January 5, 2009

Juvenile arrested at Santa Clarita Metrolink station for gun possession

A 15-year-old boy was arrested on a Metrolink train bound for Santa Clarita for carrying an automatic rifle. The Antelope Valley boy, whose name was withheld because he is a minor, was released from custody a week ago before being picked up on the gun charges. The Daily News reports that a train rider overheard the boy bragging about the gun and notified the conductor, who called sheriff's deputies.

Under California law, juvenile offenders do not commit crimes--they commit "delinquent acts"-- and some of these actions would constitute crimes if committed by an adult. The trial phase of a youth offender case is a "jurisdictional" hearing. This means that the judge hears the evidence and determines whether the child is delinquent. The court may then take whatever action it deems to be in the child's best interest. This can range from community service to spending time at the California Youth Authority, which is essentially juvenile prison. The theoretical purpose of the juvenile penal code is to rehabilitate, not punish.

Continue reading "Juvenile arrested at Santa Clarita Metrolink station for gun possession" »

December 30, 2008

How to get out of jail if arrested in Orange County

If you or a friend or family member has been arrested in Orange County, the following are a few things you need to know to get out of jail:

(1) Posting bail. The usual way to get released from jail is to "post bail." Bail is cash or a cash equivalent that an arrested person gives to a court to ensure that he will appear in court when ordered to do so. If the defendant appears in court at the proper time, the court refunds the bail. But if the defendant doesn't show up, the court keeps the bail and issues a warrant for the defendant's arrest.

(2) Bail Payment. Bail can take any of the following forms: cash or check for the full amount of the bail , property worth the full amount of the bail, a bond (that is, a guaranteed payment of the full bail amount), or a waiver of payment on the condition that the defendant appear in court at the required time-- usually called "release on one's own recognizance."

(3) Getting Out of Jail Free. As motioned, sometimes people are released "on their own recognizance," or "O.R." A defendant released O.R. must simply sign a promise to show up in court. He doesn't have to post bail. In general, defendants who are released O.R. have strong ties to a community, making them unlikely to flee. Factors that may convince a judge to grant an O.R. release include the following: family and community ties, employment, past criminal record and past history of appearing in court.

Continue reading "How to get out of jail if arrested in Orange County" »

December 26, 2008

Melrose Man in Santa suit goes on killing spree at Covina Christmas Party

The Los Angeles Times is reporting that a festive Christmas Eve party took a terrible turn for a Covina family. The Times reports that a man dressed in a Santa suit opened fire at his ex-wife’s Christmas Eve party and then set the house ablaze. Authorities believe that eight people are dead as well as the alleged shooter, who was later found dead of a gunshot wound.

The alleged shooter’s former wife and her parents are believed to be among the dead. Authorities said that the bodies found in the house were so badly burned that dental records would be needed for identification. It was thought to be the worst single killing spree in the county this year. Overall, homicides have remained at relatively low levels compared to previous years.

Continue reading "Melrose Man in Santa suit goes on killing spree at Covina Christmas Party" »

December 19, 2008

Probe of SEC ordered

According to the L.A. Daily News, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman Christopher Cox said his agency neglected to pursue allegations of wrongdoing by Bernard L. Madoff, the alleged perpetrator of a $50 billion Ponzi scheme for the last ten years. As a result, Cox ordered a probe by the SEC's inspector general, saying the agency's staff had never brought the Madoff matter to the attention of commissioners.

Madoff, the former chairman of the NASDAQ Stock Market, was arrested December 11th and charged with a single count of securities fraud, which if proved, may rank among the biggest frauds ever—totaling $50 billion of fraudulent losses. A Ponzi scheme—sometimes called a pyramid scheme—is a fraudulent investment operation where investors receive abnormally high returns out of the money paid in by subsequent investors, rather than from the profit from any real business.

Many of the investors allegedly swindled by the Wall Street money manager are Jewish philanthropists and non-profit organizations. The Daily News article states that the effect of the loss to Jewish philanthropic world is nothing less than “catastrophic,” however at this time it doesn’t appear the fraud has had any effect on Los Angeles organizations.

Continue reading "Probe of SEC ordered " »

December 16, 2008

Police arrest Westminster man after finding home full of lights, snowmen and inflatable Santas

Westminster police responded to a typical disturbing the peace call last week--but instead of finding disgruntled family members, they fell upon a herd of wicker reindeer in the living room, yards of Christmas lights, faux Christmas trees, several snowmen and many inflatable Santa Claus figures. According to the L.A. Times, it all seemed just a little much to police, even for the most devoted holiday fanatic.

