As jury deliberations were underway, an attorney who briefly represented Marion “Suge” Knight in what was a murder case at the time pleaded guilty Wednesday to two felony counts in an agreement with prosecutors that will require him to give up his ability to practice law in California within 90 days.
Matthew Powell Fletcher, 57, is facing five years probation but no jail time in connection with his guilty plea to one felony count each of conspiracy to obstruct justice in Knight’s case and perjury under oath stemming from a State Bar disciplinary proceeding involving a separate murder case.
“I give up,” Fletcher, a Long Beach-based attorney, told City News Service as he walked out of the courtroom following the plea.
Fletcher—who had been indicted on five felony counts—could have faced a maximum sentence of three years and eight months in jail if he had been convicted as charged. He is due back in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom May 17 for sentencing.
Jurors had deliberated just over 1 1/2 days in Fletcher’s case, with Superior Court Judge George G. Lomeli telling jurors that the case had been “resolved.”
“Your presence here was crucial in reaching a resolution,” the judge told the panel. “Do not go away thinking this was a waste of time.”
One of the jurors said outside court that he believed the charge of conspiracy to obstruct justice was “the most clear cut” against Fletcher.
The panel had not signed the verdict forms, according to the juror, who asked that his name not be used.
Jurors had gotten the case late Monday against Fletcher, who has been practicing for more than 24 years and has taken on high-profile cases in Long Beach and elsewhere. While presenting their case against Fletcher, prosecutors portrayed him as corrupt and morally flexible, comparable to Saul Goodman in the TV shows “Breaking Bad” and “Better Call Saul,” the Los Angeles Times reported.
Under the last-minute plea deal reached with prosecutors, Fletcher agreed not to practice law in California or apply for reinstatement with the State Bar.
“He was smart because the jurors were going to convict him of four to five counts,” Deputy District Attorney Phil Stirling told City News Service outside court after talking with jurors.
The prosecutor noted that it was the “wildest, most dramatic case” he had ever tried in his 30-year career.
Fletcher represented Knight for a short time in a case in which the former rap mogul eventually pleaded no contest to voluntary manslaughter for running over a man with a pickup in the parking lot of a Compton hamburger stand.
Fletcher was indicted by a Los Angeles County grand jury just over four years ago on one count each of conspiracy to commit bribery, conspiracy to suborn perjury, conspiracy to obstruct justice and accessory after the fact involving Knight’s case. He was also indicted on one count of perjury under oath involving his testimony at a State Bar hearing involving whether he had texted the brother of a defendant in another case and provided him his banking information.
Another of Knight’s former attorneys, Thaddeus Culpepper, 48, was also indicted and is still awaiting trial.
In his closing argument last week, Deputy District Attorney Stefan Mrakich reminded the jury of his remark in his opening statement that Fletcher’s “own words will bury him,” arguing that Fletcher and others were involved in a conspiracy to either get the case against Knight dismissed or for Knight to be acquitted through false testimony when they knew that he was guilty.
Fletcher—who was acting as his own attorney and was not in the courtroom when Mrakich gave his closing argument—said he had proven that the entire working theory of the case was wrong and accused prosecutors of making personal attacks “when they know what they’re saying is baloney.”
“There is no evidence that I gave anyone anything, none,” he said, telling the panel that he had challenged prosecutors to call in a witness to say that he had offered to pay anyone even a penny.
“They have no evidence that I …. entered into a conspiracy with anybody,” Fletcher said.
He told jurors that they “have to vote not guilty” and that “the only people who can stop this insanity is you guys.”
Stirling told the jury in his rebuttal argument that Fletcher is “wildly dishonest at the highest level,” arguing that Fletcher “has lied to you repeatedly.”
“You can’t have a justice system that allows attorneys to lie and manipulate … We need this system to be pure, as pure as possible,” the prosecutor said Monday in his rebuttal argument a few hours before jurors were handed the case. “This case is entirely about dishonesty.”
In one jailhouse recording, Fletcher told Knight in March 2015 that $20,000 to $25,000 would be a fair investment to secure his freedom.
Fletcher also told an informant for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department in May 2016 that witnesses in Knight’s case needed to be paid for their testimony, and subsequently told Knight that Cle “Bone” Sloan, who survived being struck by the truck, needed to be paid money for his testimony, according to the grand jury indictment that was handed up in January 2018.
Knight—who was initially charged with murder for Terry Carter’s Jan. 29, 2015, death—pleaded no contest in October 2018 to voluntary manslaughter and admitted that he used a deadly weapon, a truck, during the commission of the crime in the parking lot of Tam’s Burgers in the 1200 block of West Rosecrans Avenue.
Knight is serving a 28-year state prison term.
Mark Blankenship, a one-time business partner of Knight, pleaded no contest in June 2019 to a felony conspiracy charge stemming from the sale of video footage of the crime and was immediately sentenced to five years probation.
Knight’s fiancée, Toi-Lin Kelly, pleaded no contest in 2017 for conspiracy to violate a court order involving video evidence that was under seal, and she was subsequently sentenced to three yeas in jail for violating her probation by having indirect communication with Knight and helping him violate orders restricting his use of jailhouse phones.
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