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August 2009 Archives
The Daily Pilot reported on an Orange County DUI involving an official in the public defender's office. An Orange County public defender is scheduled to be in court next month after he was arrested on suspicion of Orange County DUI in Newport Beach, police said.
Heshmat Ali, 33, was arrested on suspicion of Orange County DUI early Saturday after Newport Beach police pulled him over for a vehicle code violation near 23rd Street and Balboa Boulevard, Sgt. Jon Lewis said.
Ali, an attorney in the county's public defender's office, submitted to a field sobriety test and a Breathalyzer test just before 3 a.m. and was then arrested for an Orange County DUI, authorities said.
Police released him later that morning on his own recognizance. He is scheduled to appear in court Sept. 29, but may appear before that.
Ali continued to act as a defending attorney in court Wednesday and did not return phone calls seeking comment.
"I don't think there is a policy on this because it doesn't happen very often," said Brian Ducker, a senior assistant public defender. "This is more like a private law firm. I think it depends on whether it affects your ability to do a good job."
Arrests don't necessarily exclude someone from practicing as a public defender, Ducker said.
"Getting arrested isn't necessarily the end of it," he said. "We want to know if he did it. There's a lot of issues like that to be worked out."
THe Daily Pilot reported on how they are cracking down on Orange County DUI.A nd you thought you knew how to bar-hop.Det. Bryan Moore has you beat. As the Newport Beach Police Department's Alcohol Beverage Control Department liaison, Moore has the monumental task of hitting every upscale restaurant, trendy twentysomething party spot and dimly lit dive bar in Newport Beach by July if they have a permit to serve alcohol. Add in another 40 off-sale establishments -- liquor stores and the like -- and Moore will visit nearly 400 spots by June 30. No, Moore is not sampling drinks. Instead, as the Police Department's go-to guy for making sure the city's alcohol establishments are up to code, he visits a few each day and inspects them for various Department of Alcohol Beverage Control violations. Newport Beach has three times the state average for alcohol establishments per capita. This can result in more Orange County DUIs. In 2005, the city had the highest rate of DUIs with injuries in the state per its population, though there was a slight decrease the next year. From 2005 to 2006, Orange County DUI arrests in Newport jumped 212, to a total of 597. When Moore walks into a bar and says he's with the police, the room goes silent. Bar owners and employees act nervous around him. Moore does his best to get them to relax. After all, he's not there to shut them down, he said. His eyes are constantly moving, scanning the tables, bar tops, bottles and walls. Anything that could be a violation -- graffiti on the walls or not having a proper sign or license visible -- is noted. What he's looking for are major violations, he said. Someone visibly intoxicated with a drink in their hand, drug paraphernalia or an underage drinker are all things that can lead to citations or Orange County Drug arrests. To work on the problems inherent in bars and liquor stores setting up in Newport Beach, Moore and other officers perform sting operations. They use kids from their Explorers program to ask adults to buy them alcohol outside liquor stores, or the Explorers try to purchase it themselves. Officers in plain clothes also monitor places on busy Friday and Saturday nights looking for serious violations, such as serving people obviously intoxicated or underage. Before Moore's position was created, enforcement efforts were scattered, depending on a designated officer and what other crimes and cases he or she had to work on. Now, "we have one guy at the center of it all," Moore said. ABC does not traditionally award the $100,000 grant to the same department more than two years in a row, police officials said. If Moore's efforts work, and police and city officials want to make his position permanent, the city will likely have to absorb the position into the department's budget, Sgt. Evan Sailor said.
Orlandosentinel.com reported. A 2-year-old girl has died of injuries received in an Orange County DUI car crash that investigators say was caused by a drunk driver. Isabella Zepka, of Durham, N.C., was taken off life support Saturday, a family friend said. A spokesman for Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children confirmed Isabella's death. The toddler sustained extensive internal injuries and a fractured skull when the Chrysler PT Cruiser her father was driving was hit Wednesday by a man in a Cadillac. Troopers say John Molnar ( photo), 36, was driving drunk and ran a red light. Isabella's 9-year-old brother, Alexander, was hospitalized with a fractured skull, too, said their uncle, Sundeep Arya. The boy has been released and is expected to recover. Their father, Roberto Zepka, 43, was not seriously hurt. Molnar of Davenport was arrested on charges of DUI and possession of cocaine after investigators said they found a plastic bag containing the drug under the driver's seat of the Cadillac. His drivers license was automatically suspended for six months on the DUI charge, which troopers plan to upgrade because of Isabella's death. Several attempts to reach Molnar, an assistant director of convention services and catering at a tourist-corridor hotel, were unsuccessful. He was released from the Orange County Jail Thursday on $11,000 bail. Breath tests after the accident measured his blood-alcohol level at 0.133 percent and 0.129 percent, an arrest report states. Molnar told troopers, who smelled alcohol on his breath, that he had consumed one Yuengling beer at a friend's house, the report shows. Molnar failed field-sobriety tests, investigators wrote. Molnar's drivers license was revoked for six months last year after he was charged with DUI in Orange County, records state. He attended DUI school in January. Molnar received four speeding tickets in less than three years and has two other moving violations -- careless driving in 2007 and failure to obey a traffic device in 2006. It is unknown whether speed played a part in Wednesday's crash. It was suspended for six months in August after he was ticketed in Orange County for driving under the influence. Nearly a decade ago, he was convicted of disorderly intoxication in Orange County. The Zepka family was returning to their time share after a day at SeaWorld Orlando and dinner at a Venezuelan restaurant near the International Drive tourist corridor, said Joanne Flores, a friend. Another Zepka daughter, 4, and the children's mother, Elizabeth, were in another car. Shortly before the crash, the Zepka children and their cousins "were playing and chasing and eating ice cream together," said Arya, whose wife was there. "Isabella was so happy," he said. "She said, 'Mom, I love you so much.' " The crash happened at 7:45 p.m. as the family was turning left from northbound Turkey Lake Road onto Westgate Lakes Boulevard, where they were staying. Molnar was southbound, headed home, he told troopers. The children were probably restrained, the FHP said. On Saturday, the Zepkas' relatives from Europe, South America and the U.S. were gathering at Arya's east Orange County home to mourn. "It's really sad that we have to have a family gathering in circumstances like this," he said.
NJ.com reported. More than 230 local and county law enforcement agencies in New Jersey are planning a crackdown on drunken driving from Aug. 21 to Sept. 7, officials announced today.
Police will set up checkpoints and increase patrols to target DUI drivers.
NOAH K. MURRAY/THE STAR LEDGERMotorist drive past a flashing road sign on Rt. 22 in Mountainside warning them that they are approaching a DUI checkpoint in a 2003 photo.
"The consequences of drunk driving are tragic and can have a lasting impact," Division of Highway Traffic Safety Director Pam Fischer said. "There's no excuse for drunk driving, and it simply won't be tolerated on New Jersey's roads."
Last year, 28 percent of the state's 591 traffic fatalities were alcohol related, for a total of 165 deaths, Fischer said.
For the crackdown, titled "Over the Limit, Under Arrest," the state Division of Highway Traffic Safety is doling out $6,000 federal grants to participating agencies.
Police departments receiving grants include West Orange, Lambertville, New Brunswick, Morris Township and Elizabeth.
MONROE -- The Recordonline.com reported. A 53-year-old man was charged Friday with growing marijuana inside his home and stealing electricity, state police said. Troopers arrested Edward Vasquez at his home on Osseo Park Road, where they said he used electrical lights and heat lamps to grow 40 marijuana plants. Police said Vasquez also tampered with his electrical service to mask the high utility usage. Vasquez was charged with criminal possession of marijuana and grand larceny, felonies, and growing cannabis and theft of services, misdemeanors. The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
PORT JERVIS - Midhudsonnews.com/News reported. Police concluded a one month narcotics investigation with the arrest of a Campbell Hall man in Port Jervis.
Jeremy Auston, 29, was charged with selling heroin to an undercover officer from the Orange County Sheriff's Office on three occasions in July.
He was charged by Port Jervis City Police and the Sheriff's Office with three counts each of criminal sale and criminal possession of a controlled substance in the third degree.
The arrest took place on Jersey Avenue in Port Jervis. Auston was found in possession of 10 bags of heroin and was charged with one more count of criminal possession with intent to sell.
Police also seized $533 in cash and a 1990 Nissan 300ZX, which they said was used for the delivery and sale of illegal drugs.
Auston, who is on New York State parole, was arraigned and sent to the Orange County Jail in lieu of $50,000 cash bail or $250,000 bond.
PORT JERVIS - The Times Herald-Record reported. A Campbell Hall man has been charged in the sale of heroin in the Port Jervis area.
Police say Jeremy Auston, 29, sold heroin to an Orange County undercover officer on three occasions in July.The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
He was arrested Wednesday afternoon. Police say he possessed 10 bags of heroin. Police seized $533 in cash and a 1990 Nissan 300ZX they say was used in drug deliveries.
Auston, who is on parole, was charged with criminal sale of a controlled substance and criminal possession of a controlled substance, felonies. He was arraigned and sent to Orange County Jail on $50,000 bail and $250,000 bond.
ORLANDO, Fla. -- Wesh.com reported. Two teenagers were shot in the streets of Orange County Saturday night.
Deputies said the young women were hanging out on Sherry Drive, near Forest City Road, at about 9 p.m., when a sport utility vehicle drove up and fired shots at them.
Witnesses told investigators that it appears the shootings were intended for a man standing near the girls, but he was not hurt.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
"There was an argument between two guys," said Orange County Sheriff's Office Lt. Vincent VanNess.
Both women were taken to a hospital. Their injuries do not appear to be life-threatening, police said.
Deputies said the driver is possibly in a white Toyota Sedona.
Anyone with information on the case is asked to call authorities.
ABC News reported. Phillip Garrido, the man accused of kidnapping Jaycee Dugard and holding her prisoner for 18 years, walked into the FBI field office in San Francisco two days before his arrest and handed over a letter describing how he'd cured his disturbing sexual behaviors and how the information could be used to assist in curing sexual predators.
The FBI spokesman in San Francisco told ABC News the rambling letter is very similar to the postings on Garrido's website.
The document that talks about cures for sexual predators and ways of "controlling human impulses that drive humans to commit dysfunctional acts."
Police in Contra Costa County, Calif., expanded their investigation into the 1991 kidnapping of Dugard this weekend.
Officials searched an Antioch, Calif., property next door to the home of Phillip and Nancy Garrido who have been charged in the 1991 kidnap and rape of Dugard.
Police are reportedly calling the adjacent property part of a crime scene, but details were not released, according to ABC affiliate KXTV in Sacramento.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
The Associated Press reports that years ago, Phillip Garrido served as a caretaker for the property.
The stepfather of Dugard says he is not dwelling on the gruesome details emerging about the Garridos.
"It's been 18 years," Carl Probyn told "Good Morning America," Sunday. "I'm glad we got her back, I don't care about him."
Probyn, 56, a wallpaper hanger, was suspected by some in-laws of being involved in the 1991 abduction. He concedes finding Dugard, who is now 29, is also a relief for him personally. "I'm free now," he said. "They caught him and it's solved."
Northfortmyersneighbor.com reported. Impaired drivers are a very real danger to themselves and, of course, any motorist who is sharing the road at the same time. With this in mind, the Lee County Sheriff's Office launched a multi-faceted campaign of education, awareness and enforcement to battle this threat to our community. We have elected to publicize the names of those charged by deputies with the offense of DUI during the past week:
On August 23, 2009, at approximately 10:35 pm, Lee County Sheriff's Deputies arrested Steven Galik, D.O.B. 11/19/54 of 3250 Rustic Lane, North Fort Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of Del Prado Extension, North Fort Myers, Florida.
On August 17, 1990, at approximately 09:45 pm, Lee County Sheriff's Deputies arrested Nelson Acevedo, D.O.B. 03/28/78 of 5473 11th St, Fort Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of College Pkwy/Summerlin Blvd, Fort Myers, Florida.
* * * * * * * * *
On August 17, 2009, at approximately 02:00 am, Lee County Sheriff's Deputies arrested Julea Jamileth Curtis, D.O.B. 02/07/85 of 910 Rush Ave, Lehigh Acres, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of McGregor Blvd/Entrada Dr, Fort Myers, Florida.
On August 18, 2009, at approximately 02:24 am, Lee County Sheriff's Deputies arrested Jorge Luna Padilla, D.O.B. 04/23/75 of 5514 3rd Ave, Fort Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of 17891 San Carlos Blvd, Fort Myers Beach, Florida.
On August 19, 2009, at approximately 12:25 am, Lee County Sheriff's
Deputies arrested Ruben Vicente Zepeda Moreno, D.O.B. 01/30/78 of 2516
SW 46th St, Lehigh Acres, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of Tarapin Ave & Alabama Rd, Lehigh Acres, Florida.
On August 19, 2009, at approximately 04:14 am, Lee County Sheriff's Deputies arrested Daniel Patrick Lang, D.O.B. 01/11/56 of 19730 S Tamiami Trail, Fort Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of 19730 S Tamiami Trail, Fort Myers, Florida.
On August 19, 2009, at approximately 08:21 pm, Lee County Sheriff's Deputies arrested Jeannette Suzzanne Rogers, D.O.B. 01/04/38 of 5213 Seagull Ct, Cape Coral, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of Orange Grove Blvd & Birkdale Ave, North Fort Myers, Florida.
On August 21, 2009, at approximately 09:16 pm, Lee County Sheriff's
Deputies arrested Sergio Delacruz, D.O.B. 01/24/80 of 409 Bellair Rd, Fort
Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of Tice St/Tillman Dr, Fort
Myers, Florida.
On August 21, 2009, at approximately 09:50 pm, Lee County Sheriff's
Deputies arrested Mark Roden, D.O.B. 10/30/59 of 125 Oak Side St, Lehigh
Acres, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of Orange River
Blvd/Shady River Lane, Fort Myers, Florida.
On August 21, 2009, at approximately 11:14 pm, Lee County Sheriff's
Deputies arrested Robert M. Berard, D.O.B. 12/18/46 of 16200 Cutts Ct, Fort
Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of Pine Ridge Rd/Kelly Rd,
Fort Myers, Florida.
