So Chuck Rosenthal's testimony came to an abrupt halt yesterday after his attorney requested and was granted a recess. It would appear that Rosenthal and his attorney have a few things to discuss before Chuck goes back under oath.
Rosenthal acknowledged in testimony that he made some "errors" in previous sworn explanations for why he deleted the e-mails.Defense attorney Brian Wice, who isn't involved in the case but observed the hearing, guessed that Rosenthal and his lawyers asked for the recess to get a copy of the transcript.
"They want to go over it with a fine-tooth comb for any statements that need to be retracted or corrected before the hearing ends to avoid a possible charge of aggravated perjury," Wice said. "You don't have to work really hard to perjure yourself."
The inconsistent statements made by Rosenthal in affidavits and depositions filed with the court made for a contentious round of questions as the embattled DA came under fire while defending his Nov. 5 deletion of more than 2,000 e-mails from his office computer.Kelley established in court that Rosenthal swore that he deleted e-mails from his inbox, his sent box and his trash box in bulk by their dates.
Rosenthal testified that he selectively deleted e-mails as he read the subject line on each one. He said he opened a few of the e-mails to reread them before deciding whether to delete them.
Kelley also established that Rosenthal said in a deposition that he had tried to delete all but the past month's e-mails.
"If that was true, then this is false," Kelley said pointing to a large notepad on an easel in the courtroom on which he wrote out Rosenthal's prior statements.
Rosenthal said there were "errors" in his affidavit. He also said that some of his statements were false when confronted with the inconsistent statements.
[...]
Will Outlaw, who has been a lawyer for 33 years, sat through most of the hearing and said Rosenthal opened himself up to allegations of perjury.
"I'm not saying he perjured himself, but he opened himself up to those allegations," Outlaw said. "It's pure speculation, but if there has been perjury, this would be an opportunity to clean it up."
Criminal defense lawyer Todd Dupont said he was surprised Rosenthal didn't invoke his Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate himself.
"If he was my client, he would have pleaded the Fifth," Dupont said. "It didn't make any sense."
Dupont said Rosenthal's testimony amounted to an admission of a material misrepresentation of a fact in a sworn affidavit -- the definition of perjury.
In court, Rosenthal also told Hoyt that he understood that his actions could be likened to obstruction of justice or tampering with evidence.
How common is it for someone to be giving a time-out to go back and research and correct to avoid perjury charges?
Posted by: Gary Denton on February 2, 2008 5:49 PMSpeculation behind the reasons for delay are inconsistent with the Hoyt's failure to set a return date and Kelly's public irritation about the delay. It is consistent with a renewed effort by I.T. staff and/or possibly something else.
Posted by: Charles Hixon on February 2, 2008 6:38 PM