Jensen v. Super. Ct.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 2021
DocketH048548
StatusPublished

This text of Jensen v. Super. Ct. (Jensen v. Super. Ct.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jensen v. Super. Ct., (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 5/28/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

JAMES JENSEN, H048548 (Santa Clara County Petitioner, Super. Ct. No. C2010724)

v.

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SANTA CLARA COUNTY,

Respondent;

THE PEOPLE,

Real Party in Interest.

Petitioner James Jensen is charged as a coconspirator in a felony indictment alleging a quid pro quo scheme under which members of the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Department issued hard-to-obtain concealed firearms permits in exchange for substantial monetary donations to an independent expenditure committee supporting the reelection campaign of Santa Clara County Sheriff Laurie Smith. Jensen is a sheriff’s department captain identified in the indictment as the individual within the sheriff’s department who facilitated the conspiracy. Jensen moved to disqualify the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office from prosecuting him, alleging that the district attorney’s office leaked grand jury transcripts to the press four days before the transcripts became public which created a conflict of interest requiring disqualification. He also joined in codefendant Christopher Schumb’s motion to disqualify the office due to Schumb’s friendship with both Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen and Rosen’s chief assistant, Jay Boyarsky. The trial court denied the disqualification motions without holding an evidentiary hearing, and Jensen now seeks writ relief here. Jensen argues the trial court should have granted his motion because he identified three bases for finding a conflict of interest requiring disqualification: the grand jury transcript leak; Schumb’s relationships with Rosen and Boyarsky; and a dispute between Rosen and Sheriff Smith about access to recordings of county jail inmate phone calls. For the reasons stated here, we will deny Jensen’s petition. I. TRIAL COURT PROCEEDINGS A. INDICTMENT ALLEGATIONS Jensen is charged by indictment with 10 felony counts: conspiring to bribe an executive officer (Pen. Code, §§ 182, 67); bribing an executive officer (Pen. Code, § 67); conspiring to file a concealed carry application with a false statement (Pen. Code, § 26180, subd. (a)); and seven counts of falsifying a public record by a custodial officer 1 (Gov. Code, § 6200). Jensen’s alleged coconspirators are Christopher Schumb (a private attorney), Harpaul Nahal (a private attorney), and Michael Nichols (a local gun parts manufacturer). Unindicted coconspirators include three men affiliated with a private executive security company called AS Solution, Inc., among them Martin Nielsen and the company’s CEO, Christian West. We provide here a factual summary based on the overt acts alleged in the indictment. AS Solution provides contract security services for corporate executives. The company wanted local licenses to carry concealed weapons (CCW licenses), which are difficult to obtain. Nielsen contacted Nichols about the CCW issue in spring 2018. Nielsen and West then had lunch with Nichols, Nahal, and Schumb. At that lunch Schumb described his fundraising efforts for the reelection of Santa Clara County Sheriff

1 Jensen did not include the indictment among the exhibits accompanying his petition in this court. We rely on the copy of the indictment included in the record for codefendant Schumb’s petition (case No. H048532). 2 Laurie Smith, and he encouraged Nielsen to attend a SWAT competition where Nielsen could meet Jensen. Nielsen attended the competition and was introduced to Jensen by Nichols. The indictment alleges Nielsen and Jensen agreed at that time to the core conspiracy: “AS Solution’s executive protection agents would receive CCW licenses issued by the Sheriff in exchange for a donation from the company.” Nielsen met with Jensen, Nahal, and Nichols in May 2018. They reached an agreement that AS Solution would receive 10 to 12 CCW licenses in return for a $90,000 donation to support Sheriff Smith’s reelection. Jensen instructed Nielsen to have his agents use false employer names and positions on their CCW license applications. Nielsen delivered the completed applications to Jensen in summer 2018. Jensen met with Schumb at Schumb’s office in fall 2018. Jensen then instructed Nielsen that the first part of the donation would be $45,000 for a $5,000-per-plate fundraiser for the sheriff’s reelection campaign. Nielsen delivered a check to Schumb in October 2018 payable to the “ ‘Santa Clara County Safety Alliance.’ ” Schumb was the assistant treasurer of an independent expenditure committee with a substantially similar name (the Santa Clara County Public Safety Alliance), whose purpose was to support Sheriff Smith’s reelection campaign. Nielsen complained to Schumb in early 2019 that AS Solution had not yet received any CCW licenses. Schumb called Jensen. Less than a month later, Jensen signed shooting range qualification paperwork for Nielsen’s CCW license. Jensen later administered the firearms qualification training for other AS Solution CCW license applicants. Nielsen obtained his CCW license in spring 2019, signed by Sheriff Smith. Jensen later informed Nielsen that he should make the second $45,000 donation to the “Sheriff’s Advisory Board.” Based on the foregoing, the grand jury returned the operative indictment against Jensen, Schumb, Nahal, and Nichols. The indictment was filed in the superior court in August 2020. In a press release announcing the indictment, District Attorney Rosen was 3 quoted as follows: “ ‘CCW licenses should not be given out in exchange for campaign donations. They should not be for sale.’ ” B. MOTIONS TO DISQUALIFY THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE Jensen moved to disqualify the entire Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office from prosecuting his case, alleging that it was the district attorney’s office who leaked grand jury transcripts to the press four days before the transcripts were to become public by operation of law. (Pen. Code, § 938.1, subd. (b).) He asked the trial court to re-seal the grand jury transcripts. Jensen also joined codefendant Schumb’s motion to disqualify, in which Schumb argued that his personal relationships with both District Attorney Rosen and his chief assistant Boyarsky constituted a conflict of interest that 2 made it unlikely Schumb would receive a fair trial. Jensen’s motion noted the grand jury returned the indictment in early August 2020. The motion stated his defense counsel received the grand jury transcripts on August 21, but provided no evidence confirming that date. An article published online by San Jose Inside, dated August 27, 2020, was included as an exhibit to a declaration supporting Jensen’s motion. The article quoted verbatim part of Nielsen’s testimony before the grand jury. Jensen also included another article from the same media company, dated August 28, 2020, that again quoted the grand jury transcripts and also included the following: “Though absent from the transcript, witnesses to the proceeding say that’s when [Sheriff] Smith, visibly overcome with emotion, paused to collect herself and wipe tears from her eyes.” Four prosecutors filed declarations contesting Jensen’s allegation that the district attorney’s office was responsible for the leak: District Attorney Rosen; his chief assistant Boyarsky; and the two prosecutors present at the grand jury proceedings, Matthew Braker

2 Schumb filed a separate petition in this court (case No. H048532) following the trial court’s denial of his disqualification motion, which we address in a separate opinion filed today. That opinion discusses the bases for Schumb’s motion in greater detail. 4 and John Chase. All four prosecutors made the same declaration under penalty of perjury: Except for the indictment, “I did not disclose to anyone not officially assigned to this case transcripts or other information about the grand jury proceedings in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
Jensen v. Super. Ct., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-v-super-ct-calctapp-2021.