On August 22, 2009, at approximately 12:04 am, Lee County Sheriff's
Deputies arrested Jonathan Michael Joshua, D.O.B. 09/17/84 of 6074
Timberwood Cr, Fort Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of
16440 S Tamiami Trail, Fort Myers, Florida.
On August 22, 2009, at approximately 01:15 am, Lee County Sheriff's
Deputies arrested James Rand Agnew, D.O.B. 09/09/46 of 7761 Bay Lake Dr,
Fort Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of 17651 San Carlos
Blvd, Fort Myers Beach, Florida.
On August 22, 2009, at approximately 01:23 am, Lee County Sheriff's
Deputies arrested Daniel Bernard Lorpker, D.O.B. 11/09/54 of 8410 Slant Rd,
Bartelso IL, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of 17651 San Carlos
On August 22, 2009, at approximately 02:30 am, Lee County Sheriff's
Deputies arrested Elizabeth Mendez, D.O.B. 05/20/63 of 909 Joel Blvd, Lehigh
Acres, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of 909 Joel Blvd, Lehigh
Acres, Florida.
On August 22, 2009, at approximately 05:30 pm, Lee County Sheriff's
Deputies arrested Jason Bryan Kwiatkowski, D.O.B. 01/06/83 of 9250 Triana
Terrace, Fort Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of N Cleveland
Ave & Pondella Rd, North Fort Myers, Florida.
On August 22, 2009, at approximately 06:51 pm, Lee County Sheriff's
Deputies arrested Shelley Marie Tompkins, D.O.B. 06/07/81 of 13110 S.E.
Bella Casa Cr, Fort Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of 1133
Estero Blvd, Fort Myers Beach, Florida.
On August 23, 2009, at approximately 03:41 am, Lee County Sheriff's
Deputies arrested Robert Dale Brooks, D.O.B. 01/10/87 of 1895 N Tamiami Trail,
North Fort Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of SR 80/SR 31,
On August 23, 2009, at approximately 05:30 pm, Lee County Sheriff's
Deputies arrested Jose Armando Sanchez, D.O.B. 03/12/82 of 8462 Wren
Rd, Fort Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of Corkscrew Rd &
Three Oaks Blvd, Bonita Springs, Florida.
On August 23, 2009, at approximately 11:31 pm, Lee County Sheriff's Deputies arrested Stanley S. Wisniewski, D.O.B. 09/20/60 of 211 3rd St, Fort Myers, for DUI. The incident occurred in the area of Cleveland Ave/South Ave, Fort Myers, Florida.
If you have a cellular phone, you can report drunk drivers while traveling in Lee County.
Dial 9-1-1 if you want to be eligible for a $100 dollar reward* through the "Mobile Eyes" program.
Remember: "Fasten Your Seat Belts, be courteous to drivers and pedestrians and help us prevent traffic related fatalities, injuries and property damage."
"Mobile Eyes" Against Drunk Driving is a joint partnership between the Lee County Sheriff's Office, MADD (Mother's Against Drunk Driving) and Associates and Bruce L. Scheiner, Personal Injury Lawyers, P.A. A 9-1-1 caller reporting a drunk driver and acknowledging the "Mobile Eyes" program becomes eligible for a $100 dollar reward if the impaired driver is stopped by law enforcement and arrested for DUI. For more information contact our Traffic Unit at (239) 477-1000.
Source: Lee County Sheriff's Office
Some voters are calling for Westminster Councilman Andy Quach to resign after an arrest on suspicion of drunk driving; others call it a personal matter. At this week's Council meeting, he apologized.
A this week's Westminster City Council meeting, Andy Quach apologized for having been arrested on suspicion of drunk driving after an auto accident that knocked out power to more than 300 homes. |
By My-Thuan Tran
August 14, 2009
The LA Times reported. Westminster City Councilman Andy Quach and Assemblyman Van Tran (R-Garden Grove) are two of Orange County's most prominent Vietnamese American elected officials. Quach found himself on the defensive this week regarding his recent arrest on suspicion of Orange County DUI, and Tran deflected criticism of his involvement during the police investigation. Some have called for Quach to step down. Others have rallied around him and said the incident should not tarnish his record. On Wednesday night, Quach publicly apologized at the City Council meeting. Quach, 37, was arrested Aug. 1 after his Mercedes-Benz S550 collided with another car, struck a concrete wall and severed a power pole, knocking out electricity to more than 300 homes. A blood test revealed that he had a blood-alcohol level of more than 0.26% when he was driving drunk.
"I fully recognize and appreciate that the years of service I have put into this city were damaged by my recent mistakes, although I hope the damage is not irreparable," said Quach, who was elected in 2002 to the council in this suburb where nearly a third of the residents are Vietnamese American. Quach said he did not believe the incident should be treated as a political issue. "On the contrary," he said, "I believe that this is an issue of personal responsibility." Westminster resident Ngoc Tran, 60, agreed. "He is at fault, but this does not affect his work as a City Council member," said Tran, who voted for Quach. But others disagreed. Tuan Nguyen, 54, another Westminster resident, said at Wednesday's council meeting that Quach should either step down or be recalled. "He is not going to be a role model for other Vietnamese to look at," Nguyen said. "He destroyed the good-citizen image that a Vietnamese politician should have to represent the community, and that is why we look for his resignation." Nguyen also questioned the involvement of Van Tran during the police investigation of Quach's accident. Shortly after the incident occurred, Quach called Tran, said Westminster Police Sgt. Dan Schoonmaker. Tran arrived at the scene and identified himself as Quach's DUI lawyer, Schoonmaker said. Tran had to be warned twice by officers to step back, he said. At one point, an officer warned him that he would be arrested if he continued to interfere, and Tran relented, Schoonmaker said. Although Tran was disruptive at the scene, he did not interfere with the investigation, Schoonmaker said. "If it would have gotten to a point where he was truly causing our officers to be unable to continue the field sobriety test," he said, "we would have taken different action." Tran said in a statement Thursday that Quach called him for help and that when he arrived on the scene, "tensions were high, with exposed power lines and the car on fire." "In attempting to get more information," Tran added, "the on-duty officer asked me to step back. I did." Meanwhile, Quach said he would not make any "hasty political decisions." He said that because of physical injuries he suffered in the DUI accident, he had not planned to attend Wednesday's council meeting, but he went because he wanted to address his constituents. "I plan to concentrate my attention toward rebuilding the trust I know I have damaged," he said at the meeting, "and that starts with me coming here tonight."
FAIRBANKS -- Newsminer.com reported. The Alaska Supreme Court has reversed the drunk driving conviction of a Fairbanks man, saying a state law prohibiting his possible "delayed absorption" defense is unconstitutional.
The court ruled on Friday that Douglas Valentine, 47, who was convicted of driving under the influence of alcohol in 2005, should receive a new trial.
The ruling states that defendants can argue they were less intoxicated while driving than when a chemical breath test was administered afterward. The Legislature prohibited the defense in 2004, but the court unanimously ruled that the law denies due process rights to drunk driving defendants.
The argument -- known informally as the Big Gulp defense -- contends there is a delay between a person's consumption of alcohol and the absorption of it into the bloodstream. Because of that, a defendant could hypothetically operate a motor vehicle while legally sober, only to have their blood-alcohol level climb into the illegal range after being pulled over.
Robert John, who argued on Valentine's behalf, said it was a victory for "the application of fairness and science" in the courtroom.
"I just believe this is an important decision for the accused and to have people who are innocent actually presumed innocent," John said.
The Supreme Court ruling came four years after a challenge from Valentine.
He was pulled over for speeding by Fairbanks Police Sgt. Dan Welborn, who noticed a moderate odor of alcohol and watery, bloodshot eyes, according to court documents. Valentine subsequently failed three field sobriety tests and was placed under arrest.
Two breath-alcohol tests that followed seemed to show a climbing rate of intoxication. A test given about 35 minutes later showed a blood-alcohol level of 0.099, followed by a second, independent test 25 minutes after that showing a level of 0.119 percent, court documents say.
Before the trial, Valentine argued that his case should be dismissed, challenging the 2004 amendments to the DUI law.
He was convicted by a Fairbanks jury, and the verdict was upheld by the Alaska Court of Appeals in 2007 by a 2-1 vote.
But in a decision written by Chief Justice Dana Fabe, the court agreed with the appellate court dissent that the prohibition on delayed-absorption evidence gives the prosecution an unfair advantage. Justices said that the law "unjustifiably prevents defendants from introducing evidence that is both scientifically valid and directly relevant to the question of whether the defendant was impaired by alcohol at the time of driving."
Rep. Jay Ramras, the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said the Legislature passed the ban on the Big Gulp defense to discourage people from drinking and trying to race to their destination.
The Fairbanks Republican said he thinks the Supreme Court ruling will require a procedural adjustment in how DUI cases are prosecuted, not necessarily a statutory change. Ramras said the Judiciary Committee will follow up on the ruling by asking for an opinion from Attorney General Dan Sullivan on how to respond.
Fairbanks District Attorney Mike Gray could not be reached to comment on the opinion.
GOSHEN -- The Times Herald reported. A 22-year-old man from the state of Florida was arraigned Wednesday in Orange County Court on charges of manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide and four counts of second-degree assault, stemming from a head-on car crash last year that killed an 18-year-old.
The defendant was arrested earlier this week in Palm Harbor, Fla. The crash happened Nov. 22 on Guymard Turnpike in the Town of Mount Hope. At the time, the defendant lived in Westtown.
Four passengers suffered injuries in the crash, accounting for the four counts of assault.
The case took several months to prepare and present to a grand jury, and an indictment was unsealed Wednesday.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Hours after his arraignment, The defendent posted $25,000 cash bail and was released from Orange County Jail, according to jail records. He faces further proceedings in County Court
The LA Times reported. A 45-year-old Orange County criminal was sentenced Thursday to a maximum 17 years in prison for possessing homemade explosive devices with the intent to kill his former wife, her Orange County Criminal attorney, the family court judge and Huntington Beach Police Department officers.
Ronald Gary Turner of Costa Mesa was on probation in a separate domestic violence case against his ex-wife that resulted in three restraining orders when he stalked her and her divorce attorney, and threatened to kill the woman by shooting her in the face, said Deputy Dist. Atty. Israel Claustro.
Turner also threatened to shoot the judge presiding over the divorce case, and threatened to commit suicide by creating a standoff with police and using the situation to detonate remote pipe bombs with timers.
Turner was found guilty of 15 felony counts, including stalking, possession of a destructive device with intent to injure, possession of a homemade deadly weapon and possession of a loaded firearm in public.
OC defense attorney filed a notice of appeal in court. He could not be reached for comment.
The couple, married for 14 years, divorced in 2007, Claustro said. Turner's estranged wife kicked him out of the house and eventually gained custody of their sons, 11 and 13. Turner's child support payments also "went up, and his visitation rights were taken from him," Claustro said.
On April 4, 2008, Turner was placed on probation after pleading guilty to four misdemeanor violations of a domestic violence restraining order. On July 1, 2008, the Orange County Sheriff's Department received information from Huntington Beach and Newport Beach police that Turner may be in possession of bombs and weapons and had made potential threats to his estranged wife, her divorce attorney, a Huntington Beach police detective and the presiding judge.
The next day he did not appear at the court-ordered batterer's treatment program and a bench warrant was issued. Later that day, authorities pulled Turner's car over in a traffic stop on the Garden Grove Freeway and recovered handcuffs, pepper spray, throwing knives and a stolen 9-millimeter firearm with its serial numbers removed.
During a subsequent search of his Costa Mesa home, they found three homemade bombs with two timers, two homemade guns, bomb-making materials, tactical equipment, a bulletproof vest and listening devices.
Expert witnesses from the Orange County Sheriff's Department bomb squad testified in the two-week jury trial that the homemade devices were "the most sophisticated destructive devices ever found in California," Claustro said.
Turner, who worked as a cable network installer, "did a lot of homework and research," Claustro said.
ORLANDO, Fla. -- Wesh.com news reported. Orange County Commissioners passed an amendment Tuesday that will double traffic fees from $15 to $30.
The new fee takes effect Oct. 1.
It is the court facilities surcharge, which is assessed on civil and criminal traffic infractions.
The surcharge pays for courthouse security, maintenance and operation. Parking, capital improvements and leases for courts, offices and warehouse space are also included.
Supporters say it is needed because the cost of upkeep of the courthouse buildings is expensive.
"Everything is costing more, and facilities are getting older and we need the additional revenue to maintain for the long term," said John Terwilliger, director of the Orange County Administrative Service Department for Orange County.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Dui Attorney
Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer
Orange County Dui Lawyer
Orange County DUI Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney Orange County DUI Attorney
Terwilliger said just as in your home, things break down and you have to replace the air conditioner or the roof. It is the same for the court facilities, he said.
The average annual revenue is $3.2 million dollars, but expenses run around $4 million a year.
Terwilliger said if you don't want to come out of your pocket with an extra $15 for traffic court then don't get a traffic ticket
Dailypilot.com reported. Alcohol establishments in Costa Mesa received a near-perfect score when only one business tested sold alcohol to a person younger than 21, police said Monday. In a "Minor Decoy" operation by Costa Mesa police, officers used an 18-year-old female decoy to try to by alcohol at local liquor stores, markets, bars and restaurants and see who would check for ID. Of the 23 locations tested, only one spot sold the drink without carding the woman, authorities said. Police also performed "shoulder tap" stings, in which they use decoys younger than 21 who try to persuade customers to buy alcohol for them.
Here are a few websites to visit:
Orange County Dui Attorney
Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer
Orange County Dui Lawyer
Orange County DUI Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County DUI Attorney
Of 20 people approached, four people bought alcohol for the minors, police said. They were cited. Authorities inspected 20 local businesses with Alcohol Beverage Control licenses and found that all but one were violating the law. Most were minor violations like not posting the proper warning sign, police said. Only one store was completely up to code, officials said.
DANA POINT - The Orange County Register reported. A 24-year-old man apparently upset over a breakup was arrested this afternoon after authorities say he fired several shots in a Dana Point motel and across Pacific Coast Highway.
Ishmael Orellana was arrested around 4:15 p.m. at the Dana Marina motel on PCH after someone reported shots being fired, said Lt. Jim England of the Orange County Sheriff's Department.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
For more information please visit the following websites
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
According to deputies, Orellana was inside the motel at 3411 PCH when he started firing a semiautomatic handgun into adjoining rooms. Two shots were also fired across PCH, England said.
