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Sentencing for deputy district attorney convicted of conspiracy in ticket-fixing scheme

A San Diego County prosecutor convicted of conspiracy to obstruct justice and other misdemeanor counts for asking a San Diego police sergeant to fix a seat belt ticket she got while riding with a f
Sentencing for deputy district attorney convicted of conspiracy in ticket-fixing scheme

SAN DIEGO (CNS) - A San Diego County prosecutor convicted of conspiracy to obstruct justice and other misdemeanor counts for asking a San Diego police sergeant to fix a seat belt ticket she got while riding with a fellow prosecutor is scheduled to be sentenced Wednesday.

Thirty-seven-year-old Allison Debow, also known as Allison Worden, faces up to a year in jail. Had she accepted the ticket, she would have had to pay a $142 fine as a first-time adult offender, according to the California Office of Traffic Safety.

The veteran San Diego County District Attorney's Office prosecutor has been on paid administrative leave since last year pending the outcome of the criminal case. She testified that she used "poor judgment" by telling the officer who issued the tickets to her and fellow prosecutor Amy Maund that they were deputy district attorneys.

The defendant said she told investigators from her office that she believed her friend, Sgt. Kevin Friedman, had dismissed the tickets.

Friedman told investigators that he didn't get rid of the citations, and an attorney representing Debow told her that a police official higher up the chain of command probably deleted the tickets from the system.

Deputy Attorney General Michael Murphy said Debow was a passenger in a car driven by friend and fellow prosecutor Maund, who was pulled over on May 28, 2011, in Pacific Beach because Debow didn't have her seat belt on. The two had just had pedicures.

Debow, 37, became angry when the officer issued them both citations and called her friend Friedman, Murphy told the jury. Within six hours, the tickets were out of the system, according to the prosecutor.

During the traffic stop, Debow told the officers that she and Maund were deputy district attorneys and didn't violate any laws.

Defense attorney Paul Pfingst said the officer who issued the citations acted inappropriately by leaning into the car on Debow's side and invading her personal space.

Friedman, who was also charged in the case, pleaded no contest last May to destroying a traffic citation and later resigned from the department.

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