
Crusading Calif. D.A. retires, leaves painful wake
By GARANCE BURKE (AP)
November 15, 2009
BAKERSFIELD,
Calif. — The molesters drank blood, the children
said, and hung them from hooks after forcing them to have sex with
their parents. They murdered babies, prosecutors told jurors, and
snapped photographs as the horror unfolded.
Ed Jagels, renowned as one of California's toughest district attorneys,
built his career on the Kern County child molestation cases of the
1980s, putting more than two dozen men and women behind bars to serve
decades-long sentences for abusing children.
Appellate judges now say most of those crimes never happened.
Still, generations of voters have embraced the crusading prosecutor's
tough-on-crime agenda in this blue-collar basin just a mountain range
north of Los Angeles.
Now, as Jagels prepares to retire, the get-tough laws he championed are
being criticized in a state crippled by soaring prison costs. And some
of those he put away are going public with stories of wrongful
conviction in a documentary film narrated by Sean Penn, one of his most
ardent critics.
The Bakersfield trials — and half a dozen similar cases that rippled
across America during the hysteria of that period — are widely
acknowledged to have punished the innocent. Most convictions relied
solely on children's testimony, and the state attorney general
ultimately found county investigators coerced their young witnesses
into lying on the stand and that the probe "floundered in a sea of
unproven allegations."
But the silver-haired prosecutor maintains that justice was done in the
cases that made him a darling of California's conservative movement.
"Innocent people may have been accused at
one point or another,
but what I really fear is that perfectly legitimate convictions have
been overturned," Jagels said, sitting in his wood-panelled office
among portraits of himself with Ronald Reagan and other Republican
leaders. "How the people of Kern County feel about what I've done is
much more important than what anyone else might think."
Such stunning setbacks might have derailed other elected officials, but
Jagels, 60, has thrived amid the oil fields and orchards surrounding
Bakersfield. He holds fast that he was right to form a special task
force to investigate alleged molestation rings, right to assign his
young attorneys to the cases and he has fought the release of those
convicted.
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In this photo taken Thursday, Oct. 22, 2009, Kern County District
Attorney Ed Jagels is shown in his office in Bakersfield, Calif.
Jagels, renowned as one of California's toughest district attorneys,
built his career on the Kern County child molestation cases of the
1980s, putting more than two dozen men and women behind bars to serve
decades-long sentences for abusing children. Appellate judges now say
most of those crimes never happened. (AP Photo/Gary Kazanjian)
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He has been re-elected six times, is leaving office on his own terms
and hopes to leave the reins next year to a handpicked successor.
That brings little comfort to Brandon Smith, who grew up without his
parents after they were sentenced to prison for gruesome sex crimes he
and his younger brother described on the witness stand. Smith said he
only repeated what he heard during weeks of group therapy, and had no
inkling his false statements would mean he would be separated from his
family and assigned to live in foster homes for nearly a decade.
"They basically coached me through my whole testimony, and told me that
I had to say that my parents had sexually abused me," said Smith, whose
parents Scott and Brenda Kniffen served 12 years on molestation
convictions before they were reversed by an appeals court. "We've all
put it behind us, but the one thing I would love is a verbal apology
from Ed Jagels for tearing my family apart."
Since the late 1980s, all but one of 26 convictions Jagels secured have
been reversed. Kern County has paid $9.56 million to settle state and
federal suits brought by former defendants and their children.
Penn, who met Smith through the film, says the Bakersfield cases struck
a chord because he did a short stay in a Los Angeles County jail cell
next to a man accused in a major Southern California child abuse case.
Raymond Buckey and his mother, who ran the McMartin Pre-School in
Manhattan Beach, ultimately were acquitted of 52 child molestation
charges in 1990.
"There is no question that we have to take these kinds of questions
very seriously, but in these cases a pretty good system was used really
corruptly," said Penn, who also executive produced the film "Witch
Hunt," which has been airing nationally on MSNBC. "Jagels orchestrated
the rape of these children emotionally, not to mention the illegitimate
prosecution of the adults."
Jackie Cummings fled Bakersfield with her husband and two sons in
October 1984, when plainclothes police started casing their house
looking for members of molestation rings. The family moved from
campsite to campsite for a year, terrified that sheriff's deputies
would arrest them because they knew a couple on trial for alleged child
abuse.
When investigators tracked down the Cummings at a motel, they seized
the children, arguing the couple were devil-worshipping molesters.
After a year in foster care, their sons were pressured to testify
against them in custody hearings.
"He's destroyed hundreds of people's lives," said Cummings, who was
never charged with a crime, and whose custody case ultimately was
thrown out. "We came back to Bakersfield and the jails were just
filling up with people. We knew all those people were innocent, because
we were innocent, too."
Since the 1980s, Jagels and county law enforcement officials have made
major reforms to their investigative procedures, and now assure all
interviews with child witnesses are videotaped and do not include
suggestive questioning.
Jagels also has cut a wide swath through California politics in the
last 30 years, leading a voter-driven campaign that unseated three
liberal justices from the state Supreme Court, and fighting for
California's stringent three-strikes law. He was once contemplated a
run for state attorney general, but now says he plans to spend his
retirement hunting elk. Conservatives praise Jagels' persuasive
advocacy for victims' rights and tough sentencing laws, and his record
of putting more people behind bars per capita than almost all other
California counties.
"Anybody who has spent any time as a prosecutor knows Ed Jagels because
he's had such a massive impact on the criminal justice system in
California," said Steve Baric, secretary of the California Republican
Party.
Now, however as California and other cash-strapped states face dire
budget crises and prisons bursting at the seams, officials are
rethinking whether it makes fiscal sense to keep locking up so many
people for so long.
"As the economy has tightened, policymakers from both parties are
asking much tougher questions about whether this tough-on-crime agenda
is producing enough of a return for public safety," said Adam Gelb, a
public safety policy expert at the Pew Center on the States in
Washington.
Scott Thorpe, who leads the California District Attorneys Association
in Sacramento, called Jagels a "prosecutor's prosecutor" who helped to
popularize support for the death penalty.
Jagels remains adamant that putting more criminals in prison has kept a
tight lid on crime in his rural pocket of the Central Valley, and says
he'll retire assured that he used his power to keep his constituents
safe.
"One thing we know for sure is criminals can't commit felonies when
they're locked up," Jagels said. "If California prisons are overcrowded
it's not because we have too many people in prison. It's because we
don't have enough prisons."
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