No one was injured.
Orellana was arrested on suspicion of negligent discharge of a firearm
SALT LAKE CITY -- In Utah, even if you don't get arrested for drunk driving you might still have to call your mom from jail -- sort of.
The Utah Highway Patrol and some local bars hope letting people practice an uncomfortable call from the local lockup will help dissuade drunk driving.
A phone number has been set up to recreate what it would feel like to make such a call. After dialing 1-877-JAIL-FON, the caller is given the option to talk to a hysterical mother or a disapproving father, among others. A prerecorded message then plays one end of what the conversation might sound like, with the caller filling in the other half.
Slogans associated with the campaign include "Getting a DUI is easy, calling an
Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer from jail is hard."
The campaign runs through Sept. 7.
Information from: Deseret News, http://www.deseretnews.com
BUENA PARK -- The Orange County Register reported. Police released surveillance images of a man wanted in connection with an armed robbery in hopes that someone will identify him.
The robbery occurred shortly before 10 p.m. Aug. 15 at a Chevron gas station at 7250 Artesia St., said Buena Park police Sgt. Bill Kohanek.
The clerk told police a gunman entered the gas station, pointed a gun and demanded cash from the register. The clerk complied and the robber took an about $400 to $500 in cash, Kohanek said.
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The male clerk was unharmed and no customers were in the store at the time of the robbery.
The robber fled in a dark green or black minivan, possibly a Dodge Caravan, with body damage to the front right passenger door. He was last seen traveling north on the 5 freeway.
The robber is African American, about 30 to 35 years old, about 5 feet 10 inches to 6 feet tall, about 180 pounds with a mustache. He was wearing a black baseball hat, a hooded jacket and blue Dickies-style pants.
Anyone with information is encouraged to contact Buena Park Detective Rick Pino at 714-562-3966.
NEWPORT BEACH -The Orange County Register reported.A man who robbed a female escort at a Newport Beach hotel has been arrested following a four-month investigation that wrapped up just one day before the suspect was to be deported, police said this week.
The case goes back to April 14, when a 30-year-old woman whose escort service advertises on Craigslist was in a room at the Radisson on MacArthur Boulevard.
A man who arrived took out a handgun and demanded the combination to the safe, but the woman, who is not being identified, would not provide it, said Newport Beach police Sgt. Evan Sailor.
It's not known what was in the safe, but the suspect - and two accomplices who also showed up at the room - made off with jewelry and a cell phone valued at $250, Sailor said.
The men got away, but cell phone records eventually tied the main suspect to the crime, leading to him and his accomplices, Sailor said.
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"The suspect had changed his cell phone number numerous times after the crime in an attempt to keep from being identified," Sailor said by e-mail. "This caused the detective to have to do multiple search warrants and go through voluminous phone records to finally identify him."
Newport police Detective John Pallas learned the suspect - Han Dol Park, 22, of Torrance - was being held on other charges in a jail operated by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department and was to be deported to South Korea the next day.
Park was arrested Aug. 13 and is being held at Orange County Jail in Santa Ana. Also arrested were Alexander Choe Alforque, 22, of Buena Park, and Alan Choe Alforque, 24, also of Buena Park.
All face felony robbery charges, and all have pleaded not guilty
The Orange County Register reported.Officers from the Orange Police Department will conduct a special Orange County DUI saturation patrol on Friday, Aug. 28.
The officers will specifically be assigned to patrol the city in search of motorists driving under the influence of alcohol and /or drugs.
Motorists are asked to call 911 if they see a suspected impaired driver.
Funding for OC DUI special enforcement efforts is provided by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Information: 714-744-7444.
Follow the Orange City Watch blog on Twitter at http://twitter.com/orangecitywatch to hear of more Orange County DUI arrests.
The Daily Pilot reported. A Long Beach woman wants Newport Beach to pay her at least $1 million for the "severe emotional distress" she claims she suffered at the hands of city police officers who allegedly asked her what nationality she was, arrested her without cause and fondled her during a search. In a claim filed against Newport Beach on Aug. 10, the 23-year-old woman alleges a city police officer signaled her to pull over her car about 10:30 p.m. Feb. 21 in Newport Beach, although she claims she was in compliance with all traffic laws.
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The Daily Pilot will not identify the woman, because she claims to be the victim of a sexual assault.
In public documents, the woman claims the police officer asked her in a threatening tone, "Where are you from?" when she rolled her car window down.
In her claim, the woman alleges the officer yelled at her, demanding she tell him what nationality she was.
After the woman "politely" responded that she was an American citizen, the officer shined a flashlight into her face, according to the claim.
"During this time, [the officer] appeared to be studying claimant's facial features," the claim states. "After conducting his evaluation of claimant's face, [the officer] loudly announced in an extremely sardonic tone, 'Sure . . . you're white!'"
The officer then asked the woman to get out of her car, at which time he placed her under arrest and put her in the back of his police car without any probable cause, according to the claim.
The claim goes on to allege the officer and other police officers at the scene laughed when the woman complained that the handcuffs were hurting her wrists.
The woman also alleges she was subjected to "an extremely invasive and humiliating physical search" and interrogated for hours.
"During this 'search' claimant was 'felt up' by a very large Caucasian police officer in a manner that made her feel like she was being sexually assaulted," the claim states. "Specifically, the searching officer pressed her body very close to claimant's and began breathing heavily on her neck in a suggestive fashion."
Police officers at the station continued to ask the woman "where her parents were from," according to the claim.
The woman was detained in a Newport Beach jail cell for more than an hour, until a friend secured a $1,500 bail bond, the claim states.
Newport Beach police officers never informed her of her rights during her detention, according to the claim.
A Daily Pilot search of court documents found no record of any criminal charges stemming from the woman's February arrest.
When reached by phone Wednesday, the woman declined to comment on the matter and referred all questions to her attorney, Allen Felahy.
Felahy could not immediately be reached for comment Wednesday.
Newport Beach City Atty. David Hunt also could not immediately be reached.
Newport Beach Sgt. Evan Sailor, a spokesman for the department, said he could not comment on the matter.
Yahoo Sports reported. Last night, Billy Gillispie was driving in his Mercedes at 2:45 a.m. What's the old saying? If someone's driving a Mercedes at 2:45 in the morning, they're probably drunk? That's not it. But anyway, Billy Gillispie might well have been: Someone reported seeing the car driving erratically, and Gillispie was taken to a jail for suspicion of DUI in Franklin County, about 20 minutes west of Lexington, where Gillispie apparently still lives.
Gillispie's mugshot, right, pretty much tells the whole story. Except it doesn't.
There are numerous questions here, like, for one, why on Earth was Gillispie driving his own car at 2:45 a.m., especially if he had been drinking? What's wrong with a cab? Heck, hire a limo. Gillispie's tenure at Kentucky may have ended poorly, but it was a pretty nice little cash haul for the Texas coach; what's wrong with paying someone to drive you? Most people yearn for that sort of upper-crust treatment. Take advantage, Billy Clyde.
Orange County Dui Attorney
Another question is whether Gillispie actually thought telling officers he was out golfing -- at 2:45 a.m. -- was a surefire alibi. Apparently so.
(Yet another question is why on Earth does Gillispie still live in Kentucky, but I suppose that's for a different time.)
Here are a few websites to visit:
Orange County Dui Attorney
Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer
Orange County Dui Lawyer
Orange County DUI Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County DUI Attorney
Anyway, it's Gillispie's third suspicion of DUI charge, so he might not have a choice in driving preference for very long. And it capped off an utterly hilarious day on the Kentucky basketball homefront, a day when Rick Pitino unnecessarily took to the airwaves to lecture the media about ethics and Ted Kennedy. All of which is couched, of course, in the offseason that saw John Calipari flee from a institutionally punished Memphis program to ... Kentucky. Who in the Commonwealth is ready for basketball to start already?
SANTA ANA - The Orange County Register reported. Two Orange County sheriff's deputies face Orange County criminal charges in a case in which prosecutors say one officer lied and called another deputy a confidential informant - in order to protect the other deputy from getting a citation.
Deputy Philip Glenn Romero, 39, is accused of telling a worker from the California Department Fish and Game that Deputy William Robb, also 39, was an informant as a way out of concealing Robb's true identity, the Orange County Criminal Attorneys Office announced today.
On Nov. 18, 2008, prosecutors said, Robb, who was off-duty at the time, was pulling up to a launch ramp in Dana Point Harbor after fishing for lobsters with two other deputies.
Robb had a bucket full of 13 undersized spiny lobsters - which violates a state law that requires no more than seven lobsters can be caught by one individual, and that each lobsters must measure 3.25 inches or bigger, prosecutors said.
A warden from the state agency - Justin Sandvig - approached Robb to talk about the lobsters, and Romero, who was on-duty, walked up to them, prosecutors said.
Romero told Sandvig that Robb was an informant who shouldn't be outed in front of the other two men, prosecutors said. Sandvig backed off, and allowed the men to leave after confirming there were no other illegal lobsters in the men's possession.
But several days later, Sandvig contacted Romero and asked for Robb's identity, explaining that he needed the name for his report and to issue a citation, prosecutors said.
Romero again lied, using the informant story, prosecutors said, and refused to answer the question.
Authorities say Sandvig figured out that it was a ruse, and then informed the Orange County Criminal Attorneys Office of the matter, prosecutors said.
The Orange County Sheriff's Department conducted the criminal probe, and then referred it to county prosecutors, said Ryan Burris, a spokesman for the Sheriff's Department.
When asked about the status of the deputies, Burris said that Romero left the department in May, and that Robb remains employed there.
The incident was mentioned in a recent report by the county's Office of Independent Review. The report said that one deputy resigned, while the three other deputies were given "substantial" discipline.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
Romero is charged with a misdemeanor count for obstructing an officer, while Robb is charged with two misdemeanors relating to the lobster poaching. They will be arraigned Sept. 14.
LAGUNA NIGUEL -- The Orange County Register reported. A man wielding a knife stole more than $50,000 in jewelry from a courier late Wednesday afternoon, authorities said.
The courier was dropping of jewelry to Nuggets and Carats, a shop located on the 28200 block of Crown Valley Parkway, when the incident was reported around 5:15 p.m., said Sgt. Eric Nestor of the Orange County Sheriff's Department.
The courier had picked up jewelry estimated to be worth $50,000 from a previous location before making the delivery, said Nestor.
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The suspect is described as a white male with a goatee, 5-feet-6, 50 to 55 years old, 180 pounds, with shoulder-length blond hair, said Nestor. He was reported to be wearing dirty clothes
IRVINE -The Orange County Register reported. Police are still investigating a fatal car crash outside an Irvine gated community that left two dead and three others still hospitalized a week after the collision.
Authorities have released few details of the collision, which took place just after 11:30 p.m. last Thursday, when a car crashed into a guard shack for a gated Shady Canyon neighborhood east of Sunny Hill.
One of the vehicle's occupants, 18-year-old Daniel Tran of Westminster, reportedly died at the scene, while another, 19-year-old Arlene Tjandrawansa of Pinole, died several hours later at a nearby hospital.
The vehicles three other occupants are still in the hospital, Irvine police Lt. John Hare said today.
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The driver and one of the two remaining passengers are in the intensive care unit, Hare said, while the other passenger is in stable condition.
It may be several weeks before police complete their investigation and determine the cause of the crash, Hare said
The Orange County Register, dated Aug 24th, reports on an Orange County DUI checkpoint. The Placentia Police Department is conducting a Orange County drunk-driving checkpoint from 6 p.m. to midnight Friday.
The Orange County DUI checkpoint is set up by local police and paid for with a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety. Officers at the checkpoint will not only target drunk drivers, but also those with no license and other violations.
A release from the department states that 12 percent of all traffic collisions in Placentia this year involved drivers on a suspended or revoked license or unlicensed drivers. Close to 9 percent of all the crashes in the city last year involved Orange County DUI .
Last year, 36 people died in alcohol-related crashes throughout Orange County.
The Orange County Register reported on an Orange County DUI in COSTA MESA. A sobriety checkpoint held Wednesday night netted one Orange County DUI arrest, one possession of marijuana for sales arrest and various other violations. The Costa Mesa Police Department stopped 237 cars last night. The Orange County DUI checkpoint, which was held at Wilson Street and Pomona Avenue, was held from 6 p.m. Wednesday until midnight Thursday.
Along with the Orange County DUI and possession arrests, 17 drivers were screened for driving under the influence, five were cited for no licenses and one for driving on a suspended license. Police also issued 12 citations for miscellaneous vehicle code violations and seven cars were impounded.
The Costa Mesa Police Department is planning another Orange County DUI checkpoint for Sept. 1. As with all of the checkpoints, an increased number of police officers will patrol adjacent streets to stop impaired drivers from avoiding the checkpoint
The Fontana Herald reported. Two men from Orange County were arrested and charged with trying to extort $5,000 from a man in Fontana, according to the Fontana Police Department.
Police said a victim came forward and identified two subjects who told him to pay the $5,000 or the men would have the victim murdered, police said.
The victim identified the suspects and surveillance was conducted on the suspects in Santa Ana. The suspects were detained and arrested without further incident on Aug. 22, police said.The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
The suspects were identified as Anthony Vasquez, 44, of Anaheim, and Michael Vasquez, 42, of Santa Ana.
 The incident is believed to be gang related, police said.
In other crime news:
----- Robber takes $150 from Fontana man
An armed robber took $150 from a 29-year-old Fontana man on Aug. 22, police said.
The victim was pushing his pushcart northbound on Live Oak Avenue approaching Valley Boulevard at 7:15 p.m. when he
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Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney was approached by the suspect, who brandished a black handgun and demanded money.
The victim handed over $150, and the suspect fled the location in a gray Honda, police said.----- Two men found dead in San Bernardino
Two men, one from Fontana and one from San Bernardino, were found dead behind businesses located in the area of Third Street and Waterman Avenue in San Bernardino on Aug. 23, according to the San Bernardino County Coroner's Division.
After receiving a 911 call at 11:16 a.m., San Bernardino Police Department personnel arrived on scene and confirmed the death of Jose Luis Hinojosa, a 44-year-old resident of Fontana.
