BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �







                      SENATE COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC SAFETY
                            Senator Loni Hancock, Chair              S
                             2011-2012 Regular Session               B

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          SB 1474 (Hancock)                                          4
          As Amended April 11, 2012 
          Hearing date:  April 17, 2012
          Penal Code
          MK:mc

                                GRAND JURY PROCEEDINGS:

                         ATTORNEY GENERAL: POWERS AND DUTIES  


                                       HISTORY

          Source:  California Attorney General

          Prior Legislation: AB 1854 (Garrick) - not heard Senate Public 
          Safety, 2008
                       SB 796 (Runner) - Chapter 82, Stats. 2007
                       SB 416 (Ackerman) - 2005-2006, Ch. 25, Stats. 2005
                       SB 607 (Cannella) - 1991-1992, Ch. 464, Stats. 1991

          Support: California Nurses Association; California District 
                   Attorneys Association; over 200 individuals

          Opposition:None known



                                         KEY ISSUE
           
          SHOULD THE LAW ALLOW THE ATTORNEY GENERAL TO CONVENE A SPECIAL GRAND 
          JURY IN SPECIFIED COUNTIES TO INVESTIGATE, CONSIDER OR ISSUE 
          INDICTMENTS IN MATTERS IN WHICH THERE ARE MULTIPLE ACTIVITIES, IN 




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          WHICH FRAUD OR THEFT IS A MATERIAL ELEMENT, THAT OCCURRED IN MORE 
          THAN ONE COUNTY AND WERE CONDUCTED EITHER BY A SINGLE DEFENDANT OR 
          MULTIPLE DEFENDANTS ACTING IN CONCERT?



                                       PURPOSE

          The purpose of this bill is to allow the Attorney General to 
          convene a grand jury in cases of theft or fraud where the same 
          actor or actors committed the offenses in multiple counties.

           Existing law  provides that a grand jury is a body of the 
          required number of persons returned from the citizens of the 
          county before the court of competent jurisdiction, and sworn to 
          inquire of public offenses committed or triable within the 
          county.  (Penal Code � 888.)

           Existing law  sets forth the number of grand jurors required by 
          the size of a county.  (Penal Code � 888.2.)

           Existing law  sets forth the qualifications of grand jurors.  
          (Penal Code � 893.)

           Existing law  provides that a prosecutor shall inform the grand 
          jury of the nature and existence of any exculpatory evidence.  
          (Penal Code � 939.71.)

           Existing law  sets forth the number of grand jurors necessary for 
          an indictment.  (Penal Code 
          � 940.)

           Existing law  provides that every superior court, whenever in its 
          opinion the public interest so requires, shall draw a grand 
          jury.  (Penal Code � 904.)  
           
           Existing law  authorizes the presiding judge of the superior 
          court, or the judge appointed by the presiding judge to 
          supervise the grand jury to, upon the request of the Attorney 




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          General or the district attorney or upon his or her own motion, 
          order and direct the impanelment, of one additional grand jury, 
          as specified.  (Penal Code � 904.6.)

           Existing law  provides that whenever the Attorney General 
          considers that the public interest requires, he or she may, with 
          or without concurrence of the district attorney, direct the 
          grand jury to convene for the investigation and consideration of 
          those matters of a criminal nature that he or she desires to 
          submit to it.  He or she may take full charge of the 
          presentation of the matters to the grand jury, issue subpoenas, 
          prepare indictments, and do all other things incident thereto to 
          the same extent as the district attorney may do.  (Penal Code � 
          923 (a).)

           Existing law provides that whenever the Attorney General 
          considers that the public interest requires, he or she may, with 
          or without concurrence of the district attorney, petition the 
          court to impanel a special grand jury to investigate, consider, 
          or issue indictments for Medi-Cal fraud and sets forth duties 
          and scope of such a grand jury.  (Penal Code � 923(b).) 

           Existing law  provides that upon certification by the Attorney 
          General, a statement of costs directly related to the 
          impanelment and activities of the grand jury for the purposes of 

          prosecuting Medi-Cal fraud from the presiding judge of the 
          superior court where the grand jury was impaneled shall be 
          submitted for state reimbursement of the costs to the county.  
          (Penal Code � 923 (c).)

