HONOLULU — The criminal case against a man accused of stealing the Honolulu police chief's mailbox was dismissed Tuesday, about two weeks after the case abruptly ended in a mistrial and raised allegations about how the city's police department handled the investigation.
Gerard Puana's federal public defender provided copies of the dismissal order to reporters Tuesday morning, which a judge signed later in the day.
"We reached the decision to dismiss the charge in the Puana case after a review of all the information now available to us," said Elliot Enoki, spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office in Hawaii. He declined to elaborate.
The trial against Puana ended in a mistrial soon after it got underway Dec. 4. Puana is the uncle of the police chief's wife, Katherine.
Chief Louis Kealoha was the second witness on the first day of the trial and was being asked about how he could identify Puana in blurry surveillance footage that showed a man hoisting the mailbox into a car last year.
Kealoha said the man in the video looked the way Puana looked when he was charged with breaking into a neighbor's home. His response prompted the judge to declare a mistrial.
Puana's public defender, Alexander Silvert, said Kealoha should have known better than to bring that up and that the chief intentionally caused a mistrial.
Silvert said he met with prosecutors after the mistrial and presented evidence he uncovered in the case. He said he also discussed with them that eight jurors told his staff after the mistrial that based on the video, they wouldn't have found Puana guilty.