The name of the second deceased male, a 42-year-old resident of San Bernardino, was not immediately released.
An autopsy will be performed to determine the cause of death.
The investigation is ongoing, and anyone with any information is urged to contact the San Bernardino P.D. Homicide Detail.
----- Fontana P.D. conducts courthouse sting
The Fontana Police Department continued its crackdown on drunk drivers by conducting a courthouse sting on Aug. 20.
This operation, held from 1 to 4 p.m., targeted individuals who had their driver's license suspended or revoked as a result of a DUI violation.
During the event at the Fontana Courthouse, four people were cited for driving with a suspended or revoked license, and their respective vehicles were subsequently towed.
The operation was part of an ongoing DUI
Here are a few websites to visit:
Orange County Dui Attorney
Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer
Orange County Dui Lawyer
Orange County DUI Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County DUI Attorney Enforcement Program, which is funded through a grant provided by the Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
The Orange County Register reported. A Superior Court judge Thursday delayed the arraignment of a Costa Mesa mother accused of Orange County DUI behind the wheel when she slammed into a guardrail on the northbound Corona Del Mar (73) Freeway, killing her 6-year-old son.
Julie Smith is expected to enter a plea Oct. 5 on charges of gross vehicular manslaughter and felony drunk driving in connection with an Aug. 8 car crash near Jamboree Road in Newport Beach.
Smith, who suffered minor injuries, is also charged with felony child endangerment and abuse in the accident. She posted $100,000 bail and is in a residential treatment facility.
Her Orange County DUI attorney asked for the delay to clear up evidence issues with the Office of the District Attorney
SANTA ANA - The Orange County Register reported. Five men will appear in court Thursday on charges of stealing more than 50 Toyota Tacoma trucks in Orange and Los Angeles counties and selling the vehicles to unsuspecting buyers, prosecutors said.
Those arrested Tuesday were: Jorge Velasquez Fernandez, 22; Luis Rico Humberto, 26; and Ignacio Fernandez Mendez, 25, all of Anaheim; Gabino Rodriguez Perez, 35, of Orange; and Marco Antonio Mendoza, 21, of Los Angeles, according to Orange County prosecutors.
They will be arraigned Thursday at North Justice Center in Fullerton on multiple counts, including receiving stolen property, unlawfully taking of a vehicle and grand theft.
Authorities say the thefts started in January 2008 when the men began stealing Tacomas in Los Angeles and then brought them to Orange County. They replaced the trucks' license plates, doctored fake ownership titles, and then sold them to unsuspecting buyers for $5,000 to $10,000 a truck, mostly in Anaheim, Fullerton, Orange, Santa Ana, and Tustin, prosecutors said.
The thefts stopped in September 2008 - when Fernandez was taken into custody on a separate car-theft matter by Anaheim police, prosecutors said. He ended up being sentenced to 60 days in jail after pleading guilty in that case.
But this June, the thefts resumed, authorities said. This time, the men allegedly stole the trucks in Orange County - primarily from Anaheim, Orange, and Placentia - and then sold the vehicles in Los Angeles, prosecutors said.
Farrah Emami, a spokeswoman for the Orange County Criminal Attorneys office, said today that some of the stolen trucks were returned by authorities to their original owners if insurance companies had not paid out on the owners' claims. But if the companies had paid out on such claims, the trucks went to insurance companies. Other cars were tracked down before they were sold and returned to the original owners, she said.
As for the buyers, they will have to file individual claims against the defendants to get their money back, Emami said. If the defendants are convicted, a judge could order the men to pay restitution to the victims, she added.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
Fewer and fewer such auto theft rings are being busted nowadays.
Orange County saw a 19.7 percent drop in auto thefts from 2008 to 2007 - a larger fall than the state's 12 percent decrease during the same time span, authorities said.
The Tacoma is ranked as the most frequently stolen pick-up truck since 1984, prosecutors said.
In 2008, a total of 199,766 vehicles were stolen in California with an estimated value of $1.35 billion. Of those vehicles stolen, nearly 87 percent were successfully recovered, prosecutors said.
LAGUNA BEACH - The Orange County Register reportedThree armed men who robbed a local jewelry store escaped with more than a half-million dollars worth of jewelry Tuesday evening after leading police on a brief chase and evading officers at a busy shopping center, authorities said. A Laguna Beach Police officer spotted the suspects' car on the 73 toll road shortly after the robbery and followed it to the Aliso Viejo Town Center, where the three suspects ran into a parking structure, said Lt. Jason Kravetz of the Laguna Beach Police. Officers with Laguna Beach police and deputies with the Orange County Sheriff's Department searched for the suspects for three hours after setting up a perimeter at the shopping center, but the three suspects are believed to have escaped through a drainage ditch in the rear of the center. No arrests have been made as of Wednesday morning, Kravetz said. Police were notified of the robbery at Baca's Jewelry Store, 305 Forest Avenue, at 7:15 p.m. when two people witnessing the robbery called 911, Kravetz said. One of the robbers was armed, Kravetz said. No one was injured during the robbery. The men were seen leaving the store in a white Ford Fusion and a license plate number was given to dispatchers.
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A short time later, an officer driving southbound on the 73 toll road saw the car and followed it as it exited at Aliso Creek Road, Kravetz said. The robbers headed toward the Aliso Viejo Town Center, jumped out of the car and ran toward a parking structure on Enterprise Street.
The sheriff's department and Laguna Beach police established a perimeter, monitoring all exits. With help of a canine unit from the Irvine Police, authorities searched the busy shopping center for three hours, Kravetz said.
The suspects are believed to have breached the perimeter through a drainage ditch that leads to a nearby neighborhood.
Officers recovered some of the stolen jewelry from the Ford Fusion, Kravetz said. The car, which does not appear to have been stolen, was taken to the Laguna Beach Police Department.
Authorities will not be releasing surveillance images of the robbery immediately because investigators are following several leads, Kravetz said.
WESTMINSTER - The Orange County Register reported. A man sentenced today to 10 in state prison for identity theft and drug violations was in possession of employment eligibility documents for dozens of people when he was arrested, court records show.
Tuan Quoc Nguyen, 30, pleaded guilty July 28 to five felonies and three misdemeanors relating to drug possession, possession with intent to sell, unauthorized use of personal identifying information, and receiving stolen property.
That stolen property included 70 original federal Employment Eligibility Verification forms, also known as I-9s, according to a search warrant served in June 2008.
Authorities were never able to determine whether the I-9 forms came from a human resources department at a company, a leak at a government agency, a document fencing ring, or another source.
Anyone hired at a job in the U.S. is required to fill out an I-9 form, which the employer keeps on file. The form includes information on the new hire's name, address, date of birth, maiden name, social security number, and in general, driver's license number or other identity documentation.
Employers are required to keep the form available for inspection by immigration, labor, or homeland security officials, but are not required to file it with an agency.
Spokeswomen for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and United States Citizenship and Immigration Services said earlier this year that they hadn't heard of the case and didn't know of any investigations into missing documents.
The investigating officer for the Garden Grove Police Department didn't know of any federal investigation, and didn't find the source of the documents.
"Mr. Nguyen refused to talk about the records," said Officer James Tucker.
Nguyen was one of five people arrested Dec. 17, 2007, after police found methamphetamine while responding to a complaint about late-night noise and foot traffic at a backyard studio room. Nguyen also had credit cards and personal checks not bearing his name when police searched him, according to the warrant.
According to the warrant, when police searched Nguyen's BMW, they found a blue, three-ring binder notebook filled with "seventy (70) US Department of Justice-I.N.S. Employment Eligibility Verification applications. All seventy (70) of these ... applications were complete with the subjects' names, addresses, phone numbers, places of employment, social security numbers, driver's license numbers, relatives, photocopies of their social security card and driver's licenses, and many also had photocopies of their birth certificates. All of these appeared to be original applications that were completed, not photocopies."
Nguyen also had bank statements, credit card applications, E-bay invoices, and individual 401(k) reports, all in the names of other people, as well as four profiles of people that included all their identifying information, as well as bank account and credit card numbers.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
Nguyen's guilty plea wasn't part of a deal with prosecutors.
Nguyen had four prior strikes on this record and faced a life sentence in this case but Judge Frances Munoz removed three of those strikes from his record over the prosecutor's objection.
"The court makes a finding that these are not violent or serious charges in this case," Munoz said.
Prosecutor Janice Chieffo of the Orange County Criminal Attorneys Office said Nguyen never told authorities where he got the I-9 documents.
The District Attorney's office contacted many of the identity-theft victims to alert them to today sentencing, she said.
Nothing new was learned through correspondence with the victims about how Nguyen got hold of their information, Chieffo said.
WESTMINSTER - The Orange County Register reported. A man sentenced today to 10 in state prison for identity theft and drug violations was in possession of employment eligibility documents for dozens of people when he was arrested, court records show.
Tuan Quoc Nguyen, 30, pleaded guilty July 28 to five felonies and three misdemeanors relating to drug possession, possession with intent to sell, unauthorized use of personal identifying information, and receiving stolen property.
That stolen property included 70 original federal Employment Eligibility Verification forms, also known as I-9s, according to a search warrant served in June 2008.
Authorities were never able to determine whether the I-9 forms came from a human resources department at a company, a leak at a government agency, a document fencing ring, or another source.
Anyone hired at a job in the U.S. is required to fill out an I-9 form, which the employer keeps on file. The form includes information on the new hire's name, address, date of birth, maiden name, social security number, and in general, driver's license number or other identity documentation.
Employers are required to keep the form available for inspection by immigration, labor, or homeland security officials, but are not required to file it with an agency.
Spokeswomen for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and United States Citizenship and Immigration Services said earlier this year that they hadn't heard of the case and didn't know of any investigations into missing documents.
The investigating officer for the Garden Grove Police Department didn't know of any federal investigation, and didn't find the source of the documents.
"Mr. Nguyen refused to talk about the records," said Officer James Tucker.
Nguyen was one of five people arrested Dec. 17, 2007, after police found methamphetamine while responding to a complaint about late-night noise and foot traffic at a backyard studio room. Nguyen also had credit cards and personal checks not bearing his name when police searched him, according to the warrant.
According to the warrant, when police searched Nguyen's BMW, they found a blue, three-ring binder notebook filled with "seventy (70) US Department of Justice-I.N.S. Employment Eligibility Verification applications. All seventy (70) of these ... applications were complete with the subjects' names, addresses, phone numbers, places of employment, social security numbers, driver's license numbers, relatives, photocopies of their social security card and driver's licenses, and many also had photocopies of their birth certificates. All of these appeared to be original applications that were completed, not photocopies."
Nguyen also had bank statements, credit card applications, E-bay invoices, and individual 401(k) reports, all in the names of other people, as well as four profiles of people that included all their identifying information, as well as bank account and credit card numbers.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
Nguyen's guilty plea wasn't part of a deal with prosecutors.
Nguyen had four prior strikes on this record and faced a life sentence in this case but Judge Frances Munoz removed three of those strikes from his record over the prosecutor's objection.
"The court makes a finding that these are not violent or serious charges in this case," Munoz said.
Prosecutor Janice Chieffo of the Orange County Criminal Attorneys Office said Nguyen never told authorities where he got the I-9 documents.
The District Attorney's office contacted many of the identity-theft victims to alert them to today sentencing, she said.
Nothing new was learned through correspondence with the victims about how Nguyen got hold of their information, Chieffo said.
SANTA ANA -The Orange County Register reported. A Santa Ana man was convicted Thursday of the second-degree murder of a motorcyclist during an Orange County drunk driving head-on collision and fleeing the scene, leaving a friend and his 10-year-old daughter in a wrecked car down an embankment, officials said.
Luis Adan Ramirez, 34, faces up to 16 years and 4 months to life in prison when he is sentenced on May 23, said Farrah Emami of the Orange County Criminal Attorneys Office.
Ramirez was also convicted of child abuse and endangerment, and hit and run with permanent injury or death, Emami said.
Ramirez was driving on Ortega Highway about 11:30 a.m. on Nov. 5, 2006, with his friend and the daughter in the car, Emami said.
Ramirez had been drinking at his friend's home that morning and, with a blood alcohol level of .23 percent, he lost control of the car and swerved into the right shoulder of the road, then swerved again across the highway onto the wrong side of the road into oncoming traffic, crashing head-on into motorcyclist Timothy Lysgaard, 45, of Corona del Mar. Lysgaard was killed on impact and Ramirez' car went over a 150-foot embankment, Emami said.
After the crash, Ramirez was seen by witnesses throwing several beer cans from the vehicle before leaving the friend and his daughter and fleeing on foot, Emami said.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County DUI Attorney or an Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer.
About a mile from the scene of the crash, Ramirez climbed back up the embankment to the road and attempted to hitchhike, but three people who were aware of the crash -- and that the driver responsible had fled -- saw Ramirez covered in blood and held him until police arrived, Emami said.
TUSTIN - The Orange County Register reported. She loved sunflowers. She would hold them, look at them and draw them when she had a free moment; so it was only fitting that friends lined the street where she was killed Thursday morning with wide yellow sunflowers.
The day after 16-year-old Mackenzie Frazee was killed in an Orange County DUI crash on Newport Avenue, friends and family continued to gather near La Colina Drive, leaving notes, flowers and candles for the teenager they described as an artistic and good student.
"God really took an angel," said Tricia Fallo, who said her son Chad had been dating Frazee for about a year. "It's a big loss to us."
Frazee was pulled by paramedics from the wreckage of a 1998 Mercedez-Benz, but she died from her DUI injuries at Western Medical Center-Santa Ana.
Authorities said the car was sheared into pieces after crashing into a light pole early Thursday morning. The 17-year-old driver of the car has been taken into custody on suspicion of driving under the influence.
"In the middle of the intersection, we saw a big hunk of metal and sparks started coming out of it and it started to catch on fire," said Scott Walker, a 46-year-old resident from Irvine and one of the first people to see the crash. "All of a sudden, a boy stands up and walks out of the car, and we kind of look at each other in shock, like, 'Oh my God, how can somebody be walking away from this thing?' "
California Highway Patrol investigators believe the car was traveling at a high rate of speed, said CHP officer Jennifer Hink.