           This bill  would also allow the Attorney General to convene a 
          grand jury, without the concurrence of the district attorney to 
          investigate, consider or issue indictments in matters in which 
          there are multiple activities, in which fraud or theft is a 
          material element, that have occurred in more than one county and 
          conducted either by a single defendant or multiple defendants 
          acting in concert.





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           This bill  provides that a special grand jury convened pursuant 
          to this bill may be impaneled in the counties of Fresno, Los 
          Angeles, Sacramento, San Diego, or San Francisco, at the 
          Attorney General's discretion.

           This bill  provides that a special grand jury impaneled pursuant 
          to this bill shall serve for a term of 18 months unless 
          dismissed earlier by the Attorney General.  The bill does 
          provide that the special grand jury's term can be extended by up 
          to six months.

           This bill  provides that this special grand jury is subject to 
          the requirements of Penal Code sections 888.2, 893 and 940.

           This bill  provides that for special grand juries impaneled 
          pursuant to this subdivision, the Attorney General may issue 
          subpoenas for documents and witnesses located anywhere in the 
          state in order to obtain evidence to present to the special 
          grand jury.

           This bill  provides that the special grand jury may hear all 
          evidence in the form of testimony or physical evidence presented 
          to them, irrespective of the location of the witness or physical 
          evidence prior to the subpoena.

           This bill  provides that the special grand jury may indict a 
          person or persons with charges for crimes that occurred in 
          counties other than where the special grand jury is impaneled 
          and that the indictment shall then be submitted to the 
          appropriate court in any of the counties where any of the 
          charges could otherwise have been properly brought.

           This bill  provides that the court where the indictment is filed 
          under this subdivision shall have proper jurisdiction over all 
          counts in the indictment.

           Existing law  provides that an indictment, when found by the 
          grand jury, must be presented by their foreman, in their 
          presence, to the court, and must be filed by the clerk.  No 




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          recommendation as to the dollar amount of bail to be fixed shall 
          be made to any court by any grand jury.  (Penal Code � 944.)

           This bill  provides that notwithstanding Penal Code Section 944, 
          an indictment found by a special grand jury and endorsed as a 
          true bill by the special grand jury foreperson, may be presented 
          to the appropriate court solely by the prosecutor within five 
          days of the endorsement of the indictment.  For indictments 
          presented to the court in this manner, the prosecutor shall also 
          file with the court clerk, at the time of the presenting 
          indictment, an affidavit signed by the special grand jury 
          foreperson attesting that all the jurors who voted on the 
          indictment heard all of the evidence presented and the proper of 
          number of jurors voted for the indictment.

           This bill  provides that the Attorney General's Office shall be 
          responsible for prosecuting any indictment produced by the grand 
          jury.

           This bill  provides that if a defendant makes a timely and 
          successful challenge to the Attorney General's right to convene 
          a special grand jury by clearly demonstrating that the charges 
          brought are not encompassed by this subdivision, the court shall 
          dismiss the indictment without prejudice to the Attorney 
          General, who may bring the same or other charges against the 
          defendant at a later date via another special grand jury 
          properly convened, or by a regular grand jury or by any other 
          procedure available.

           This bill  specifies that this special grand jury must comply 
          with the provision requiring the prosecutor to present 
          exculpatory evidence to the grand jury.

           This bill  provides that the special grand jury under this 
          provision shall be in addition to any other grand juries 
          authorized.

           This bill  provides that the costs charged the Attorney General 
          for the activities related to the grand jury shall be no more 




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          than what would be charged to a regularly impaneled grand jury 
          convened by the county, unless an alternative payment 
          arrangement is agreed upon by the county and the Attorney 
          General.

           This bill  provides that a defendant convicted on charges brought 
          by a special grand jury shall pay a fine of $500 which shall be 
          assessed by the court and transmitted to the Attorney General's 
          Special Grand Jury Fund, which is hereby established in the 
          State Treasury to be used upon appropriation of the Legislature.

           Existing law  provides that when a public offense is committed in 
          part in one jurisdictional territory and in part in another, or 
          the acts or effects thereof constituting or requisite to the 
          consummation of the offense occur in two or more jurisdictional 
          territories, the jurisdiction of such offense is in any 
          competent court with in either jurisdictional territory.  (Penal 
          Code � 781.)