Then police remembered the theft reports. For weeks, residents of a Westminster neighborhood had been making reports of missing holiday decorations to police. Westminster police found a stockpile of holiday decorations in the home, on the roof and in the backyard. Police had to use two city trucks and a police truck to take all the property to the police station.

The Grinch, aka Vuong Pham, faces felony charges for grand theft and possession of stolen property.

Continue reading "Police arrest Westminster man after finding home full of lights, snowmen and inflatable Santas" »

November 23, 2008

L.A. County prosecutors admit Torrance police falsified drug dealer’s arrest report

An alleged drug dealer's five-year prison sentence was overturned last week and charges dismissed after Los Angeles County prosecutors conceded that police included false information in an arrest report to protect the identity of a confidential informant. The Los Angeles Daily News reports the District Attorney’s office told a judge that while the evidence overwelmingly supported Michael Edward Baker’s drug conviction, the conviction should be overturned because in an attempt to protect a confidential informant, there “were certain statements made in a police report that weren't accurate."

The inaccuracies were discovered after Baker’s defense attorney found a sworn declaration by a federal agent that contradicted the version of Baker's arrest given by Torrance law enforcement. Torrance officers contend that they fell upon Baker last year when they were patrolling near a 7-Eleven store and noticed that he matched the description of a suspect in a robbery at the store earlier in the day. They say they stopped him, found PCP in his car and arrested him on drug charges.

But according to the federal agent, the Torrance police set Baker up. The agent -- who was part of a task force investigating Baker -- said that Torrance police used one of their informants to call Baker and arrange a drug deal near the 7-Eleven. When it became clear that the CI’s identity was in danger of being uncovered, Torrance police concocted a story to protect the informant.

It is entirely legal for police to use an informant to set up a drug deal with a targeted criminal, however officers lying to protect the informant's identity is illegal. The Los Angeles D.A.’s office is considering whether they will file criminal charges against the lying cops.

Continue reading "L.A. County prosecutors admit Torrance police falsified drug dealer’s arrest report" »

November 10, 2008

California's Proposition 5, the Nonviolent Offender Rehabilitation Act defeated

The Los Angeles Times reports that California's Proposition 5—aka the Nonviolent Offender Rehabilitation Act (NORA)--was defeated by a margin of roughly 60 percent to 40 percent. As I discussed in an earlier post, the measure, which drew the attention of drug policy advocates nationwide, was regarded by some as "the biggest sentencing and prison reform in United States history" but was condemned by national drug-court advocates and California law-enforcement groups.

NORA called for more funding for addiction treatment and less imprisonment of drug offenders. Those supporting NORA stressed that it would increase funding for drug courts, but critics complained that NORA would have limited the ability of drug-court judges to jail drug offenders.

Continue reading "California's Proposition 5, the Nonviolent Offender Rehabilitation Act defeated " »

October 31, 2008

Thousand Oaks man pleads guilty in sex assaults of immigrant women

The L.A. Daily News is reporting that a Thousand Oaks man who targeted immigrant women and children plead guilty yesterday to crimes against four women. The Ventura County District Attorneys Office says that 79-year-old man entered pleas to five charges sexual battery to lewd acts with a child.

Allegedly, the man posted ads in local stores seeking house cleaning services or health care for his ailing wife and then would demand sex from the women and threaten them with death or deportation if they didn't submit to him. A 27-year-old woman testified the man began fondling her when she was 9.

Continue reading "Thousand Oaks man pleads guilty in sex assaults of immigrant women" »

October 28, 2008

Riverside Fire Department sued by man acquitted for arson

A Riverside man who was jailed for two years as a suspect in 40 arson fires has sued Riverside Fire Department officials and a dog handler who linked him to the crimes by using a controversial device intended to pick up human scent at crime scenes. Michael Espalin is now asking for damages in a federal lawsuit he filed in Santa Ana.

The only evidence brought against him at his criminal trial was a bloodhound named Dakota--whose handler said the dog found Espalin's scent at the fires days and weeks after they were set in 2004. According to the lawsuit, there was no physical evidence or eyewitness linking Espalin to any of the fires.

According to the LA Times, Espalin is at least the sixth person in Southern California cleared since 1996 after being linked to a crime by the “scent transfer unit STU-100”-- a machine that supposedly transfers human scent from an object at a crime scene to a 5- by 9-inch gauze pad. The pad is then put to a bloodhound's nose, and the dog theoretically follows the scent to the suspect. The machine and the dogs used with it have led to false arrests in several high-profile cases including an Irvine man whose murder conviction was thrown out by a judge who said the machine was scientifically unreliable. In addition, a Long Beach man arrested as a serial rapist was cleared by DNA tests. And a Buena Park man sent to prison for a carjacking was freed when DNA from the crime scene was matched to a man already in custody for another carjacking.