"The kid was like, 'What's going on?' " Walker said. "We ran close to him and said, 'Are you OK?' He's like, 'I'm all right, I got lucky, and I'm OK.' "
When more people gathered around the crash, someone noticed Frazee inside the car and that she wasn't moving.
"It's a tragic loss," Fallo said. "She's such an awesome girl."
Her aunt, Nicolle Frazee, described her as unique.
"That's what she was," Frazee said. "Unique. There was nobody like her. She would make you crack up with just the silliest things. Just crazy, funny, individual, no one like her."
Her aunt said she was against drinking alcohol.
"She was a clean-living girl," Frazee said. "She prided herself on that."
CHP investigators are looking into where the driver obtained alcohol, Hink said. He has not been identified because he is a minor.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County DUI Attorney or an Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer.
Fallo said friends had gathered at the driver's home that night, where he had been drinking. Frazee was having second thoughts about being there, and she asked for a ride home.
"It's not her character, it's just not. She doesn't do that," Fallo said. "She wanted to get home."
Frazee was about to begin her junior year at Foothill High School, where officials described her as a student who took art classes and received good grades.
She loved to paint pictures of Chad and her, Fallo said. One of her latest drawings was of Mother Theresa.
"She was a beautiful artist," Nicolle Frazee said.
She was into fashion had aspirations of attending the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising and of studying art in France.
Last year, she visited France as a student ambassador. A few weeks ago, Frazee and her father had returned from a two-week visit to Spain.
"She was very enthusiastic about life and the future," said Valerie Lopez, Frazee's aunt.
School officials said that although school is not yet in session, grief counselors will be available at Foothill and Tustin High schools. Those interested can call 714-730-7464.
Frazee's parents also had attended Foothill High School and both grew up in Tustin.
Friends are also planning a carwash to help pay for funeral costs, from 7:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at Foothill High School, Fallo said.
COSTA MESA-The Orange County Register reported.The Costa Mesa Police Department will stop cars and conduct DUI checks this Wednesday.
The Orange County DUI/drivers license checkpoint will be held between 6 p.m. and midnight at westbound Wilson Street and Pomona Avenue.
Costa Mesa police work with Mothers Against Drunk Driving, which provides a display of a crashed car as a reminder of the consequences of Orange County drunk driving. Police also work with the county Health Care Agency to maintain a task force that focuses on education and providing training to local establishments that sell alcohol.
A similar checkpoint held Aug. 14 netted three Orange County DUI arrests, nine citations for no licenses and one arrest for possession of marijuana for sales. Ten citations were issued for miscellaneous vehicle code violations and nine cars were impounded.
Funding for the DUI checkpoint was provided by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety, through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
SANTA ANA - The Orange County Register reported. An Anaheim woman was convicted today of shooting her longtime neighbor at close range in his shoulder in September 2007 after he asked her to stop trimming ivy from his side of a shared fence.
Anita Judith Spriggs, 66, Anaheim, was convicted of attempted murder, assault with a semiautomatic firearm, plus sentencing enhancements for using a gun to cause great bodily injury.
The guilty verdicts set the stage for the sanity phase of her trial, which will begin Wednesday.
Her Orange County defense attorney contends that Spriggs is not guilty by reason of insanity because a mental disease or disorder prevents her from understanding the nature of her act or from understanding that it was morally or legally wrong.
At stake for Spriggs is a prison sentence if she is found to have been sane at the time she pulled the trigger or a possible commitment to a state mental hospital if the jury determines she was insane.
The incident took place on Sept. 30, 2007, when Spriggs reached over a fence into Gary Hall's yard and started ripping away the ivy.
Hall testified last week that he politely asked Spriggs, "please don't trim the plants on my side of the fence."
"And then she shot me, simple as that," Hall testified. He was seriously injured in the late afternoon incident.
Hall said his family lived next door to Spriggs for 30 years and that he had spoken to her less than 10 times in that span.
Spriggs acknowledged in her testimony that she had a long-simmering dispute with her next-door neighbors that included a disagreement over the property line between the two houses. But she insisted she did not intend to harm Gary Hall on the day he was shot.
She told the jury that she does not remember the shooting, and that she was shocked when she was arrested about an hour later as she opened her garage door and was surrounded by dozens of police officers from the Anaheim SWAT Team.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
Spriggs also testified that she often heard voices inside her home, and that she believed members of the Hall family - including Gary Hall - were sneaking into her attic at night and stealing things. She said she cut some holes in her dry wall to peek in attic spaces to find out what was making the noises.
ANAHEIM - The Orange County Register reported. Three members of an Anaheim gang have been arrested in connection with the shooting death of a rival gang member, police said.
Jimmy Ray Patrick, Jr., 30, Elias Delgado, 21, and Juan Manuel Garcia Fuentes, 15, were arrested Aug. 19 at their homes in Anaheim. All three have been charged with killing Renato Gaitan, 29, of Anaheim, on Aug. 16 during what police called a gang-related shooting.
Fuentes, who is a minor, is being charged as an adult. All three are ineligible for bail.
Patrick, Delgado and Fuentes also face one felony count each of street terrorism for participating in the 18th Street gang, according to a criminal complaint.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
The defendants are scheduled to appear in court for an arraignment hearing on Sept. 11 at the North Justice Center, in Fullerton.
The defendants are accused of shooting Gaitan, 29, of Anaheim, on Aug. 16 while he was hanging out in the 2100 block of West Alameda Avenue. Gaitan was taken to UCI Medical Center in Orange, where he was pronounced dead, police said.
The investigation is continuing.
The Daily Pilot reported on an Orange County DUI. A 48-year-old Newport-Mesa sports coach and Costa Mesa resident arrested on suspicion of Orange County DUI - driving under the influence, last month will not be charged, prosecutors said Tuesday. Laurence Draluck, 48, the Newport Harbor High School girls' soccer coach, was arrested Oct. 6 in Costa Mesa on his way home from Los Angeles when police pulled him over and eventually arrested him on suspicion of Orange County DUI, he said. Prosecutors declined to elaborate on why they did not choose to charge him, only saying there was a lack of evidence. Prosecutors legally have up to a year from Draluck's arrest to charge him, but said unless anything new turns up in the case, that is highly unlikely. It is rare, that there woudl be lack of evidence in an Orange County DUI.
The Daily Pilot reported on Orange County DUIs , Aug 13-18th, 2009. These people have been arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of an intoxicant. As with all suspects, they are considered innocent until proved guilty.
Newport Beach; Aug. 14 :Brian Ayres, 52, Long Beach
Saturday : Chad Herbert, 20, Riverside, Lauretta Davis, 62, Newport Beach, Margaret Monti, 61, Newport Beach, Victor Martinez, 31, Placentia
Sunday : Daniel Wozniak, 25, Long Beach
Monday: Jason Holstein, 29, Santa Ana, Todd Lazar, 51, Newport Beach, Robert Argetsinger, 58, Sunset Beach
Tuesday: Elizabeth Drennen, 32, Birmingham, Ala.
These Drunk Drivers in Orange County will need an experienced Orange County DUI Lawyer.
Here are a few websites to visit:
Orange County Dui Attorney
Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer
Orange County Dui Lawyer
The Daily Pilot reported on an Orange County DUI checkpoint for this week. Costa Mesa police will be conducting their latest checkpoint Wednesday 9/26/2009 on Wilson Street.
From 6 p.m. to 12 a.m. Wednesday, police will be stationed on westbound Wilson Street at Pomona Avenue. In addition to nabbing Orange County Drunk Drivers police said the checkpoint is meant to boost awareness of the dangers of Orange County DUI.
Police arrested four on Orange County DUI charges during an Aug. 14 checkpoint on Newport Boulevard and gave 20 people tickets. Drivers are also screened for various vehicle code violations, such as not wearing seat belts or having a valid driver's license.
The department is looking for the public's help in reporting drunk drivers by calling 911.
Wednesday's checkpoint is funded by the California Office of Traffic Safety.
The Orlando Sentinel reported. A man serving a life sentence on rape and murder convictions is a suspect in the rape and murder of another woman, Orange County investigators announced today. Detectives say Jerry L. Williams Jr. preyed on some of the most vulnerable women he could find: prostitutes, drug abusers and the homeless, who either would not cooperate with investigators or likely would not be believed. One of his victims was Patricia Kimmons, 40, a prostitute and drug abuser who was found strangled on March 20, 2004 in the driveway of an abandoned house near the Holden Heights neighborhood of Orlando, investigators say. About 18 months later, a state crime lab matched Williams' DNA to evidence found at the scene. He was not arrested then. But cold-case investigators now say they have their man, who they think is a serial rapist. "He is a true predator," cold-case Detective Mark Hussey said at a news conference this evening. Investigators knew Williams had sex with Kimmons. But it wasn't until they interviewed him this summer in prison that they thought they could prove it was rape. Williams did not confess, but he made "admissions," Hussey said. He would not reveal what Williams said. The same day in 2004 that Kimmons' body was found, Williams was arrested on charges of raping a woman in Osceola County. But while on pretrial release in that case, investigators say, he strangled another woman in Sanford, his hometown. Charges were dropped because the victim disappeared. Williams, 26, whose tattoos include "Jehovah," "Jesus" and two crosses, spent two years in prison and three on probation on the Osceola conviction. He was on probation when he choked and raped a woman with a history of prostitution an crack use in Sanford in July 2006. There was no prosecution because the victim would not cooperate. Williams also was on probation when he raped and suffocated Lisa Marie French, 39, of Casselberry. Her body was found in February 2007 behind a Sanford warehouse. He was wearing a state Department of Corrections-ordered GPS tracking monitor during both Sanford attacks. The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.Williams was sentenced to life in prison for violating his probation in the Osceola case and for raping and murdering French. It's up to the State Attorney's Office whether Williams will be tried for Kimmons' murder. No matter, Hussey said, it's important for justice and Kimmons' family that an arrest was made. "No matter what kind of lifestyle these people lead, they don't deserve to be victims," Hussey said.
MIDDLEBURG, Fla. -- News4Jax.com reported. A suspected Orange County drunken driver who refused to stop for two miles after a Clay County deputy put on his blue lights is faces DUI, resisting an officer and traffic charges.
A clerk at a Race Track station in the 2500 block of Blanding Boulevard notified deputies just after midnight Sunday morning that a man parked at the gas pumps was extremely intoxicated. Before deputies could arrive, the man left in a Toyota pickup truck, heading north on Blanding.
When a Clay County deputy came up behind the pickup at the red light of Blanding and Branan Field Road, the driver failed to pull away when the light turned green. The deputy said after 30 to 45 seconds, the driver attempted to wave the deputy's unmarked car around him.
According to the arrest report, the deputy activated his blue lights and was going to make contact with the driver when the pickup pulled away, but maintained the speed limit. A few blocks farther when a second deputy pulled in front of the pickup, the driver made an abrupt lane change and attempted to pass the cruiser. The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County DUI Attorney or an Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer
A third deputy pulled along side the pickup and activated his siren, blocking him in, and all slowed down. Deputies said the driver then attempted to pass on the grass, but could not get around the cruisers. He stopped several hundred yards later.
Deputies said Arron Lee Thompson, 38, resisted efforts to be handcuffed and complained of pain in his ribs and jaw and was taken to Orange Park Medical Center, where a doctor found no injuries.
Once at jail, officials said Thompson's blood-alcohol was measured at .157 -- nearly twice the legal limit.
LAKE FOREST - The Orange County Register reported. Two men were stabbed after they harassed a couple early Sunday morning, police said.
A man, identified as Jason Kiley, and his girlfriend were walking near Trabuco Road and Cherry Avenue when two men in a truck drove by and made disparaging comments, said Orange County Sheriff's Lt. Tom Slayton.
The truck then stopped and the two men jumped from the truck and assaulted Kiley. In the fight, the two men from the truck were both stabbed.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Kiley and his girlfriend deny stabbing either of the men, identified as Kam Burns, 29, and Russell Brown, 28. Both were taken to Mission Hospital in Mission Viejo with non-life-threatening injuries.
Police believe there may have been another man involved in the fight.
The investigation is continuing. No arrests have been made.
GARDEN GROVE - The Orange County Register reported. Police are investigating the possibility that the woman found dead in a hotel room was an Orange County escort.
Police are looking into an Internet escort service, Humaniplex Orange County, after they received phone calls alerting them to a possible connection between the site and Ashley Nicole Lilly.
Police did not say how many phone calls came in about the connection.
Lilly, 24, of Inglewood, was found dead on Friday at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in the 12000 block of Harbor Boulevard. Police said they are investigating Lilly's death as a homicide but have released little additional information.
A post on Humaniplex Orange County on Saturday alerted its members to beware of a killer on the loose after an escort, with the pseudonym "Queen Sugar," was killed in an Orange County hotel.
"One of our own level 2 girls was just murdered in a fairly busy hotel," one post read today.
In another thread, users identified Lilly as "Queen Sugar."
One person wrote: "Wow ... one of our own ... my prayers go out to her family. ... This is way too crazy. ... RIP QUEEN."
On her profile, Queen Sugar identifies herself as a 24-year-old in the Los Angeles area. She registered with the Humaniplex site in January.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
Queen Sugar's profile says she will be in Orange County on Aug. 19 and 20 at a hotel near the I-5 freeway and Harbor Boulevard. She posted she will be in Garden Grove with the message, "Don't miss out."
Queen Sugar wrote: "Hey Fellas. ... I'm Moving to Orange County. ... I've been treated so well when ever I visit. ... I decided to make it my PERMANENT Home. Come Welcome SUGAR to the NEIGHBORHOOD."
Sgt. Bill Allison of the Garden Grove police said they could not confirm that Lilly is Queen Sugar or that she was a member of the Humaniplex Web site.
Allison said they are planning to interview Lilly's family about the phone calls police received citing the possible connection.
LOS ANGELES - The Orange County Register reported. The Los Angeles County coroner has ruled Michael Jackson's death a homicide, a law enforcement official told The Associated Press, a finding that makes it more likely criminal charges will be filed against the doctor who was with the pop star when he died.
The coroner determined a fatal combination of drugs was given to Jackson hours before he died June 25 in his rented Los Angeles mansion, according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the findings have not been publicly released. Forensic tests found the powerful anesthetic propofol acted together with at least two sedatives to cause Jackson's death, the official said.
