People v. SUPERIOR COURT (BAEZ)

94 Cal. Rptr. 2d 706, 79 Cal. App. 4th 1177
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 14, 2000
DocketH019769
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 94 Cal. Rptr. 2d 706 (People v. SUPERIOR COURT (BAEZ)) 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
People v. SUPERIOR COURT (BAEZ), 94 Cal. Rptr. 2d 706, 79 Cal. App. 4th 1177 (Cal. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

Opinion

MIHARA, J.

Real party in interest Peter Baez was indicted on one count of grand theft and numerous marijuana counts. He sought discovery from the district attorney’s office in support of his contention that the district attorney’s pursuit of the grand theft count was an unconstitutionally discriminatory prosecution. The superior court granted Baez’s discovery motion. Asserting that the superior court abused its discretion in granting Baez’s motion, the People ask us to issue a peremptory writ of mandate directing the superior court to vacate its ruling. We find no abuse of discretion and deny the petition.

Facts

In May 1995, Baez began receiving housing assistance from the Santa Clara County Housing Authority (SCCHA). In his application for housing assistance, Baez stated that his only source of income was “SSI” (Supplemental Security Income from Social Security). Baez was eligible for housing assistance and SSI because he suffers from AIDS. SCCHA distributes funds provided by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Baez’s housing assistance was in the form of a check payable to his landlord. This check was for approximately $900 per month.

Recipients of housing assistance from SCCHA are required to notify SCCHA of any change in their income or assets. SCCHA also performs yearly recertifications which require recipients to complete and sign documents verifying their income and assets. In December 1996, as part of a yearly recertification, Baez affirmed that there were no changes in his income or assets other than an increase in his SSI benefits. Baez stated that he had no bank accounts. In February 1997, an SCCHA employee initiated an interim recertification regarding Baez’s benefits after he saw a television program in which Baez was featured. Baez again verified that he had no income or assets other than his SSI benefits.

[1180]*1180The Santa Clara County Medical Cannabis Center (SCCMCC) opened in March 1997. The purpose of SCCMCC was to “dispense marijuana to people who needed it for legitimate use.” Baez was the executive director of SCCMCC, and he was responsible for all marijuana sales at the center. SCCMCC represented that it was a nonprofit organization staffed by individuals who were not paid salaries. In January 1998, as part of another yearly recertification by SCCHA, Baez again verified that his income and assets had not changed except for an increase in his SSI benefits. He again affirmed that he had no bank accounts. Baez continued to receive benefits from SCCHA.

In 1998, the district attorney’s office initiated a police investigation of Baez based on allegations that SCCMCC was not properly verifying that its clients had physician recommendations for the use of marijuana. In March 1998, the police executed a search warrant at SCCMCC and seized all patient records and financial documents. The police also seized Baez’s personal financial records and arrested Baez. Subsequently, the police contacted SCCHA and provided SCCHA with copies of these financial records and an analysis of these records prepared by the district attorney’s office. Similar documents were provided to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). SCCHA had not previously contacted the district attorney’s office regarding Baez.1

These financial records disclosed that SCCMCC had issued checks for what appeared to be Baez’s personal expenses, and cash deposits had been made into Baez’s personal bank account. SCCHA used these records to determine whether Baez had been eligible for the housing assistance he had received. It determined that Baez had become ineligible for housing assistance in October 1996 and had continued to be ineligible thereafter. An SCCHA employee concluded that Baez had “misrepresented his income and assets totally.”2 Nevertheless, as of May 1998, Baez was continuing to receive housing assistance from SCCHA.

Procedural Background

In May 1998, Baez was indicted on six marijuana counts and one count of grand theft of HUD funds. Baez sought discovery in support of his claim that the district attorney’s prosecution of him was “vindictive and selective [1181]*1181prosecution” based on his status as executive director of SCCMCC. His motion specified in detail precisely the evidence which he wished disclosed.3

Baez initially supported his discovery motion with declarations from his attorney and his attorney’s research assistant and “the records and files in this action.”4 The full text of these two declarations is set forth in the margin. His attorney asserted that “ [substantially similar allegedly fraudulent claims have been disposed of without prosecution in other cases” and that “[t]he criminal prosecution in this case appears to be motivated by the desire of an officer of the San Jose Police Department to discredit and demonize the defendant in the eyes of the public.”5 His attorney’s research [1182]*1182assistant, David Stein, declared that he had interviewed the SCCHA employee who had interacted with Baez.6 Stein had been informed that SCCHA [1183]*1183does not terminate benefits if the recipient has simply made a mistake or an oversight in reporting income and assets. Stein was also told that only “a purposeful attempt by a recipient to hide material information from the Housing Authority” would merit criminal prosecution.

Baez subsequently submitted two additional affidavits in support of his motion. The full text of these declarations is also set forth in the margin. One was the declaration of John Doherty, the director of AIDS Legal Services in Santa Clara 7 Doherty stated that he was “personally acquainted with at least three clients who were recipients of subsidized housing benefits through the SCCHA, and whose eligibility for those benefits was questioned because of failure to comply with requirements that would affect their eligibility for housing benefits.” He stated that in each of those cases, “the dispute was resolved by means of administrative proceedings,” and that he was unaware “of any individual afflicted with [AIDS] who has been prosecuted in the criminal courts for fraud in not reporting income to the [1184]*1184Housing Authority.” Doherty also stated that he had “spoken with seven attorneys who regularly assist clients who are recipients of subsidized housing benefits through the Housing Authority of Santa Clara County,” and that “these attorneys were aware of at least eight cases in which clients were accused of failure to comply with requirements that would affect their eligibility for housing benefits, including two cases in which clients were accused of underrepresenting their income. None of these cases resulted in criminal prosecution.”

The second additional declaration was by Thomas Ehrlich, a staff attorney at the Legal Aid Society of Santa Clara County. Ehrlich declared that he had “represented between 10 and 15 recipients of subsidized housing benefits who were accused of underreporting their income which allegedly made them ineligible for the benefits.” He stated that none of those people had been criminally prosecuted; rather, their cases “were handled administratively through the Housing Authority, where the recipients were either found not to have underreported their income or if income was underreported, a payment plan was agreed to . . .

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People v. SUPERIOR COURT (BAEZ)
94 Cal. Rptr. 2d 706 (California Court of Appeal, 2000)

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Bluebook (online)
94 Cal. Rptr. 2d 706, 79 Cal. App. 4th 1177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-superior-court-baez-calctapp-2000.