Unable to post $500,000 bail, Espalin spent two years in county jail awaiting trial.

More than $2.3 million has been paid out in lawsuits stemming from some of the cases.

Continue reading "Riverside Fire Department sued by man acquitted for arson" »

October 21, 2008

7,000 DNA kits have not been tested by Los Angeles police jeopardizing hundreds of sexual assault cases

Richard Winton of The Los Angles Times reports today that nearly 200 potential sexual assault cases have gone without prosecution because Los Angeles Police officials failed to test them within the 10-year statute of limitations period required to identify and charge a suspect in a sexual crime. These claims come on top of last week’s allegations that the LAPD’s fingerprint experts have been inconsistent in their work-- to the point where innocent people were falsely implicated in crimes.

According to law enforcement officials, each kit contains a potential genetic road map to the perpetrator of a crime. In Los Angeles County, the backlog has occasionally caused trial dates to be canceled. And in one case, an evidence kit that went untested for months left a suspected rapist free to allegedly assault another victim.

A City Controller audit showed that the LAPD has a backlog of 7,000 sexual assault test kits that have not been examined. Of those cases, 217 are beyond the 10-year statute in which to prosecute the crimes. As an excuse, Police say that they don’t have enough funding to run these labs efficiently and that more forensic techs were authorized--but budgeting for their salaries weren’t.

Victim advocates think that it is unconscionable to make rape victims go through the trauma of the examination for the rape kit and then wait years for police to investigate and prosecute their cases because their kits aren’t tested. Our office thinks that if there is DNA evidence that can exonerate or implicate a person, it should be tested before pleas are entered or charges filed. The criminal justice system is supposed to seek the truth- the current backlog of processing such probative evidence flies in the face of those notions.

Continue reading "7,000 DNA kits have not been tested by Los Angeles police jeopardizing hundreds of sexual assault cases" »

October 17, 2008

Former director of UCLA's Willed Body Program pleads guilty to cadaver scheme

In May, the former director of UCLA's Willed Body Program, Henry Reid, was indicted by a grand jury for selling body parts to businessman Ernest Nelson who resold them to medical research companies. The LA Times reports that today, Mr. Reid plead guilty to felony charges that he damaged or destroyed property worth more than $1 million and conspiracy to commit grand theft in a "body-parts-for-profit" scheme.

The Times reports that from 1999 to 2004, Reid and businessman Ernest Nelson conspired to defraud the program of its donor bodies for personal financial gain. Reid allegedly sold human body parts from UCLA's program to Nelson and then deposited thousands of dollars of proceeds of those sales into his personal bank account.

Reid, an Anaheim native, will be sentenced to four years, four months in state prison under a plea crafted by the District Attorney's Office. In exchange, Reid agreed to cooperate with the prosecution in their case against Nelson. Reid will also be required to pay restitution to UCLA's Willed Body Program of between $100,000 to $1 million. He will be sentenced in January.

Continue reading "Former director of UCLA's Willed Body Program pleads guilty to cadaver scheme" »

October 15, 2008

Copper wire thefts reaching epidemic levels

The weak economy has forced people to find creative ways to supplement their income. The Los Angeles Times reports that a surge in the price of copper has produced an outbreak of theft of copper wires from light poles. And, according to reports, there have been at least eight thefts in the Hollenbeck area since August-- jeopardizing the lighting and safety in the community.

Copper prices peaked at $4.06 a pound earlier this summer but have dropped to $2.53 a pound. According to a representative from The L.A. Department of Power and Water, interference with power distribution and transmission systems not only destroys city lights, thieves also risk their own lives.

Anyone with information can call Hollenbeck detectives at (323) 526-3000. Callers can also use a 24-hour toll-free number, (877) LAWFULL (529-3855), send an anonymous text message with a cell phone to "CRIMES" or visit www.lapdonline.org.

Continue reading "Copper wire thefts reaching epidemic levels" »

October 5, 2008

Report suggests that fears that immigration is a threat to Southern California public safety are unjustified

According to a recent study, immigrants—including immigrants living in Orange County—are far less likely than the average U.S.-born citizen to commit crime in California. The Public Policy Institute of California report, that can be found here, said that while people born outside the United States make up about 35 percent of California's adult population they only account for about 17 percent of the adult prison population.

