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FAQ: Questions About the Rebecca Grossman Case Investigation and Journalistic Findings
TL;DR
Investigative journalism by The Current Report exposes potential prosecutorial misconduct, offering leverage for legal challenges and public accountability campaigns in high-profile cases.
The Current Report's 15-article series details procedural issues including missing evidence, suppressed testimony, and inconsistent legal theories in Rebecca Grossman's murder conviction case.
This investigative reporting promotes justice system integrity, potentially correcting wrongful convictions and restoring public trust in legal fairness for all citizens.
A journalist's investigation questions whether a former MLB pitcher's involvement was properly examined in a fatal crash case with missing evidence.
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It covers investigative journalism by Cece Woods that questions the integrity, timing, and procedure in the prosecution of Rebecca Grossman, who was convicted of murder in a 2020 traffic collision in Los Angeles.
Cece Woods is a veteran journalist and editor-in-chief of The Current Report, an independent investigative journalism platform. She has published 15 articles raising concerns about the Grossman case.
The reporting raises concerns about missing and suppressed evidence, procedural fairness, selective prosecution, the role of media and politics, and how evidence and testimony were handled by the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office and Sheriff's Department.
The accident occurred in 2020, and charges against Rebecca Grossman were filed on December 29, 2020—three months after the accident and weeks after District Attorney George Gascón took office.
Questions include why DNA testing wasn't done on Grossman's car bumper, why physical evidence like a fog light cover and license plate frame was documented as missing, and why potentially exculpatory testimony from Scott Erickson was excluded.
Scott Erickson is a former major-league baseball pitcher who was reportedly driving a vehicle ahead of Grossman that night, and his testimony could have been exculpatory or contradictory but was bypassed or excluded by prosecutors.
The answers to these questions have substantial implications for Rebecca Grossman and for public trust in how justice is administered in high-profile cases in Los Angeles County.
The Current Report has urged an independent review of the Grossman investigation, though the content cuts off before detailing further actions.
Charges were filed three months after the accident and weeks after District Attorney George Gascón took office, raising concerns about political timing and selective prosecution.
Internal records, depositions, and coroner's documents obtained by The Current Report revealed 'concealed misconduct' by the Sheriff's Office and DA's Office.
Curated from 24-7 Press Release