           This bill  provides that the special grand jury created by this 
          bill is an exception to the above general rule regarding 
          jurisdiction when an offense occurs in more than one county.






                    RECEIVERSHIP/OVERCROWDING CRISIS AGGRAVATION
                                      ("ROCA")
          
          In response to the unresolved prison capacity crisis, since 
          early 2007 it has been the policy of the chair of the Senate 
          Committee on Public Safety and the Senate President pro Tem to 
          hold legislative proposals which could further aggravate prison 
          overcrowding through new or expanded felony prosecutions.  Under 
          the resulting policy known as "ROCA" (which stands for 
          "Receivership/Overcrowding Crisis Aggravation"), the Committee 
          has held measures which create a new felony, expand the scope or 




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          penalty of an existing felony, or otherwise increase the 
          application of a felony in a manner which could exacerbate the 
          prison overcrowding crisis by expanding the availability or 
          length of prison terms (such as extending the statute of 
          limitations for felonies or constricting statutory parole 
          standards).  In addition, proposed expansions to the 
          classification of felonies enacted last year by AB 109 (the 2011 
          Public Safety Realignment) which may be punishable in jail and 
          not prison (Penal Code section 1170(h)) would be subject to ROCA 
          because an offender's criminal record could make the offender 
          ineligible for jail and therefore subject to state prison.  
          Under these principles, ROCA has been applied as a 
          content-neutral, provisional measure necessary to ensure that 
          the Legislature does not erode progress towards reducing prison 
          overcrowding by passing legislation which could increase the 
          prison population.  ROCA will continue until prison overcrowding 
          is resolved.

          For the last several years, severe overcrowding in California's 
          prisons has been the focus of evolving and expensive litigation. 
           On June 30, 2005, in a class action lawsuit filed four years 
          earlier, the United States District Court for the Northern 
          District of California established a Receivership to take 
          control of the delivery of medical services to all California 
          state prisoners confined by the California Department of 
          Corrections and Rehabilitation ("CDCR").  In December of 2006, 
          plaintiffs in two federal lawsuits against CDCR sought a 
          court-ordered limit on the prison population pursuant to the 
          federal Prison Litigation Reform Act.  On January 12, 2010, a 
          three-judge federal panel issued an order requiring California 
          to reduce its inmate population to 137.5 percent of design 
          capacity -- a reduction at that time of roughly 40,000 inmates 
          -- within two years.  The court stayed implementation of its 
          ruling pending the state's appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.  

          On May 23, 2011, the United States Supreme Court upheld the 
          decision of the three-judge panel in its entirety, giving 
          California two years from the date of its ruling to reduce its 
          prison population to 137.5 percent of design capacity, subject 




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          to the right of the state to seek modifications in appropriate 
          circumstances.  Design capacity is the number of inmates a 
          prison can house based on one inmate per cell, single-level 
          bunks in dormitories, and no beds in places not designed for 
          housing.  Current design capacity in CDCR's 33 institutions is 
          79,650.

          On January 6, 2012, CDCR announced that California had cut 
          prison overcrowding by more than 11,000 inmates over the last 
          six months, a reduction largely accomplished by the passage of 
          Assembly Bill 109.  Under the prisoner-reduction order, the 
          inmate population in California's 33 prisons must be no more 
          than the following:

                 167 percent of design capacity by December 27, 2011 
               (133,016 inmates);
                 155 percent by June 27, 2012;
                 147 percent by December 27, 2012; and
                 137.5 percent by June 27, 2013.
               
           This bill  does not aggravate the prison overcrowding crisis 
          described above under ROCA.


                                      COMMENTS
          1.    Need for This Bill  

          According to the author:

               In an effort to combat widespread financial abuses that 
               have occurred in the midst of the most severe mortgage 
               crisis in decades, the Attorney General's Office is 
               engaged in the investigation of significant financial 
               crimes of statewide scope and impact.  Unfortunately, 
               existing county grand jury authority to investigate 
               these crimes is ill-suited to the needs of these cases 
               as crimes of a financial nature often occur in multiple 
               jurisdictions, and thus are often beyond the scope of 
               single-county grand juries.  SB 1474 provides the 




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               Attorney General's Office the option of creating a 
               limited Statewide Grand Jury.  With a statewide Grand 
               Jury, the AG's office will be able to investigate 
               multi-jurisdictional financial crimes in an efficient 
               and effective manner not possible under current law, 
               providing protection for Californians at a time they 
               need it most.

