California v. Dekraai
Annotate this CaseThe trial court recused the entire Orange County District Attorney's (OCDA) office from prosecuting Scott Dekraai's penalty phase after he pled guilty to eight counts of murder. The court did so after two evidentiary hearings where it heard from 39 witnesses over six months. The court concluded the OCDA had a conflict of interest with the Orange County Sheriff's Department (OCSD or deputy sheriff) that prevented the OCDA from fairly prosecuting the penalty phase. The Attorney General appealed that ruling, arguing OCSD was to blame for the misconduct and the OCDA did not have a conflict of interest. The sole issue for the Court of Appeal's review was whether the trial court erred by recusing the entire OCDA's office from prosecuting Dekraai's penalty phase. After that review, the Court concluded it was well within the court's discretion to recuse the entire OCDA's office from prosecuting the penalty phase because the OCDA indeed had a disqualifying conflict of interest. Accordingly, the Court affirmed recusal.
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