In Hollywood, there's no better magnet for stargazing than a
movie premiere. So on a Sunday afternoon in late June, the summer sun couldn't
keep thousands of fans from lining Hollywood Boulevard, hoping to spot a star.
This was the "Terminator Genisys"
premiere, and only one star mattered: Arnold
Schwarzenegger. The former governor of California shook hands, signed
autographs and posed for selfies. It's the kind of personal attention Fred and
Kathy Santos wish they could get fromSchwarzenegger, who they say stole justice
from their dead son.
"He plays a
hero in the movies, yet in real life he's not a hero," Fred Santos said.
"He's a dirty politician."
Minutes before
ending his two terms as governor, Schwarzenegger issued his final act:
Commuting the sentence of Esteban Nunez, the teen who pleaded guilty to
stabbing to death the Santos' son, Luis, in 2008.
It's not that a
governor issuing clemency was anything new. But neither the Santos family nor
San Diego County prosecutors had any idea it was coming, let alone got a chance
to plead their case. Instead, they were informed by a news release and a phone
call from a reporter.
"My son
(was) stabbed in the heart when he was alive," Fred Santos told CNN.
"Schwarzenegger stabbed him in the back after my son is killed."
At first, Fred
Santos asked himself why the governor would care about their case. But deep
down he knew. Santos feared political influence from the beginning -- ever
since learning that Esteban Nunez wasn't just any accused killer.
He was the son
of Fabian Nunez, California's most powerful Democrat and a political ally to
the governor. So to many, such as San Diego County District Attorney Bonnie
Dumanis, Schwarzenegger's surprise commutation appeared as if Nunez was cashing
in.
"I think it
was political cronyism at its worst."
The speaker's son, a brutal crime
When Fabian Nunez was sworn in as
speaker of the California Assembly in 2004, his son was by his side. At 15,
Esteban Nunez appeared baby-faced and shy -- nothing like the muscular,
tattooed adult described in court records just four years later.
It was October
2008, and prosecutors alleged that Esteban Nunez and Ryan Jett were fueling
their anger with alcohol. They had just been denied entry to a fraternity party
near the campus of San Diego State University (neither were students there),
and they were looking for revenge. The Sacramento natives were going to show them
how it was done "in Sac town," the pair boasted, according to court
records.
"They
decided they were going to either burn a frat house or they were going to stab
some people," Dumanis said.
Armed with
knives, they walked the streets at 2 a.m. until they encountered Luis Santos
and a friend. After an initial altercation, Luis called several more friends
who ran to his aid.
"It was a
melee basically, where two of the boys were stabbed. One went into an induced
coma," Dumanis said. "Luis was stabbed, and one got smashed in the
eye."
"My boy's
dying, my boy's dying," Luis' friend screamed to a 911 dispatcher.
"Stay awake
Luis, stay awake," another friend sobbed.
A knife pierced
the left ventricle of Luis' heart. He died at the scene.
Later that same
night, Nunez, Jett and two others piled into a car and headed north to
Sacramento. Surveillance video at a 7-Eleven captured Jett and Nunez leaving
the store with a Big Gulp cup. They filled it with $1.30 worth of gasoline and
used it to burn their weapons and bloody clothes, throwing the items into the
Sacramento River and agreeing to never speak of the incident.
But witnesses
helped police identify four suspects, and two of them weren't so quiet. The
pair fingered Nunez and Jett as the stabbers, later getting probation in
exchange for their testimony.
Two months after
getting a phone call that their son was dead, the phone rang again at the home
of Fred and Kathy Santos. Their son's alleged killers were behind bars, and a
reporter had a question: What was their reaction to the son of Fabian Nunez
being arrested for Luis' murder?
"My concern
was that politics might interfere with justice in the legal system," Fred
Santos told CNN.
Though assured
the system would not bend to politics, Santos says he grew up in Asia, where
"politicians are dirty."
"I asked if
the judge was a Democrat," he said, believing Fabian Nunez's power in that
party would influence the case.
The judge was a
Republican. In time, however, the judge would become the least of Santos'
worries.
Foes to friends
By the time Esteban Nunez was charged
with murder, his father had already derailed Arnold Schwarzenegger's early
years in office. The Republican governor tried to bypass Nunez and the
Democrats by calling for too many special elections on pet projects, with
failing results.
"I got to
tell you, things are very sloppy here on the first floor," Nunez once told
reporters, referring to the governor's office.
Schwarzenegger returned the jab in private
conversations that were recorded and later released to news organizations.
"Fabian is
too much a political operator," he told his staff, apparently unaware of
the recording. "Not so much passion about specific things he stands
for."
