. N-PBSP-199-02 –
October 15, 2002

8

25. CDC Special Service Unit Supplemental Report re: Case no. 03-018-95(S) – July 25, 1995

9

26. PBSP Internal Affairs Transcript of Interview with Officer Owen Tuttle – March 8, 1995

10

27. PBSP Internal Affairs Transcript of Interview with Officer Greg Devos – March 8, 1995

11

28. PBSP Internal Affairs Transcript of Interview with Officer Ronald Parker – March 27, 1995

12

29. PBSP Internal Affairs Transcript of Interview with Officer Norman Whitley – March 8, 1995

13

30. FBI Investigation Report 282A-SF-116046 – September 18, 1998

14

31. Internal Affairs Investigation Request re: Case no. N-PBSP-200-02 – October 8, 2002

15

32. Internal Affairs Northern Region Investigation Worksheet re: Case no. N-PBSP-200-02 –
October 15, 2002

16
33. Internal Affairs Case Assignment: Case no. N-PBSP-200-02 – October 16, 2002
17
18

34. Office of Investigative Services Investigative Plan re: Case no. N-PBSP-200-02 – October
16, 2002

19

35. PBSP Internal Affairs Transcript of Interview with Officer Charles Matlock – February 25,
1991

20
21

36. PBSP Internal Affairs Transcript of Interview with Officer M.D. Maxwell – February 26,
1991

22

37. CDC 989: Subjects E. Powers and M. Payne re: Employee Misconduct; Reference no. 005/91
– March 19, 1991

23
24
25
26

38. Pelican Bay State Prison Incident Report re: Case no. PBP-BYD-91-02-0088 – February 14,
1991
39. Memorandum to Associate Warden C.J. Johnson from Program Administrator D.J. Helsel re:
The Incident of February 14, 1991, Involving the Assault of Officer J. Mather by Inmate
Perez D-46240 – February 15, 1991

27
28

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1

40. Internal Affairs Northern Region Investigation Worksheet re: Case no. NC-PBSP-036-03 –
October 15, 2002

2
41. Internal Affairs Case Assignment: Case no. NC-PBSP-036-03 – October 16, 2002
3
42. Internal Affairs Investigation Request re: Case no. NC-PBSP-036-03 – October 8, 2002
4
5

43. Memorandum to Thomas Moore, Assistant Director OIS from John Chen, Chief Deputy
Inspector General re: Internal Affairs Investigation Phase II Reviews Case #: CC-PVSP-08202 and C-PVSP-143-02 – May 20, 2002

6
7

44. Memorandum to Special Agents in Charge: Office of Investigative Services Headquarters –
Internal Affairs Regional Offices from Thomas Moore, Assistant Director OIS re: Office of
the Inspector General’s Review – August 1, 2003

8
9
10

45. All Pleadings Filed in the Case of Charles Alexander and Richard Newton vs. State of
California et. al. Case no. 98-AS-03598
46. Memorandum to All CDC Employees from Edward Alameida, Director re: Potential Budget
Reductions – June 12, 2003

11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20

47. All Documents Provided to State Senators Jackie Speier and Gloria Romero Per Their
Request from Edward Alameida re: Senatorial Committee Hearings Commencing on July 10,
2003.
a. Copies of leases for all CDC offices in Rancho Cucamonga.
b. Copy of lease agreement that requires CDC to pay for office space utilized by all the
State Personnel Board in the Southern Region.
c. Number of Category I investigations conducted by the Office of Investigative Services
(OIS) Northern, Central, and Southern Regional Offices for the past five years.
d. Written explanation of higher OIS Central Regional office/equipment costs as
compared to Northern and Southern Regional Offices.
e. Overtime expenditures for the OIS Northern, Central, and Southern Regional Offices
for each for the past five years.
f. Documentation outlining temporary assignment and current status of Correctional
Officer Shane Ziska.
g. Can CDC retain the Discrimination Investigations Unit (DIU) at the same lease cost if
the OIS is dropped from the lease.
h. Headquarters Office expenditures, staffing and workload.
i. Clarification of total OIS workload as provided in the June 24th report.
j. Decision to close the Southern Region Office.

21
22

48. Agenda re: Senate Select Committees on Government Oversight and the California
Correctional System Joint Hearing on the California Department of Corrections – July 10,
2003

23
24

49. Letter to Senators Jackie Speier and Gloria Romero from Peter Siggins, Chief Deputy
Attorney General, Legal Affairs re: Attorney General’s Investigation of Incident at California
Institution for Men in Chino – July 9, 2003

25
26

50. Memorandum to Edward Alameida, Director, Department of Corrections from Frank
Renwick, Deputy Director, Administrative Services Division re: Office of Investigative
Services Classification Alternatives – April 14, 2003

27
28

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2

51. Memorandum to Edward Alameida from Jerry Negrete, Special Agent in Charge, Office of
Internal Affairs re: Reclassification of OIS/LEIU Special Agent Series to Correctional
Lieutenant – March 14, 2003

3
52. Confidential Talking Points re: Proposed Special Agent Reclass
4
5

53. Memorandum to C.A. Terhune Director, Department of Corrections from Richard Ehle,
Assistant Director, Office of Internal Affairs re: Acceptance of Dillard Case by Attorney
General’s Office – July 10, 1998

6

17

54. Office of Investigative Services Policies and Procedures
a. Weapons Inventory
b. Weapons Storage Policy
c. Storage of Firearms, Ammunition and Valuable Equipment
d. Weapons Issuance and Return Policy
e. Ammunition and Chemical Agents Issuance and Return Policy
f. Incident Reporting
g. Field Incident Report “CDC Form 1662,” Part A, B, and C-1
h. Sex Crimes Investigations
i. Transfer of Inmate Witnesses
j. Office of Investigative Services Computer Policy
k. Intake Report
l. Employee Access to Videotape Recordings, re: Personnel Investigations
m. Collection of Videotape Evidence
n. Mailing Instructions Video and Audio Evidence
o. Delivery Instructions for Audio Evidence
p. Audio Processing Case Log
q. Audio Processing Item Log
r. Transfer of Office of Internal Affairs Investigations
s. Informant Fund
t. Pre-Interrogation Discovery
u. Notification of Persons Under Investigation