The findings suggest that long-standing fears that immigration jeopardizes public safety are unjustified. The report also noted that U.S.-born adult men are incarcerated at a rate more than 2 1/2 times greater than that of foreign-born men.

Continue reading "Report suggests that fears that immigration is a threat to Southern California public safety are unjustified" »

October 3, 2008

California’s Proposition 5 would overhaul sentencing of drug offenders

Sponsors of the Proposition 5 are asking voters in November to increase treatment and eliminate incarceration for those convicted of nonviolent, drug-related crimes. The Los Angeles Times reports that the Nonviolent Offender Rehabilitation Act, funded in part by billionaire George Soros, would be "the most ambitious sentencing and prison reform in U.S. history," according to the Drug Policy Alliance Network, a primary sponsor.

Opponents contend that the drug treatment offered in lieu of incarceration would be a "get-out-of-jail-free card" for addicts. And they say the Drug Policy Alliance Network -- a spinoff of Soros' New York-based Open Society Institute, which fights against punitive drug laws -- is using the initiative to chip away at its true agenda: legalizing drugs.

Of course the benefits of Proposition 5—if passed—remains to be seen. On one side, the new system would expand the pool of criminals who could take part, creating three "tracks" for offenders to receive treatment, including, at the discretion of judges, those who commit nonviolent crimes such as theft to feed their habits. Depending on their crimes, their records and their number of treatment failures, they would gradually move from the least intensive programs to the most intensive -- drug courts -- and the possibility of jail or prison. And by 2010, the measure would commit the state to spending at least $460 million a year, mostly to increase treatment -- and eliminate incarceration -- for those who commit nonviolent crimes involving drugs or fueled by them. The measure could eventually cost Californians up to $1 billion, but also could ultimately save that much by reducing incarceration, according to the state's nonpartisan legislative analyst.

The Times reports that on the other side are judges who complain that they will rarely be able to threaten incarceration under the Act, which they believe is most effective at coercing offenders to cooperate. And even when drugs aren't involved, the state could no longer seek to send ex-convicts to prison for low-level parole violations, or revoke parole for actions that would qualify as misdemeanors. Law enforcement groups object to a provision that would allow the expunging of some records. For example the Act would allow a methamphetamine addict who steals cars to avoid prison, to have their record sealed after completing treatment.

Would this act be one step closer to the legalization of drugs? Under the Act. possession an ounce or less of marijuana would be an infraction, instead of a misdemeanor.

Continue reading "California’s Proposition 5 would overhaul sentencing of drug offenders" »

September 20, 2008

OC sheriff's deputy charged with assault for unlawfully tasering suspect

An Orange County sheriff's deputy was indicted for allegedly abusing his authority when he tasered a handcuffed suspect in his patrol car last year. Mike Anton of the L.A. Times reports that Christopher Hibbs, a 12-year veteran of the sheriff’s department, was indicted by an Orange County grand jury on two felony assault charges.

The indictment—which was unsealed today—stems from the September 2007 arrest and subsequent gun charge of Ignacio Gomez Lares. Anton reports that Lares was stopped for walking in public with an open beer bottle and when he tried to resist arrest and flee, Hibbs tasered him. The charges stem from what happened next- after Lares was arrested and in handcuffs, Hibbs tasered him numerous times because Lares kept truthfully telling Hibbs his name was “Ignacio Gomez,” instead of Ignacio Gomez Lares, which was not in authority's database.

If convicted, he could face a maximum of three years in prison.

Continue reading "OC sheriff's deputy charged with assault for unlawfully tasering suspect" »

September 15, 2008

San Diego Police Kill Gun Brandishing Man

A 64-year-old San Diego man was shot and killed Friday night during a confrontation with police that began when he allegedly fired several shots into the home of a San Diego sheriff's deputy. Tony Perry from the Los Angeles Times reports that the incident began when the man banged on the door of the sheriff’s Lake Murray home and demanded to know if the resident was a San Diego police officer. According to reports, at some point then, the man began to argue with the deputy and allegedly brandished a handgun. The off-duty deputy then slammed the door and the man fired three shots into the home, police said.

Police responded to 911 call about shots being fired and surrounded the home of the alleged shooter while attempting to persuade him to surrender. A half-hour later he emerged, carrying a gun that he pointed at officers. Six officers fired at the man, fatally wounding him. What an unfortunate end to what appeared to be a tense standoff between this man and San Diego Police.

Continue reading "San Diego Police Kill Gun Brandishing Man" »