http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-arneson25mar25,1,4653116.story
From the Los Angeles Times
Ex-Police Officer Refuses to Testify
Mark Arneson, who has ties to Pellicano, was asked about
a scheme to drop a case for $100,000.
By Andrew Blankstein
Times Staff
Writer
March 25, 2006
A former Los Angeles police sergeant invoked
his 5th Amendment rights Friday, refusing to answer questions about an alleged
scheme to extort $100,000 in exchange for dropping a bookmaking
investigation.
During a court hearing on Eric Portocarrero's petition to
overturn his bookmaking conviction, former Sgt. Mark Arneson refused to answer
half a dozen questions, including whether he used his position to "interfere
with the administration of justice" in the case.
Portocarrero, who
pleaded no contest to two bookmaking counts, has accused Arneson and disgraced
private investigator Anthony Pellicano of offering to "fix" aspects of the case
if the defendant's brother came up with $100,000.
Portocarrero is seeking
to have his conviction overturned on the grounds that authorities failed to
disclose that Arneson was under investigation for leaking confidential
information to Pellicano and had been suspended three days before Portocarrero
entered his plea.
Both Arneson and Pellicano are awaiting trial in U.S.
District Court on charges of wiretapping and illegally obtaining information on
celebrities and high-profile business executives in what federal prosecutors
have described as a conspiracy to gain tactical advantage in high-profile
litigation.
The Portocarrero case raises the prospect that Arneson and
Pellicano also worked together to subvert the criminal justice system.
"I expected him to take the 5th," Portocarrero's attorney, Amy E. Jacks,
said late Friday, referring to the constitutional protection against
self-incrimination. "But why is the LAPD hiding the ball and playing games that
frustrate our ability to show the truth?"
Citing the ongoing case, Sandi
Gibbons, a spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County district attorney's office,
would not comment on Friday's testimony. But she said prosecutors were opposing
efforts to overturn the conviction.
Now free on bond, Arneson has pleaded
not guilty to wire-tapping and other charges. Pellicano, who is being held in
federal custody without bail, also has denied the allegations.
Arneson's
attorney, Steven Miller, did not return calls seeking comment on the
Portocarrero case. Steven Gruel, Pellicano's attorney, also could not be reached
for comment.
Portocarrero was arrested in December 2001 on suspicion of
running a sports betting ring. Arneson headed the investigation. As part of a
plea deal, Portocarrero was sentenced to four days in jail, five years'
probation and 90 days of community service.
In court documents filed as
part of his petition to overturn his conviction, Eric Portocarrero's brother,
Jan, said he received a series of calls from a private investigator who claimed
he knew people conducting the LAPD illegal gambling probe.
The private
investigator "told me details about what was supposedly happening inside
Arneson's office," Jan Portocarrero said. He said the investigator offered to
use his LAPD contacts to help "fix" aspects of the case. According to the
documents, Pellicano's fee was $100,000 — "for starters" — some of which would
go to Pellicano and some to his LAPD contacts.
Jan Portocarrero recalled
the name of the private investigator as Anthony Pelligrino, but he later became
convinced that it was Pellicano.