18

55. Department of Corrections Mission Statement

19

56. Department of Corrections Organizational Chart

20

57. Department of Corrections Operations Manual (DOM) Including Various CDC
Memorandum

7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16

21
22
23
24

58. Senate Select Committees on Government Oversight and the California Correctional System
Joint Hearing on the California Department of Corrections Transcripts – July 10, 2003
59. Senate Select Committees on Government Oversight and the California Correctional System
Joint Hearing on Department of Corrections: Impact of Closing Southern Region of
Investigative Services, Utilization of Retired Annuitants, and, Paid Leave Issue from the
Committees’ May 8 Hearing Transcripts – June 5, 2003

25
26

60. U.S. v. David Gene Lewis (CR-99-0186-MMC) Transcripts of Preliminary Hearings –
January 7, 2003; February 5, 2003

27
28

139

1

61. U.S. v. David Gene Lewis (CR-99-0186-MMC) Excerpts of Criminal Trial Transcript

2

62. Declaration of Gregory Schwartz re: Long v. Gomez - Case no. C-98-2679-SBA (MEJ)

3

63. Memorandum to Steve Cambra, Regional Administrator North Institutions Division from
Arthur Diaz, Chief, Investigative Services Unit re: Shooting Review Board Close Out # 033PBSP-94 – July 28, 1994

4
5

64. CDC Special Service Unit Sacramento Personnel Investigation Report no. 41-003-96 re:
David Lewis – February 28, 1996

6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
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Appendix 5

2

GLOSSARY OF ACRONYMS

3
4

BCP –– Budget Change Proposals

5

BIR — Bureau of Investigative Services

6

CAP –– Corrective Action Plan

7

CCPOA –– California Correctional Peace Officers Association

8

CDC –– California Department of Corrections

9

CPOST –– California Peace Officer Standards for Training

10

D.A. –– District Attorney

11

DFRB –– Deadly Force Review Board

12

DOM –– Department of Corrections Department Operation Manual

13

ELU –– Department of Corrections Employment Law Unit

14

ERC –– Executive Review Committee

15

FBI –– Federal Bureau of Investigation

16

GAR –– Governor’s Action Request

17

IA or IAD –– Internal Affairs Division

18

LEIU –– California Department of Corrections Law Enforcement Investigation Unit

19

MOU –– California Correctional Peace Officers Association Memorandum of
Understanding

20
MTA –– Medical Technical Assistant
21
OIG –– Office of the Inspector General
22
OIS –– Office of Investigative Services
23
PERB — Public Employment Relations Board
24
PBSP –– Pelican Bay State Prison
25
POBAR –– California Peace Officer Bill of Rights
26
POST — Police Office Standards of Training
27
28

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SPB –– State Personnel Board

2

SRB –– Shooting Review Board

3

SRT –– Shooting Review Team

4

SSU –– Special Services Unit

5

YACA –– Youth and Adult Correctional Agency

6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28

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2
3
4

PROOF OF SERVICE BY MAIL
I, Kristina Hector, declare:
I am a resident of the County of Alameda, California; that I am over the age of eighteen (18)
years of age and not a party to the within titled cause of action. I am licensed to practice law in
the State of California and employed as the Assistant to the Special Master in Madrid v.
Woodford et al. in the County of San Francisco, California.

5
6
7
8
9

On June 24, 2004 I arranged for the service of a copy of the attached documents described as
the SPECIAL MASTER’S FINAL REPORT RE DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS “POST
POWERS” INVESTIGATIONS AND EMPLOYEE DISCIPLINE on the parties of record in said
cause by sending a true and correct copy thereof by United States Mail and addressed as follows:
MIKE JORGENSON/SARA TURNER
Deputy Attorney Generals
455 Golden Gate Ave., Suite 11000
San Francisco, CA 94102

10
11
12
13
14

STEVEN FAMA
Prison Law Office
General Delivery
San Quentin, CA 94964-0001
MADRID UNIT (2 copies)
Pelican Bay State Prison
P.O. Box 7000
Crescent City, CA 95532

15
16
17
18
19
20

KATHLEEN KEESHEN
Deputy Director
Legal Affairs Division
California Department of Corrections
P.O. Box 942883
Sacramento, CA 94283
BRUCE SLAVIN
YACA
1100 11th Street, Suite 400
Sacramento, CA 95814

21
22
23

MATTHEW CATE
Inspector General
Office of the Inspector General
P.O. Box 348780
Sacramento, CA 95834-8780

24
25
26
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28

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2
3

MILDRED K. O’LINN
Manning & Marder
Kass, Ellrod, Ramirez, LLP
23rd Floor at Figueroa Tower
660 S. Figueroa Street
Los Angeles, CA 90017

4
5
6
7
8

DAVID P. BANCROFT
Sideman & Bancroft
One Embarcadero Center, Eighth Floor
San Francisco, CA 94111
PAUL Q. GOYETTE
Attorney at Law
11344 Coloma Road, Suite 145
Gold River, CA 95670

9
10
11
12

RONALD YANK
Carroll, Burdick & McDonough
44 Montgomery, Suite 400
San Francisco, CA 94104-4606
I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the State of California that the foregoing
is true and correct. Executed on June 24, 2004 at San Francisco, California.

13
14
15

Kristina Hector

16
17
18
19
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