But with his
policies stalling in Sacramento, Schwarzenegger announced a shift in strategy
in a State of the State address, conceding his mistakes and pledging to work
with Nunez and the Democrats. The tactic proved beneficial for both sides. The
pair stood side-by-side when California passed legislation creating the highest
minimum wage in the nation, one of many victories out of a newly minted
political friendship.
In 2008, though,
Schwarzenegger did not publicly get involved in Nunez's personal problems.
Instead, with his son facing a first degree murder charge and fighting for a
lower bail amount, Fabian Nunez called on his Democratic friends to vouch for
the credibility of his son. A union leader, a retired assemblyman and even
then-Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa submitted letters to the judge.
On official
mayoral stationery, Villaraigosa wrote that Esteban had shared meals at his
home and that he was "a young man of good and upright character."
"They
already have the mayor trying to influence the judge," Fred Santos said.
"Nobody in power was speaking (for us). We're just regular folks."
The deal
In 2010, Esteban Nunez and Ryan Jett
were moments away from their murder trial. A first degree conviction would
result in a sentence of 25 years to life in prison. A second degree conviction,
15 to life.
But then, with
jury selection already underway, came the next twist in this case: a plea deal
for Nunez and Jett. If the pair pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter, they
would face a maximum of 16 years behind bars. For the Santos family it sounded
too brief, but would offer swift justice and an end to years of future pain.
"So we will
not be spending the rest of our lives going to court ... listening to them
fight their appeal if they were convicted," Fred Santos said.
For District
Attorney Dumanis, a plea bargain also removed, in her mind, the only impediment
to an otherwise airtight case: proving who actually stabbed Luis.
Witness
testimony pointed to Jett as Luis' killer, while Nunez stabbed two other boys
who survived. Was that enough to pin first- or second-degree murder on Esteban
Nunez? The question no longer needed an answer when all sides agreed to a deal.
Nunez and Jett pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter.
"I couldn't
believe we were giving this case away," said Rick Clabby, then deputy
district attorney, in an interview with CNN.
Now retired,
Clabby believes the evidence was strong enough for at least a second-degree
murder conviction.
"We charged
Nunez with conspiracy, too," Clabby said. "It didn't matter if the
jury couldn't decide who was the stabber."
But Dumanis
stressed the emotional toll on the victims and approved the deal.
As part of the
plea, Nunez admitted that his actions led to the death of Luis Santos. Both
Nunez and Jett were sentenced to the maximum of 16 years in prison.
Calling it
"bitter satisfaction," the Santoses thought their son's newly
confessed killers would go away quietly and pay for their crimes, content with
the plea deal they had just reached.
"Had I
known what was going to happen," said Dumanis, "that (deal) never
would have been an agreement."
The governor's final act
On January 2, 2011, six months after
their son's convicted killers were sent to prison, the phone rang at the home
of Fred and Kathy Santos. It was another reporter.
"That's
been the story of our life, a reporter calls the house and gives me
information," said Kathy Santos.
This time, she
was told of the surprise commutation and immediately went online for more
information.
"There was
Esteban's face," she said, "with a little blurb about Arnold's dirty
deed."
Minutes before
leaving office, Schwarzenegger announced the commutation in an emailed news
release. Esteban Nunez's sentence had been cut in half. He would be eligible
for release in April of 2016.
"I was so
disgusted," Kathy Santos said. "Esteban has been coddled, he hasn't
had to be accountable because apparently his father has gotten him off."
Fabian Nunez has
publicly denied he forced Schwarzenegger into granting a favor, but he also
wasn't complaining. Nunez has repeatedly maintained that his son got a raw deal
because he was related to a powerful lawmaker.
"From the
beginning, my son was the headliner in the case," Nunez told CNN affiliate
KCRA in 2011. He declined CNN's repeated requests for an interview, but after
an initial version of this story aired on television, Nunez spoke to CNN over
the phone.
"This has
gone from aiding and abetting to him being labeled a killer," Nunez said
of his son.
He argues that
comments from the Santos family, their attorneys and the district attorney's
office have boiled the case down to a convenient narrative: Esteban Nunez
accepted a plea deal, then had it cut in half because of the influence of his
father. In reality, Fabian Nunez told CNN, "the case is more
complicated," and that his son sought clemency to right wrongs perpetrated
on them by an "overzealous district attorney" and a
"conservative judge."
"My son did
not want to take the deal" if it meant he had to accept 16 years behind
bars, Nunez said. "He was going to go to trial" and defend his
position that Esteban was not nearly the aggressor that the prosecution was
making him out to be.
"This was a
fight among a large group" of people, Fabian Nunez said, adding that the
two suspects who were given probation in exchange for their testimony
"were just as responsible as my son."
