Pennsylvania
high court halts any charges against attorney general
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[January 23, 2015]
By Elizabeth Daley
PITTSBURGH (Reuters) - The Pennsylvania
Supreme Court temporarily halted the filing of charges against Attorney
General Kathleen Kane in a media leak case while it decides whether the
appointment of a special prosecutor assigned to investigate her was
legal, her lawyer said on Thursday.
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The court will hear oral arguments in March to determine whether
the appointment of Special Prosecutor Thomas Carluccio by Judge
William Carpenter was a potentially illegal conflict of interest,
said Lanny Davis, an attorney who represents Kane.
"If the Supreme Court rules he is unconstitutional, everything he's
done is illegal," Davis said, adding that any investigation into the
Democratic attorney general would need to start from scratch.
A special grand jury recommended charges of perjury and obstruction
against Kane in connection with an allegedly illegal media leak to
the Philadelphia Daily News. The article resulting from the leak was
critical of the office of Kane's Republican predecessor.
Davis said Kane admitted to providing the media with information,
but he said the 2014 memo she provided had nothing to do with 2009
secret grand jury information she is accused of leaking.
"She has repeatedly stated she has done nothing wrong. She told the
truth to the grand jury at all times; there can’t be a perjury
charge when you are telling the truth," Davis said.
He pointed out that the grand jury appointed to investigate her did
not recommend charges of violating the secrecy of a grand jury
proceeding.
In addition to recommending charges against Kane the grand jury
investigating her recommended changes to state law which would force
journalists to reveal the identities of confidential sources in
certain cases.
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The shield law, designed to protect journalists from being forced to
reveal the identity of confidential sources, made it initially
difficult to determine who had leaked information to the newspaper,
according to the grand jury report released Thursday. If reporters
were forced to testify, the panel's deliberations would have been
more complete, it said.
Melissa Melewsky, legal counsel for the Pennsylvania News Media
Association, criticized the recommendations, pointing that the
investigating panel was able to reach its conclusions even with the
law in place."When you chip away at protections for the press, you
diminish their ability to do their constitutionally protected job,"
she said, "The change suggested by the grand jury could stifle
sources and undermine democracy." No formal charges have been filed
against Kane. If convicted, state law would require Kane to resign.
(Reporting by Frank McGurty; Editing by Richard Chang)
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