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A Second Baltimore Legislative Immunity Decision: There Are Limits!
Tuesday, October 6th, 2009
Robert Wechsler
There are limits on the legislative immunity of local government
officials, according to a decision yesterday by the Baltimore Circuit
Court in the Dixon case (attached; see below), involving the mayor of
Baltimore at the time she was president of the city council.
The court rejected Dixon's motion to dismiss a second round of perjury charges (I discussed the motion in a recent blog post). The court found that a witness's testimony regarding meetings outside of the council did not merit dismissal:
Robert Wechsler
Director of Research-Retired, City Ethics
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The court rejected Dixon's motion to dismiss a second round of perjury charges (I discussed the motion in a recent blog post). The court found that a witness's testimony regarding meetings outside of the council did not merit dismissal:
- Whether one denotes the very limited
testimony provided before the Grand Jury in this case as
“non-substantive”, or merely “incidental to the legislative process”,
or only concerning the status of the Defendant, it does not rise in the
final analysis to the level of invading the core legislative immunity
enjoyed by the Defendant. As a result, it does not form the basis for
the drastic remedy of dismissal with prejudice of an otherwise valid
indictment.
- Even assuming that there was a
violation of the legislative immunity doctrine in the grand jury
process, dismissal of the Indictment would not be warranted. The
Court’s prior dismissal was premised on the fact that the wording of
the indictment and the grand jury process was permeated with violations
of the privilege which required the extraordinary step of dismissal.
- the State has indicated that it may not
even use the supposedly offensive evidence at trial. If this is the
case, the issue of violation of the privilege will be avoided
altogether. If the State does decide to use the evidence, the Court
remains open to further argument in limine or at the time of the offer
of the evidence at trial to review and reconsider the preliminary
ruling made here as to the applicability of the legislative privilege.
Robert Wechsler
Director of Research-Retired, City Ethics
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Baltmore Decision on Leg Immunity II 100509.pdf | 0 bytes |
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