In a letter to
the court objecting to the sentence, Fabian Nunez claims the judge overreached
in giving Esteban the full 16 years because his son, unlike Jett, "had no
criminal record" and that Esteban "did not harm Mr. Santos,"
referring to the witness who claimed Jett inflicted the fatal blow.
Fabian Nunez
went on to claim his son was misled by the judge, who "told us that (he)
would treat Esteban differently" from Jett.
"He told
the attorney one thing in chambers, then went into open court and said
another," Fabian Nunez told CNN.
Prosecutors
maintain they warned Esteban in open court that he could receive 16 years.
The judge denied
that he made conflicting statements and refused to reconsider the sentence.
Esteban Nunez
and his attorneys continued their fight until December 6, when they submitted a
motion to end their appeal.
Less than a
month later, Nunez received clemency.
"I believe
Nunez's sentence is excessive," wrote Schwarzenegger in his commutation
letter, citing the lack of criminal history and the inability to prove that
Nunez actually stabbed Luis Santos.
"It was a
complete betrayal of a system of justice and fairness," said Dumanis, the
district attorney, who questions whether Nunez even submitted a clemency
application to the governor. Nunez's attorney, Charles Sevilla, told CNN he did
but refused to release it.
Upon his exit,
Schwarzenegger ordered all clemency files sealed for 25 years. (That's not
necessarily unusual. Schwarzenegger's predecessor, Gray Davis, did the same
thing.)
In his only
comment about the case, Schwarzenegger told Newsweek, "There's criticism
out there. I think it's just because of our (Fabian Nunez) working relationship
and all that. It maybe was kind of saying, 'That's why he did it.' Well, hello!
I mean, of course you help a friend."
Fabian Nunez
told CNN he was told by Schwarzenegger that the comments were "taken out
of context." Still, the Santos family attorney, Nina Solarno, was
outraged.
"He took a
political favor and played God, and took justice away from this family,"
claimed Solarno, who is also a board member for the advocacy group Crime
Victims United.
In a private
letter to the Santos family, Schwarzenegger wrote: "I recognize that the
last minute nature of my final acts as Governor provided you no notice, no time
to prepare for or absorb the impact of this decision. For that, I
apologize."
It was an
apology the Santos family would not accept.
Taking on the Terminator
While Arnold Schwarzenegger returned to
Hollywood in 2011, Fred and Kathy Santos returned to court. Along with the San
Diego County district attorney, they filed suit alleging Gov. Schwarzenegger
violated "Marsy's Law," which mandates that victims' families be
given a right to speak in all proceedings related to their case.
It was the last
chance Dumanis had to keep Esteban Nunez behind bars and repair the damage from
what she considered a tremor shaking the entire system.
"When a
governor commutes a sentence in such a flagrantly political way, it puts
everybody in the system on notice that their (deals) are not safe,"
Dumanis said.
While agreeing
Schwarzenegger's move was "grossly unjust" and "deserving of
censure," two separate judges concluded that it was not illegal and that
"Marsy's Law" applied to parole hearings, not executive clemency.
Schwarzenegger,
for now, had won. But both the Santoses and San Diego prosecutors were not
giving up.
They succeeded
in changing the state law, which now requires California governors to give
victims and prosecutors at least 10 days of notice before issuing clemency.
That will ensure Luis Santos' case isn't repeated, but it won't keep Esteban
Nunez from being released.
While the Santos
family will next petition the state Supreme Court, they know time is running
out.
"Esteban is
going to be out before we get to the Supreme Court," Solarno conceded.
"Now we want an acknowledgment that the family's rights were taken from
them, that they should have been heard, and that from this day forward your
case is setting precedent that other victims are going to be heard."
Arnold Schwarzenegger did not respond to CNN's requests for a
formal interview, but when questioned by CNN at the "Terminator Genysis" premiere in June, he would not speak
about the case.
"Since
we're here today for the movie promotion, we talk movies," he said.
"That's the
type of person he is," said Fred Santos. "He thinks somebody being
murdered -- it's news that is below his status."
"I get
their pain," Fabian Nunez said, adding that his attempt to reach out to
the Santos family wasn't accepted. "I get to see my son, they don't get to
see theirs ... but I make no apologies for fighting for justice for my
son."
For Rick Clabby,
the vocal former prosecutor, the Santos family has been victimized too many
times in this case.
"They were
victimized when their son was murdered, they were victimized when our office
made this stupid decision and they were victimized when the governor buddied up
with Mr. Nunez," Clabby told CNN.
But Fred and
Kathy Santos say they'll continue to fight. They're not sure where it will lead
them, but they know they have to keep trying.
"We weren't
there to protect Luis, to prevent him from being killed," Fred Santos
said. "This is the only thing we can do for him."
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