San Francisco Public Defender Frees Man Facing Life in Prison

The Vanguard Staff

SAN FRANCISCO – Although not completely pleased with the outcome, and confident they could have won at trial, the San Francisco Public Defender’s Office Monday pulled a defendant out of COVID-19 jail by working a deal to have him released almost immediately even though he faced life in prison.

The SFPD said it had “secured freedom for a man who spent nearly five months in jail for an incident wherein he acted in self-defense.”

The plea deal released Anthony Prater, 53, on time-served—on a misdemeanor charge—when he faced premeditated attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon.

The charges arose from an incident where Prater defended himself when a man pulled a knife on him in late March. But police arrested Prater largely because the alleged victim sustained a cut to his leg in the fight. The “victim” was found to have a long history of violence and threatening behavior.

The assault with a deadly weapon charge, considered a strike under California’s three-strikes law, could have led to life in prison for Prater.

Led by Deputy Public Defender Kathleen Natividad, the defense team successfully negotiated a lesser misdemeanor assault charge after beginning the trial when prosecutors admitted they could not prove their case.

“Mr. Prater accepted the plea deal, despite professing his innocence, so that he could immediately be released from custody,” said Natividad.

“We are pleased Mr. Prater escaped a charge wherein he was facing life in prison, but are disappointed the case was not dismissed in its entirety,” said SF Public Defender Mano Raju. “The result speaks for itself; the case was over-charged from the beginning. Pleas often happen despite innocence when people cannot fight their cases from out of custody.”

Several attempts to get Mr. Prater released from jail prior to trial, where the threat of contracting COVID-19 was a major concern, were unsuccessful.

Prater will be released Wednesday.

“Kathleen Natividad and her team worked extremely hard and did an extraordinary job with this case. I believe she would have secured a not guilty verdict if they had completed trial,” said Raju.

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  • Vanguard Court Watch Interns

    The Vanguard Court Watch operates in Yolo, Sacramento and Sacramento Counties with a mission to monitor and report on court cases. Anyone interested in interning at the Courthouse or volunteering to monitor cases should contact the Vanguard at info(at)davisvanguard(dot)org - please email info(at)davisvanguard(dot)org if you find inaccuracies in this report.

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3 comments

  1. the San Francisco Public Defender’s Office Monday pulled a defendant out of COVID-19 jail

    I haven’t heard of that jail.  Is it in The Mission?  Upon release, will they reside in COVID-19 Oakland?

    he faced premeditated attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon. The charges arose from an incident where Prater defended himself when a man pulled a knife on him in late March. But police arrested Prater largely because the alleged victim sustained a cut to his leg in the fight.

    It’s almost as if the narrative is being written only from the side of the person charged as narrated by the public defender.  Almost as if the other side’s point of view isn’t even being reported.

    1. Or perhaps you are so used to the other side’s use of language, you have appropriated it into your own. Part of what we are looking to do here is provide an alternative narrative to the mainstream one. I’ve pulled out so many articles in the mainstream press over the years that quote exclusively from the police report or the prosecutor – what’s wrong with giving the other side of the story?

      1. what’s wrong with giving the other side of the story?

        What’s wrong with giving both sides of the story?

        Reading this account I feel the defendant should be released if he truly acted in self defense, but again that’s only one side of the story.

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