Polanski Lawyers: Investigate Cooley!

Polanski Lawyers: Investigate Cooley!

Published: July 13, 2010 @ 2:47 pm
Print this page
By Brent Lang

Roman Polanski’s U.S. legal team released a statement Tuesday praising the Swiss government’s refusal to extradite the director.

In their statement, Douglas Dalton, Bart Dalton and Chad Hummel planted the blame squarely U.S. law enforcement officials and more specifically Los Angeles District Attorney Steve Cooley.

The three lawyers call for an investigation into the manner in which Polanski’s case has been handled and into the reasons why Cooley did not comply with the Swiss government’s request for more information.

They contend that by refusing to furnish the Swiss with the sworn testimony from the case’s former prosecutor, they were in essence revealing that their case to forcibly bring the Oscar winning director back to the states was compromised.

They maintain that in that testimony, Roger Gunson, the deputy district attorney in charge of the case in 1977, says that the judge on the initial trial said that the time that the director served in Chino State Prison was his entire punishment.

Their public comment on the Polanski ruling comes just after Samantha Geimer, the victim at the center of the sex trial, called on prosecutors to drop the case.

In an interview on Monday, Geimer told the Los Angeles Times, “Enough is enough. This matter should have been resolved 33 years ago,"

The full statement from Douglas Dalton, Bart Dalton and Chad Hummel:

"The Swiss government’s decision not to extradite Mr. Polanski resulted directly from the unjustifiable refusal by U.S. law enforcement to provide critically important evidence requested by the Swiss. That evidence was not insignificant and the failure to produce it was neither accidental nor a “technicality,” as some have said.

The evidence was the sworn testimony of the former prosecutor in the case -- given in February and March of this year -- which proved that the original trial judge in 1977 agreed that Mr. Polanski's time served in Chino State Prison was his entire punishment. On behalf of Mr. Polanski, we had repeatedly asked both the Los Angeles District Attorney and the U.S. Justice Department to agree to provide this testimony to the Swiss and we were rebuffed, as was the request by the Swiss government.

The District Attorney's motive in refusing to cooperate was clear: the testimony would have shown that the extradition request itself was untrue in material respects in that it asserted the false premise that Mr. Polanski had only been ordered to undergo an appropriate diagnostic study. The truth, if revealed, could have undermined the legality of the extradition request, and the District Attorney knew that. Nevertheless, the Swiss should have been told the true facts.

The California Court of Appeal stated in this case that the prosecutor's role in our justice system is to be the "guardian of systemic integrity." The District Attorney has not fulfilled that role here. Instead, he has refused to investigate and remedy what the Court of Appeal called "highly improper" and "profoundly unethical" prosecutorial and judicial misconduct in this case.

Tags: Douglas Dalton, lawyers statement, Movies, Roman Polanski, Steve Cooley
Sign Up For First Take

Get Our Daily Email, and Receive Invitations to Our Screenings Series

Start your day with all of the news worth knowing

What's First Take?

Description

From Charlie Sheen and Michael Jackson to Roman Polanski, Sean Penn, Lindsay Lohan and sticky fingers on bad deals gone wrong.
 

Subscribe to L.A. Noir
Most Popular
Columns
Wrap Tweets