Skip to content
News
Link copied to clipboard

On eve of perjury trial, Kane asks state Supreme Court for reprieve

A week before Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane is set to face criminal trial, her lawyers filed an emergency petition with the state Supreme Court on Monday asking that the charges against her be dismissed.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane
Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen KaneRead moreED HILLE / Staff Photographer

A week before Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane is set to face criminal trial, her lawyers filed an emergency petition with the state Supreme Court on Monday asking that the charges against her be dismissed.

The so-called King's Bench motion marked a last-minute attempt to avoid or delay trial for Kane. Jury selection is to begin Monday in Norristown.

King's Bench actions, named for the high court in English common law, may be filed only in matters of immediate public importance. They are unusual - and rarely granted.

Kane is charged with perjury, obstruction, official oppression, and other crimes. Prosecutors say she illegally leaked secret grand jury information in an attempt to embarrass a political foe, and later lied about it under oath. She has pleaded not guilty.

Kane's request reiterated arguments her lawyers made unsuccessfully in pretrial motions and proceedings.

In a 30-page filing Monday, Kane's lawyers contended that evidence from the grand jury that investigated her should be thrown out because it was "unlawful and unconstitutional." They argued that Special Prosecutor Thomas Carluccio, appointed to work with the grand jury, had no legal authority to issue subpoenas and act as a prosecutor.

"The issue is one of immediate, practical concern, which threatens the constitutional rights of the commonwealth's chief law enforcement officer," wrote Douglas K. Rosenblum, one of Kane's lawyers.

Kane has already made this argument to the Supreme Court. The court ruled last year, after the grand jury recommended charges against her, that a judge's appointment of a special prosecutor was appropriate, though no state law explicitly authorized it.

After the grand jury investigation, the case was referred to the Montgomery County District Attorney's Office, which charged Kane last August.

District Attorney Kevin R. Steele said his office planned to file a response.

In response to other arguments from Kane's lawyer, prosecutors have said they conducted their own investigation after they received the grand jury materials, along with its recommendation, last year.

Kane, a Democrat, is in the final year of her term as attorney general. The Supreme Court suspended her license to practice law after she was charged, and she chose not to seek a second term.

It was not clear when the Supreme Court would rule. If the justices do not delay the case, jury selection will begin in Montgomery County before Judge Wendy Demchick-Alloy.

lmccrystal@phillynews.com

610-313-8116

@Lmccrystal