Dr. Conrad Murray, a Las Vegas cardiologist who became Jackson's personal physician weeks before his death, is the target of a manslaughter investigation by the Los Angeles Police Department. According to a search warrant affidavit unsealed Monday in Houston, Murray told investigators he administered a 25-milligram dose of propofol around 10:40 a.m. after spending the night injecting Jackson with two sedatives in an unsuccessful attempt to get him to sleep.
The warrant, dated July 23, states that lethal levels of propofol were found in Jackson's system. Besides the propofol and two sedatives, the coroner's toxicology report found other substances in Jackson's system but they were not believed to have been a factor in the singer's death, the official said.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Murray has spoken to police and last week released a video saying he "told the truth and I have faith the truth will prevail." His attorney, had no immediate comment but has previously said Murray never administered anything that "should have" killed Jackson.
A call to the coroner's office was not returned Monday.
Murray did not say anything about the drugs he gave to Jackson.
The LA Times reported. A teen driver was convicted today of murdering his 16-year-old friend after speeding over 100 mph -- while drunk driving and without a license -- and crashing into a utility pole.
Milad Moulayi, 18, of Santa Ana was the first juvenile in Orange County to be charged as an adult with murder in a drunken driving crash, according to the Orange County criminal attorneys office. He was 17 at the time of the accident.
A jury found Moulayi guilty of one count of second-degree murder for being drunk behind the wheel and one misdemeanor count of driving without a license in the crash last year that killed Mackenzie Frazee. Moulayi's learner's permit had been suspended the day before the accident.
After having several drinks at a party at his Santa Ana home on Aug. 28, 2008, Moulayi insisted on driving Frazee back to her house, prosecutors said. While driving his Mercedes Benz between 102 mph and 112 mph on Newport Avenue in Tustin, he lost control, crossed the center median and crashed into a utility pole, splitting the car in half. The front half of the car caught fire and firefighters had to cut Frazee free.
She was taken to Western Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead. Moulayi was treated for cuts and bruises. He had a blood alcohol level of .11%.
He faces a maximum sentence of 15 years to life in state prison and is scheduled to be sentenced in October.
The Orange County Register reported. A San Juan Capistrano man whose home was raided in June in a search for methamphetamine pleaded not guilty this week to two felony counts and one drug-paraphernalia charge stemming from a March arrest. The felony charges involved criminal threats and domestic violence, according to court records.
Sheriff's deputies searched Ty William Maddox's home on Via Inez on June 2 on suspicion that he was dealing methamphetamine. There is no record of Maddox being arrested after that raid, though authorities reportedly found a glass meth pipe, slightly less than a gram of meth in plastic bags and a gram scale. Police also reported finding assorted pills, a debit card and a hospital card, all under different women's names.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
The home is in a neighborhood west of Marco Forster Middle School.
Sheriff's spokesman Jim Amormino said suspects sometimes are not arrested after narcotics searches, but he did not elaborate.
Maddox pleaded guilty in July last year to drug-possession charges, but charges of drug sales were dropped.
According to a report commissioned by Idaho state police in 2004, the average street value of a gram of meth is roughly $80.
The Orange County Register reported. As cowboys celebrate at the San Juan Rodeo, they had better plan for a designated driver. The Orange County Sheriff's Department will be cracking down on drunken driving on Saturday with a Orange County DUI checkpoint.
Deputies will check for invalid licenses and impaired drivers.
San Juan Capistrano Police Services received $28,764 in grant funds to continue setting up checkpoints throughout the year.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County DUI Attorney or an Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer.
The sheriff's department says these checkpoints have been proven effective in reducing DUI fatalities. They also increase public awareness.
HUNTINGTON BEACH-The Orange County Register reported. A Huntington Beach man was arrested Wednesday afternoon on allegations he abducted, sodomized and raped an autistic 7-year-old girl.
The girl was playing in the back yard of her apartment complex when she was taken against her will to a neighboring apartment, where she was assaulted and then released, Huntington Beach Police said in a news release issued late Friday
The girl's parents called the police and after interviewing her and witnesses, arrested Daniel Blas Flores, 27, who they found hiding in the bedroom of his apartment.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
Flores was taken to the Huntington Beach City Jail, where he was booked on sexual assault charges.
Anyone with information is asked to call the police hotline at 714-375-5066 or Det. Cathy Meza at 714-536-5970.
The Orange County Register reported. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police today announced they are narrowing the search for Ryan Alexander Jenkins and have found credible evidence that suggests he is in Canada.
Officials said although they cannot release details about their investigation, they are currently using a variety of techniques in an effort to bring Jenkins in, reported Sgt. Duncan Pound of the RCMP.
Jenkins, 32, is accused of killing his wife and swimsuit model Fiore, 28, of Los Angeles. Fiore's body was found mutilated and stuffed in a suitcase near a Buena Park apartment complex in the 7400 block of Franklin Street on Aug. 15.
The suspect may have fled to Canada and Pound said new evidence uncovered by the RCMP seems to prove he is still in the country.
"In the interest of the safety of the Canadian public, the police and Ryan Jenkins, the RCMP are urging Ryan Jenkins to peacefully surrender himself to Canadian authorities," Pound said.
The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer.
CTV, a Canadian television station, also reported today that Jenkins' father, Dan Jenkins, would not say whether he has had contact with his son. Dan Jenkins added his lawyers encouraged him not to comment on his fugitive son, CTV reported.
The Orange County Criminal Attorneys office has filed felony murder charges against Jenkins and issued a $10 million warrant for his arrest. The Canadian police have also issued an Orange County warrant for Jenkins.
Anyone with additional information is encouraged to contact Buena Park Police Department Detective Greg Pelton at 714-562-3992 or Supervising District Attorney Investigator Ed Berakovich at 714-347-8492
Hillsborough, N.C. -- Wral.com reported. Prosecutors and defense attorneys made their closing arguments Thursday in the case of an Orange County criminal charged with fatally shooting his father before opening fire at Orange High School. The jury got the case at about 4:30 p.m. They were dismissed for the day at 5 p.m. and are expected to resume deliberations Friday morning.
Alvaro Castillo, 22, is charged with killing Rafael Huezo Castillo, on Aug. 30, 2006, and then driving to Orange High School with a cache of weapons and opening fire. Two students were injured in the school shooting, which ended when school personnel tackled the gunman.
He has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to all charges.
Orange County Criminal Attorney Jim Woodall said Alvaro Castillo planned the attacks to gain notoriety.
"He wants fame. He's got to kill somebody, and he's got to do in a way that gets attention. Only thing he can come up with is the thing that has interested him for a long time: school shootings, mass murders," Woodall said.
Alvaro Castillo's defense attorney, James Williams, countered that argument with an explanation of how Castillo's "delusional belief" led to the acts.
"I'll be the first to admit, a lot of planning went into this," Williams said. "All the planning was driven by this delusional belief that this had to be done."
"The premise that someone sick or delusional can't plan is totally untenable," Williams argued.
He said Alvaro Castillo was goal focused. He had a "false, fixed belief that God wants him to do certain things and that relates to sacrificing his family and sacrificing children at Orange High School," Williams said.
"He had to get done what he felt God wanted him to do."
Woodall countered with excerpts from the suspect's journal, in which he wrote that he knew he would need to ask God for forgiveness. "Why do you say 'God forgive me' if you're doing what God's directing you to do?" Woodall asked.
"He did not know the difference between right and wrong," Williams said. "Indeed, he thought what he was doing was the right thing."
Williams said Alvaro Castillo developed a mental illness to "psychically survive" abuse from his father against himself, siblings and mother.
Orange County Criminal Attorneys sparred over one example of abuse - that Rafael Castillo forced his children eat fruits and vegetables. While Williams said that Rafael Castillo beat his children when they didn't vegetables, Woodall asked, "How much was he enforcing his beliefs about what they eat if his son weighs 195 pounds (in seventh grade)?"
Alvaro Castillo deliberately "manipulated" and "deceived" his mental health providers so they wouldn't latch onto his homicidal desires, Woodall said. "He knows if he tells people too much they're going to stop him," he said.
Since "there's no question" Alvaro Castillo committed the shootings, the defense "demonized" Rafael Castillo and exaggerated physical and verbal abuse by Rafael Castillo, Woodall claimed.
"They've got to create a situation where his murder is a little more palatable to you. The way to do that is to turn him into a demon," he said.
The slaying of Rafael Castillo was violent revenge, Woodall argued. He referred to a statement from Alvaro Castillo's mother, Vicky, that he shot his father multiple times to make sure he didn't suffer and end up in a vegetative condition.
"Shooting dad six times, seven times, while in a totally defenseless position, that's, 'I'm getting back at you for things you've done to me.' That's not, 'I don't want you to suffer.' That's 'I'm (angry) at you, and I'm going to show you: bang, bang, bang,'" Woodall said.
Orange County Defense attorneys urged jurors not to consider the slaying of Rafael Castillo and the school shooting as part of the same event. The abuse and mental illnesses are mitigating factors that could justify lowering the charge to second-degree murder, they argued.
"Rafael Castillo was not killed as some incident or byproduct of another felony," defense attorney Phoebe Dee said. "He was shot in the course of being shot."
She concluded, "The question, ladies and gentleman, is whether or not he was insane at the time these events occurred or whether or not he had diminished capacity. Everything else, I would argue, that the state is going to talk to you about is this white noise; it's distraction."
GOSHEN - Midhudsonnews.com reported. The Public Safety and Emergency Services Committee of the Orange County Legislature Friday went on record opposed to the planned pullout of the State Police from Stewart Airport.
The troopers plan to close the Mid-Hudson crime lab and stop providing police coverage of the airport terminal.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Legislator Alan Seidman, who led the opposition, said forcing police to transport criminal evidence to the State Police lab in Albany would be an undue hardship on area agencies.
"There is a great cost to the county and to all the municipalities if every time there is a DWI or any other kind of arrest needing lab services, the results are going to have to be driven to Albany by the old proverbial chain of command," he said.
Seidman also said it will take longer to get results back from lab work, which could hinder prosecution of cases.
SANTA ANA -- The Orange County Register reported. A disgruntled former worker was sentenced Friday to 50 years to life in prison for the execution-style murder of a rival who had replaced him as supervisor at a landscaping company.
Manuel Gonzales Melgoza, 42, of Santa Ana, was found guilty by a jury in June of first-degree murder plus a sentencing enhancement for using a gun in the Nov. 27, 2006 shooting death of Israel Quiros.
Deputy District Attorney Scott Simmons argued that Melgoza was angry after Quiros took his job at the landscaping company after he was demoted and then fired.
Witnesses testified the Melgoza waited near Quiros' Stanton neighborhood on the day of the shooting and followed when Quiros left for work.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Quiros first attempted to lose his pursuer by turning into a neighborhood in Garden Grove, according to Simmons, but when Melgoza followed, Quiros stopped his car and got out.
Melgoza then shot Quiros once in the shoulder with a rifle from close range, Simmons said, and then walked up, put the rifle to the back of Quiros' head, and executed him.
During his trial, Melgoza claimed that Quiros had been following him and that he had acted in self-defense.
GARDEN GROVE -The Orange County Register reported. Investigators with the Garden Grove Police believe a woman who was found dead in a hotel room this morning was the victim of a homicide, authorities said.
The 24-year-old woman was found inside a room at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, 12021 Harbor Blvd., at 9:51 a.m. after police received a call of suspicious circumstances at the hotel, said Lt. Travis Whitman. Officers entered the room and found the woman inside.
Police held a press conference at 2:30 p.m. today but little information was available.
Police have not yet identified the woman who was found dead in the room by hotel staff, Whitman said.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Because the investigation is only hours old, police could not yet determine how the woman was killed, Whitman said. Details about where in the room she was found were also not available.
He added the hotel has surveillance cameras and investigators are working on getting the tapes.
Police are looking for witnesses and continue to investigate, Whitman said.
ANAHEIM - The Orange County Register reported. A Yorba Linda man was hospitalized and arrested on suspicion of Orange County DUI and driving under the influence after his erratic driving apparently caused a chain reaction of collisions on the eastbound 91 freeway west of Weir Canyon Road on Friday morning, the California Highway Patrol said. Witnesses began reporting a drunk driver in a black Dodge Durango SUV driven by Richard Hildreth, 33, in the FasTrak lane of the eastbound 91 around 9:20 a.m., said CHP officer Devon Boatman. Just east of Imperial Highway, the Durango rear-ended a Hyundai Elantra, driven by a 57-year-old woman, which spun out to the right shoulder, Boatman said. The Durango continued on, drunk driving against the center median, sparks flying, Boatman said. Witnesses on the road phoned authorities, telling them the Durango hit as many as 15 of the plastic yellow polls that separate regular traffic from the toll lanes. Once the SUV reached the truck scales, the vehicle struck the center divider before slowing and eventually careening through all lanes. A Nissan 350Z, driven by a man who was following the Durango while on the phone with police, slowed and stopped in the FasTrak lane as the SUV crashed to the right shoulder. That is when a Toyota Tundra struck the Nissan, leaving it mangled, before hitting two other vehicles. Several other vehicles were seen on the right shoulder of the freeway. At least three people were injured in this DUI accident - two with possibly critical injuries. Hildreth, who refused officers' commands to get out of his vehicle, which caught fire while on the right shoulder, was removed from the vehicle and put in handcuffs on a back board, Boatman said. He was taken to UCI Medical Center and was expected to be booked on suspicion of Orange County DUI and driving under the influence, Boatman said. Hildreth also had a medical condition, Boatman said, although the officer would not specify what the condition was.
The Orange County Register reported. All 38 law enforcement agencies are planning Orange County DUI enforcement operations - checkpoints and saturation patrols - running through Labor Day weekend.
The operations are funded by the California Office of Traffic Safety, and are part of a nationwide effort to help Orange County DUI arrests, that includes $13 million in advertisements.
In 2008, more than 11,700 people died in highway crashes involving a drunk driver with a blood alcohol concentration of .08 or higher. In California, the provisional number for 2008 was 1,029 deaths, a 9 percent reduction from the year before.
