Kane Grand Jury Presentment Unsealed by Order
A grand jury presentment, shedding light on allegations that state Attorney General Kathleen Kane breached grand jury secrecy and explaining her alleged means of leaking, was made public Monday just hours after attorneys at a related contempt hearing asked for the document to be unsealed.
April 28, 2015 at 04:48 PM
5 minute read
A grand jury presentment, shedding light on allegations that state Attorney General Kathleen Kane breached grand jury secrecy and explaining her alleged means of leaking, was made public Monday just hours after attorneys at a related contempt hearing asked for the document to be unsealed.
The presentment, which concludes with recommendations that Kane face charges of perjury, false swearing, abuse of office/official oppression, obstruction and contempt of court, details the testimony of several of Kane's former and current top deputies, including first deputy Bruce Beemer, former first assistant Adrian King, former senior executive Linda Dale Hoffa and chief deputy James P. Barker, who was in charge of the criminal appeals and grand jury unit.
The order unsealing the presentment came a few hours after Kane's attorney, Gerald L. Shargel of Winston & Strawn, and special prosecutor Thomas E. Carluccio argued over whether Kane should be subject to a contempt hearing on whether her termination of Barker earlier this month violated a protective order barring retaliation against any grand jury witnesses.
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