          2.    Statewide Grand Jury for Multiple Jurisdiction Fraud  

          Under existing law the Attorney General may ask a district 
          attorney to convene a grand jury for the Attorney General to use 
          to bring a case, or in cases of Medi-Cal fraud the Attorney 
          General may convene a grand jury without the consent of the 
          District Attorney.  This bill would allow the Attorney General 
          to convene a grand jury without the consent of the District 
          Attorney in cases of fraud or theft that have occurred in more 
          than one county and are conducted by either a single defendant 
          or multiple defendants acting in concert.  The intent is to 
          allow the Attorney General the ability to seek an indictment in 
          the type of complex fraud cases where there is one actor or 
          group of actors who defraud people in various counties thus 
          making it difficult to prosecute in one particular county.

             a.    Location of the Grand Jury

            This bill would allow the special grand jury authorized under 
            this bill to be impaneled in Fresno, Los Angeles, Sacramento, 
            San Diego or San Francisco Counties at the Attorney General's 
            discretion.  There is no requirement that the county chosen be 
            close to the greatest number of witnesses to the cases, given 
            the cost and difficulty of getting witnesses present. However, 
            the flexibility of the location allows the Attorney General to 
            take the location of witnesses in to consideration when 
            determining in which count to impanel the grand jury.

             b.   Number of Grand Jurors






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            This bill provides that a grand jury impaneled under this 
            section shall comply with a number of existing provisions 
            relating to grand juries including Penal Code section 888.2 
            which sets forth the number of grand jurors based on the 
            population in the county.  Since this is a unique grand jury 
            which will be brought not necessarily in the county where the 
            crime has been committed but in one of the specified counties, 
            should the bill specify the number of grand jurors for this 
            type of grand jury or should it be based on the number in the 
            county in which the grand jury is impaneled?

             c.    Evidence Before the Grand Jury
            
            A grand jury impaneled under this bill would have the ability 
            to seek and hear evidence from all over the state. The bill 
            also specifically states that the Attorney General must follow 
            the general rule of submitting any exculpatory evidence to the 
            grand jury.

             d.    Place of Indictment

            This bill provides that the indictment can be submitted to the 
            appropriate court in any of the counties where the charges 
            would otherwise be properly brought.  The court where the 
            indictment is filed under this subdivision shall have proper 
            jurisdiction over all the counts in the indictment.  While it 
            may make sense to join all the counts brought in the 
            indictment in one county, traditionally there have been 
            concerns when "forum shopping" is a possibility.  Is there a 
            way to still allow the Attorney General to bring all the 
            counts in one county without giving rise to the possibility of 
            accusations of forum shopping?

             e.   Costs of the Grand Jury

            As with the existing Medi-Cal grand jury, a statement of costs 
            directly related to the impanelment and activities of this 
            special grand jury from the presiding judge of the superior 
            court in the county in which the jury has been impaneled shall 




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            be submitted to the state for reimbursement.  This bill 
            provides specifically that the costs shall be no more than 
            those which would be charged to a regularly impaneled grand 
            jury unless and alternative payment arrangement is agreed upon 
            by the county and the Attorney General.

          3.    Additional Fine  

          This bill provides that a person convicted of charges brought by 
          a special grand jury shall pay a fine of $500 which shall be 
          assessed by the court and transmitted to the Attorney General's 
          Special Grand Jury Fund which is to be established in the State 
          Treasury to be used upon appropriation of the Legislature.

          Generally, whatever type of fraud or theft a person or entity 
          will be convicted of will have as a punishment a fine, as well 
          as any jail or prison time.  Is the $500 intended to be added to 
          the base fine that will be part of that punishment to which 
          approximately 280% penalty assessments will be added?  Or, is 
          this intended to be a separate base fine that will be subject to 
          the penalty assessments with just the base fine going to this 
          new fund?  Or is this intended to be not a fine, but an 
          additional penalty assessment for crimes prosecuted under these 
          circumstances?  If it is to be added to the base fine, at what 
          point does the money go to the fund if the payment is made over 
          time?


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