The Anaheim Police Department provided the following schedule of Orange County DUI enforcement operations:
• OC DUI Checkpoint - Friday, Aug. 28, 7 p.m.-3 a.m., Fullerton
• Orange County Drunk Driving Checkpoint - Friday, Sept. 4, 7 p.m.-3 a.m., Dana Point
• DUI Task force operation - Saturday, Sept. 5, 8 p.m.-2 a.m., La Habra
• OC Drunk Driving Saturation patrols - Saturday, Aug. 29, 8 p.m.-3 a.m., County of Orange
• DUI Checkpoint - Saturday, Aug. 29, 7 p.m.-3 a.m., Anaheim
• DUI Checkpoint - Friday, Aug. 28, 7 p.m.-3 a.m., Irvine
• Drunk Driving Saturation patrols - Saturday, Sept. 5, 8 p.m. - 3 a.m., County of Orange
• Saturation patrols - Sunday, Sept. 6, 8 p.m. - 3 a.m., County of Orange
• Saturation patrols - Friday, Aug. 21, through Monday, Sept. 7
Orange County agencies will be conducting a total of 30 saturation patrols funded by a state grant in the cities of Brea, Buena Park, Cypress, Fountain Valley, Fullerton, Huntington Beach, La Habra, Los Alamitos, Newport Beach, Orange, Placentia, Seal Beach, and Westminster, and at UC Irvine and the Cal State Fullerton.
BUENA PARK, Calif. (CBS/AP) CBS News reported. New gruesome details have emerged in the murder of a former swimsuit model, who police believe may have been killed by her reality TV contestant ex-husband. Photos: Jasmine Fiore, Bikini Model Murder Photos The teeth and fingers of 28-year-old Jasmine Fiore were removed before her naked body was stuffed into a suitcase and thrown in a California trash can over the weekend, according to police. A preliminary coroner's report indicated Fiore had been strangled. Police believe Jenkins went to such horrific lengths to impede identification of Fiore's body. The former swimsuit model's ex-husband, reality TV contestant Ryan Alexander Jenkins, 32, is the prime suspect and authorities have already charged him with her murder. There is now a manhunt going on for Jenkins, who is Canadian. Fiore, a former swimsuit model, and Jenkins were briefly married after a quickie Las Vegas wedding this year, and had been fighting in recent months. Prosecutors said the two checked into a San Diego hotel last Thursday, and Jenkins checked out the next morning. Fiore was not seen alive again.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
The two met in Las Vegas after Jenkins finished taping for "Megan Wants a Millionaire" in early March, the couple got married on March 18, said Fiore's mother, Lisa Lepore.
But in May, "they had a big blowout," and fought because he was jealous of her ex-boyfriends, Lepore said. "She had the marriage annulled."
Jenkins then went to Mexico to do another reality TV show, but struggled to get Fiore back when he returned. It was not immediately clear which show he appeared on.
"He convinced her ... that he was really the guy for her," Lepore said. "He wrote poems and stories, and prayed, and (claimed he) had this huge spiritual awakening."
Jenkins had been violent toward Fiore before. Court records show that Jenkins was charged in June in Clark County, Nev., with a misdemeanor count of "battery constituting domestic violence" for allegedly hitting Fiore in the arm and is scheduled for trial in December.
Jenkins also has a criminal history in his hometown of Calgary. He was sentenced to 15 months of probation in January 2007 on an unspecified assault charge, according to the Alberta, Canada Ministry of Justice. No further details were available.
The Orlando Sentinal reported. Orange County officials tried to fire a Cheney Elementary teacher after he let a middle-school student sit in his lap -- nearly two years before his recent arrest on a child pornography charge, according to personnel documents released Friday. But Robert Sewell Barth successfully fought Orange County Public Schools to keep his job, and his punishment was reduced to 15 days suspension without pay. Barth, 57, was arrested July 27 on a federal charge of receiving child pornography. Federal Bureau of Investigation agents found more than 1,100 images and at least 25 videos of child pornography on his computer, prosecutors said. District officials' 2007 attempt to fire the second-grade teacher took place after he was accused twice in five months of inappropriately touching students, according his personnel file. An attorney for Barth did not return a call requesting comment.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
District spokeswoman Kathy Marsh did not comment on the case, saying it was against district policy to discuss former employees.Barth, an Army veteran, former foster parent and one-time teacher of the year, admitted to investigators that he purchased child pornography and was addicted to porn, federal prosecutors said. He is on home confinement while awaiting trial.The state Department of Children and Families closed Barth's foster home Aug. 6, a department spokeswoman said. It ceased placing children there in February when it learned of the FBI investigation.
In May 2007, an anonymous parent complained Barth grabbed students by the waist and tickled or poked them. The tipster did not name a victim.
Ten students were interviewed, and the district found no evidence of misconduct. Regardless, Barth was ordered to "immediately stop initiating physical contact" with children, according his personnel file.
Four months later, a fellow teacher walked into Barth's classroom before the start of a school day to find a female middle-school student sitting Barth's lap. The seventh grader was at Cheney Elementary as part of a district extended-day program, which provides supervised activities before school.
Barth acknowledged in a hand-written statement that the student sat in his lap, and the incident was the result of a "lapse in judgment."
Principal Lorrie Butler concluded Barth's behavior was "inappropriate and can not be condoned," according to an Oct. 10 letter.
The district recommended Barth be fired. But after talks between the district's attorneys and Barth's legal representatives, the teacher was suspended without pay. Barth was reprimanded, and was directed to not be alone with any student, among other things.
Marsh said she could not release documents about the decision to keep Barth because their release would violate the district's attorney-client privilege
School officials learned of the FBI investigation in December, and Barth was immediately relieved from duty with pay. Last month, Barth failed to tell his employers about his arrest, which is a violation of district rules, according to personnel documents.
Barth resigned from his teaching post Aug. 5.
Willoughby Mariano can be reached at wmariano@orlandosentinel.com or 407-420-5171
SANTA ANA - The Orange County Register reported. A Coto de Caza man was sentenced to 27 years in prison today for defrauding about 2,500 victims in a $55 million scheme in which he told investors he would use their money for a technology startup, but instead funneled the cash to pay for his homes and to fund his unprofitable golf companies.
Colin Nathanson, 62, was president and CEO of Giant Golf Co. and Play Big Enterprises Inc., both of which sold golf clubs and accessories out of Irvine and Rancho Santa Margarita.
Today, at his sentencing hearing, Nathanson apologized for his actions to U.S. District Judge Cormac Carney.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
"I just want to reiterate and whatever I did ... there's no excuse. I can't explain how sorry I am how bad the things are that I did ... what I did was terrible, sir,'' he said. "There was never intent to hurt anybody. One thing led to another and it just got out of hand. And it was wrong."
He pleaded guilty in October 2008 to six counts of mail fraud, and admitted that he induced several hundred people to invest in what he said were ownership interests in a privately held, Internet-based technology company, according to prosecutors.
The company didn't exist. Instead, Nathanson used the investors' money to finance the golf companies and pay for personal expenses such as gambling debts and making payments for three houses in Coto de Caza and Trabuco Canyon.
During the hearing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Keenan said Nathanson ran a "sophisticated scheme,'' and said one victim was a federal agent who probed fraud cases. The agent thought the scam was legitimate, and even encouraged friends and family to invest.
"He was charged here because he lied to people over and over again,'' Keenan said. "He wasn't straight with his investors. ... He kept them in dark."
Carney said it was evident Nathanson used some of the money to fund his "comfortable lifestyle." He also said he was disturbed how Nathanson betrayed the trust of his victims, and that it didn't appear the victims would be able to get restitution.
"Mr. Nathanson's crimes were terrible and serious ones,'' the judge said upon imposing the sentence. "The victims have lost their savings, retirements and peace of mind ... in essence I believe a life sentence is an appropriate sentence."
BUENA PARK, Calif. -- CHRON.com reported. An ex-model found stuffed in a bloodstained suitcase without fingers or teeth was so badly mutilated that authorities had to use breast implants to identify her body, prosecutors said Friday.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Marshals Service offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of Ryan Alexander Jenkins, a wealthy reality TV show contestant who was charged Thursday with the Orange County murder of Jasmine Fiore.
Detectives tracked the serial number on the implants because they could not use fingerprints or dental records, said Farrah Emami, a spokeswoman for the Orange County Criminal attorneys office.
Fiore's body was found Aug. 15 in a trash bin in Buena Park, an Orange County city about 20 miles southeast of Los Angeles.
Authorities believe Jenkins, a contestant on VH1's "Megan Wants a Millionaire," may have fled more than 1,000 miles to reach his native Canada.
Buena Park police Lt. Steve Holliday said Jenkins, a native of Calgary, Alberta, is possibly armed with a handgun. Prosecutors recommended bail of $10 million upon his arrest and said he had significant resources to finance his flight.
Prosecutors revealed the U.S. Coast Guard briefly pursued a boat Wednesday that was licensed to Jenkins, but it eluded them. The Coast Guard was unable to verify that Jenkins was aboard but believe he was, Emami said.
The chase occurred off the coast of northwest Washington, a few hours before Jenkins' boat was discovered at the Point Roberts, Wash., marina, about 25 miles south of Vancouver. The Canadian border is a short walk from the spit of U.S. territory.
Jenkins' car was found at a marina in the northwest Washington town of Blaine, just across the bay from Point Roberts.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Canadian authorities have since ended a massive border search using helicopters, ground police and dogs but continued their investigation, Royal Canadian Mounted Police Sgt. Duncan Pound said. Tips in Canada were "on the low end," he said.
However, a Thursday news conference in Southern California prompted phone tips to American authorities that were being pursued, said Tom Hession, chief inspector for the U.S. Marshals Service's regional fugitive task force.
He declined to elaborate.
Jenkins is a real estate developer and investor who is also the son of a prominent Canadian architect. On the reality show, he said he had between $1 million and $2.5 million, Hession said, adding the money could help Jenkins stay ahead of police or work against him.
"It could be an area where he may not have access to that wealth, where he has assets that he has to sell or something like that and then he's going to have to expose himself to potential arrest," Hession said.
Hession declined to say if authorities were watching Jenkins' assets as part of their investigation.
"When we're looking for someone who's a fugitive, we try to find out everything we can about that person," he said. "We're going to turn every rock over."
Fiore and Jenkins were briefly married in a quickie Las Vegas wedding in March and had been fighting in recent months. Prosecutors said the two checked into a San Diego hotel Aug. 13, and Jenkins checked out the next morning. Fiore was not seen alive again.
Fiore's mother, Lisa Lepore, told The Associated Press her daughter had the marriage annulled in May. However, there were no court records of an annulment in either Clark County, Nev., where the couple was married, or in Los Angeles County, where they most recently lived.
Court records show Jenkins was charged in June in Clark County, Nev., with a misdemeanor count of "battery constituting domestic violence" for allegedly hitting Fiore in the arm and was set to be tried in December.
Neal Tomlinson, a partner at the law firm representing Jenkins in that case, declined to comment.
In his hometown of Calgary, Jenkins was sentenced to 15 months probation in January 2007 on an unspecified assault charge. The Canadian TV network CTV said Jenkins also was ordered to seek counseling for domestic violence and sex addiction.
Alain Hepner, Jenkins' attorney in that matter, did not return a call seeking comment.
In Calgary, Paulina Chmielecka said she was engaged to Jenkins for 2 1/2 years and never saw a violent side.
"The guy was a great guy, as far as I knew he was very happy," she told CTV. "In our relationship, we had our fights -- everyone does -- but I would never say, 'Well, he could have murdered someone.' There's no way."
A resume posted on the professional networking site LinkedIn.com says Jenkins has a license to fly commercial airplanes and has dabbled in several development enterprises and investments since graduating from college in 1999. Those include Townscape Development Inc., a condo project undertaken in Calgary with his father, architect Daniel Jenkins.
The elder Jenkins did not return phone or e-mail messages at his office.
After taping for "Megan Wants a Millionaire" finished in early March, Jenkins met Fiore in a Las Vegas casino and the two got married, said Lepore, Fiore's mother. Court records show the date of marriage as March 18.
But in May "they had a big blowout" and fought because he was jealous of her ex-boyfriends, Lepore said.
Jenkins then went to Mexico to do another reality TV show but struggled to get Fiore back when he returned.
"He convinced her during that month that he was really the guy for her," Lepore said. "He wrote poems and stories, and prayed, and (claimed he) had this huge spiritual awakening."
The U.S. has filed a provisional apprehension warrant with Canada that allows officials there to issue a Canadian arrest warrant based on the U.S. charges, said Hession, the U.S. marshals official. The Canadian government will extradite defendants to the U.S. but only with reassurances that they will not face the death penalty in the U.S.
Emami, the Orange County district attorney spokeswoman, has said her office is not pursuing the death penalty.
_____
Gillies reported from Toronto. Associated Press Writers Derrik J. Lang and Robert Jablon in Los Angeles also contributed to this report.
The LA Times reported. An Orange County criminal who posed as a successful sporting goods entrepreneur has been sentenced to 27 years in federal prison after admitting to a complex fraud that prosecutors said cost more than 2,000 investors $55 million. Before his arrest in 2005, Colin Nathanson was president of Giant Golf Co., also known as Play Big Enterprises Inc., which marketed golf clubs and accessories. He pleaded guilty last year to mail fraud and was sentenced Tuesday by U.S. District Judge Cormac Carney in Santa Ana. The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense LawyerIn admissions to the court, Nathanson acknowledged that he misled investors in his Nathanson Investment Trust into thinking they were buying ownership in a privately held Internet-based company. Prosecutors said he represented that the company was about to conduct an initial public offering, then changed the pitch and claimed instead that it was in merger talks with a large public company. In fact, Nathanson admitted, the private Internet company was fictitious and he used investors' money to keep his money-losing golf companies going and to pay for personal extravagances, including gambling expenses and payments for three houses.In addition to the Nathanson Investment Trust scheme, which cost investors $28.4 million, Assistant U.S. Atty. Robert J. Keenan said, Nathanson also admitted to fraudulently inducing investments in various other projects, including an Internet-based casino, based on false claims that the investments paid 2% to 5% per month. The Securities and Exchange Commission had his assets frozen in 2004, but by then the vast majority of the investors' funds had disappeared. Nathanson, 62, who lived in Coto de Caza before his arrest, was the subject of cease-and-desist orders issued by state securities regulators in California in 1994, Ohio in 2002 and North Dakota in 2004. His scams cost victims a total of about $55 million, Keenan said. Orange County Criminal Attorneys told Carney the minimum sentence under federal advisory guidelines was about 24 years; Nathanson's attorney from the federal public defender's office argued that such a penalty was excessive and said five or 10 years was appropriate. In handing down the 27-year sentence, the judge said that it was in the middle of the range suggested by the sentencing guidelines and that the victims of the financial crime had been seriously harmed. Carney has a reputation for giving tough sentences to white-collar criminals. Three years ago, he sentenced Orange County money manager James P. Lewis Jr. to 30 years in prison for swindling 1,600 investors out of $156 million in a Ponzi scheme so calculated and long-running that the judge called it a "crime against humanity." Last year, Carney rejected a plea agreement between Broadcom Corp. co-founder Henry Samueli and prosecutors that would have given the Orange County billionaire, who owns the Anaheim Ducks, probation for lying to the SEC about his alleged role in the backdating of stock options issued by the Irvine computer chip company. Broadcom's other founder, Henry T. Nicholas III, and former Chief Financial Officer William J. Ruehle have pleaded not guilty in the case. Carney said he wanted to see how the evidence played out in their cases before deciding whether Samueli should escape time behind bars.
The Daily Pilot reported on an Orange County DUI in Costa Mesa. An Upland teen was recovering in the hospital Thursday, only hours after police said he drunkenly lost control of a Porsche in Costa Mesa, crashing it into an electrical box and flipping the car onto its roof near a 73 Toll Road onramp. Costa Mesa authorities arrested Dominick Anthony McCoy, 18, on suspicion of Orange County DUI (driving under the influence) Wednesday just before midnight after emergency personnel were able to cut him free from the Porsche police said he was driving. According to police, about 11:40 p.m. Wednesday a witness called police to report a Porsche speeding southbound on Bear Street toward Paularino Avenue. Firefighters arrived within minutes and used specialized rescue equipment to cut McCoy and his passenger, 38-year-old Dorothy Dunlap of Newport Beach, out. Both were rushed to Santa Ana's Western Medical Center Trauma Center.McCoy had serious head injuries, police said. They booked him on suspicion of Orange County DUI and left him with medical personnel to recover. Court records show that McCoy had two traffic-related tickets in 2005.When he was 14 years old he was cited for driving without a license and failure to stop and three months later, when he was 15, he was cited again for failure to stop. McCoy will need a very good Orange County DUI attorney.
The Daily Pilot reported on an Orange County criminal arrest for shooting her husband. Campbell shot her husband once for running around with other women. She shot him twice more for beating her and bootlegging whiskey. And she shot him yet again for the Nevada mining tycoon she still loved. "I didn't mean to do it," Mary Campbell sobbed after being carted off to the county jail in Santa Ana in June 1921, charged with the Orange County murder of her husband after chasing him into a beach tent with a gun and shooting him dead on Balboa Peninsula.Mary and Jess Campbell had been quarreling that day at their home near East Bay Avenue and Adams Street in Newport Beach. A Newport Beach criminal attorney would be needed in this case. Witnesses heard a shot ring out before seeing Jess Campbell run from the house, followed by his wife, who was holding a gun, the Los Angeles Times reported June 29, 1921. Jess Campbell, an oil worker, ran into a beach tent, where he pleaded for protection with its inhabitant, Alice Carson, the Times reported. The couple had been separated for about a year at the time of the shooting, and Mary Campbell had started divorce proceedings. Police also suspected Mary had been drinking that day -- they took a bottle of whiskey from her after the shooting. Contemporary news accounts characterize Mary Campbell as "hysterical" and "on the verge of a nervous breakdown" during preliminary court hearings after the shooting. "Her face was white and tense throughout the proceedings and frequently she turned her head and leaned against a woman at her side and sobbed," the Los Angeles Times reported on one of Mary Campbell's court appearances Aug. 4, 1921.During Mary Campbell's trial, defense attorney Guy Eddie tried to convince the jury that constant beatings from hard-drinking Jess Campbell, as well being dumped years before by a Nevada businessman she still loved, drove her insane. A jury of eight men and four women found Mary Campbell guilty, but reduced the charges down to Orange County manslaughter. She served six years at San Quentin for the crime
The LA Times reported. Almost seven years after his three-run, seventh-inning homer altered the course of the 2002 World Series, former Angel Scott Spiezio still hears about his blast for the ages. "Everyone's got a story associated with it," said the utilityman, who is trying to revive his career with the Orange County Flyers of the independent Golden Baseball League. Spiezio heard from an angry San Francisco fan who blamed him for getting stuck with T-shirts and bumper stickers proclaiming the Giants world champions. He heard from a friend who celebrated the homer, a Game 6 shot that cut the Giants' lead to 5-3, at a bar in North Dakota during a bachelor party. He also heard from a photographer who was shooting a wedding during the game. According to the photographer, about 150 guests kept peering through a window to see what was happening on a television in an adjacent room. Spiezio asked how the bride felt about attention being diverted from her wedding. Responded the photographer: "She was the one right in front of the TV." Trivia timeWhich Giants pitcher gave up Spiezio's World Series homer? Tweet the truthDavid Whitley of fanhouse.com thanked disgraced Cleveland Browns receiver Donte' Stallworth for putting an end to the worst charade in sports: the prepared statement. As evidence, Whitley presented both the official statement made by Stallworth after NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell suspended him for the season after his DUI manslaughter conviction and what Stallworth had to say on Twitter a few hours earlier. First, the statement: "Commissioner Goodell called me this morning. Obviously, I am disappointed, but, as I said previously, I accept the commissioner's decision. Regardless of the length of my suspension, I will carry the burden of Mr. Reyes' death for the rest of my life." The Twitter post: "TO ALL MY FAM IN THE LEAGUE: GOD BLESS Y'ALL, STAY HEALTHY, GOOD LUCK THIS SEASON!!! I'M WATCHIN EVERY [EXPLETIVE] GAME."
Here are a few websites to visit:
Orange County Dui Attorney
Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer
Orange County Dui Lawyer
Orange County DUI Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County DUI Attorney
SEAL BEACH- The Orange County Register reported. Anthony Panzica estimates he kept more than 12,000 possible Orange County drunken drivers off the road in six years and he believes that number could have skyrocketed if not for financial hardship.
Panzica, founder of Scooter Patrol, has announced that he has closed the nonprofit that scoured beach-city bars and transported patrons safely home.
At its peak, Scooter Patrol had about 15 volunteers ready to whisk bar patrons home from Long Beach to Huntington Beach.
"With for-profit businesses going under all around us it's unrealistic for me to think our small nonprofit can survive in this climate," said Panzica, 43, of Seal Beach.
Kirk Waters, general manager of O'Malley's bar in downtown Seal Beach, said Panzica's business was a positive idea but economic pressure eventually took its toll.
"He was consistent all the way through and really fought a good battle but unfortunately it didn't survive," Waters said.
The dip in the economy has prompted more patrons to lean toward carpooling, which may have contributed to fewer people taking Panzica up on his offer, Waters said.
As Panzica struggles with his decision to leave behind a business he hoped would be altruistic and also somewhat lucrative, he reflects on how it came to be and how it ultimately had to end.
Panzica did not have ambitions to run and operate a business to taxi DUI drivers all over the city. Much like his first career, it sort of fell into his lap.
At 18, he was working as a waiter in Venice Beach when he was approached by a talent agent. He didn't quite fulfill the cliché waiter-turned-actor, but he came close.
"The agent said to me, 'I think that you could be a great James Dean look-a-like,'" Panzica said. "I did my first gig within two weeks of meeting the guy and it turned into a 15-year career."
Panzica turned in his rebel persona and moved to Orange County in 2002 where he came up with a plan to keep Orange County drunk drivers off the roads.
He determined that many Drunk Drivers in Orange County don't like to leave their cars overnight in a bar parking lot and some make the decision to get behind the wheel when they shouldn't.
He would throw a scooter in a trunk, drive partygoers home in their cars and zip home on a GoPed.
But he didn't own a scooter nor could he afford to buy one so he tried the next most logical thing and borrowed one.
Panzica went from bar to bar in the Sunset Beach, Seal Beach and Long Beach area. He'd look for people who appeared intoxicated and had their in car keys in hand. Then, he simply offered a ride.
The first man he took home gave him $11.
Scooter Patrol cost about $8,000 to $10,000 a year to run, most of that being in products, Panzica said.
Local bars such as O'Malley's and Mahé in Seal Beach and Legends in Long Beach contributed when they could. GoPed provided the scooters and Scott's Motor Sports maintained Panzica's fleet.
Panzica talked to local government officials, who supported his idea but said they could not contribute financially because of liability issues.
Legends bar owner Gene Rotondo said he will miss the Scooter Patrol, especially the energetic man who ran its operations.
"If we had people like (Anthony) running the government we wouldn't have the problems we have today," Rotondo said of Panzica's work ethic and business sense.
"He provides a service that, in some cases, could be the difference between life and death," he said. "If they are saving one person's life... I consider it a huge impact."
Panzica said he lost his sponsors about nine months ago and his service started to decline. He said the decision to close Scoot Patrol has weighed heavy on him for months but he is proud of the company's accomplishments.
"It's been very sad to have to do this but I have to be realistic about this," he said. "I've never made a substantial amount of money doing this. I was willing to do it because I know nothing that's worth it is easy."
Panzica has moved to Tucson, Ariz. to be with his family and to attend school and pursue a career in natural healing and medicine.
He said he doesn't foresee reopening Scoot Patrol unless the government offers their support.
"Without them being behind us, no I'm not willing to do this anymore," he said. "The government has the resources to fund something like this and do something about Orange County drunk driving."
The Orange County Sheriff's Department
The Capistrano Dispatch reported. Authorities say safer streets are coming to San Juan Capistrano. Increased enforcement measures are in place for the rest of the year thanks to a $28,764 grant awarded by the Office of Traffic Safety to San Juan Capistrano Police Services and the Orange County Sheriff's Department.
At an August 22 checkpoint in San Capistrano, deputies will be checking for valid driver's licenses and impaired drivers.
" DUI checkpoints are an effective tool to keep drunks off the road and to alert the community of our commitment to having safe roadways," said Lt. Dan Dwyer, Chief of Police Services for the city of San Juan Capistrano. "We want to send a clear message to those who are considering driving a motor vehicle after consuming alcohol and / or drugs - Drunk Driving, Over the Limit Under Arrest. To report a drunk driver, call 911."
Last year nearly 1600 people were killed and over 31,000 people were injured in California in drug- and alcohol-related DUI crashes. This grant will focus on reducing those numbers, through both enforcement and education.
The measures taken will specifically target Orange County DUI offenders and drivers with suspended or revoked licenses. These checkpoints when utilized have been shown to significantly reduce DUI fatalities.
In addition, Orange County DUI checkpoints increase public awareness to prevent impaired driving in the first place, and to encourage designating a sober driver.
"When more people drive sober and safely, lives are saved. It's just that simple," said Christopher J. Murphy, Director of the Office of Traffic Safety. "This grant will help make San Juan Capistrano just that much safer of a place to live and work."
Funding for the grant comes from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
The Washington Post reported. They're doing it in front of TV cameras in Orange County, in New York, in Atlanta, even in New Jersey. Real housewives, sipping chardonnay, talking about their loves, their losses, their lives.
They don't talk about the handcuffs too often, but when reality hits the road, more women than ever are being arrested for driving drunk.
"TV shows have made it look hip and cool to stay home and drink," Laura Dean-Moody, president of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, said Wednesday as she helped launch the annual Labor Day weekend crackdown.
It is neither hip nor cool, she pointed out, when women who have been drinking are involved in fatal accidents, which they are an average of about 2,000 times a year.
Although four times as many men as women are arrested nationwide for drunken driving, the number of women facing DUI charges increased by 29 percent during the decade that ended in 2007, a year when 162,493 women were arrested, according to FBI statistics. DUI arrests of men declined 7.5 percent during the same period.
In Virginia, the number of highway fatalities attributed to intoxicated female drivers dropped from 50 in 2007 to 34 last year; the number attributed to intoxicated men increased from 235 to 242. In Maryland, the number of women dui involved in fatal crashes held steady at 16 from one year to the next; the number of men DUI dropped from 141 in 2007 to 122 last year.
No DUI fatalities in the District last year involved women; the number attributed to men dropped from 10 in 2007 to eight last year.
Dean-Moody was joined at the announcement of the national Labor Day weekend crackdown by U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and Capt. Susan H. Culin, commander of the Fairfax County police traffic division.
"Sadly, the number of arrests of women driving under the influence is on the rise," LaHood said. "This is clearly a very disturbing trend."
The annual effort, called Checkpoint Strikeforce, will include sobriety checkpoints in Maryland and Virginia. Maryland State Police plan to operate 30 of them.
The OC Weekly reported. Sunday night, 60 Minutes replayed " DUI: Was It Murder?" Reporter Bob Simon interviewed a prosecutor who pursues murder charges against drunken drivers whose traffic collisions result in deaths of people in the other vehicles. Nassau County, New York, district attorney Kathleen Rice's first successful prosecution against just such a drunken driver resulted in a second-degree murder conviction and sentence of 18 years to life in prison against a 24-year-old insurance salesman with no previous arrests.
At least Andrew Thomas Gallo, the 22-year-old tentatively set to stand trial in Santa Ana Superior Court November 9 on triple murder charges related to an April 9 collision in Fullerton, has a previous Orange County DUI and apparently was not supposed to be behind the wheel. The San Gabriel resident allegedly drove his minivan while intoxicated through a red light, broadsiding a Mitsubishi Eclipse. The driver, Cal State Fullerton student Courtney Stewart, 20, and passengers Nick Adenhart, a 22-year-old Angels pitcher, and Henry Pearson, a 25-year-old law student, were killed. Passenger and former Cal State Fullerton Titan catcher Jon Wilhite, 24, was seriously injured.
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| Andy Quach | ​A few hours after the 60 Minutes report aired on the West Coast, Westminster City Councilman Andy Quach allegedly drove his Mercedes-Benz into a vehicle with three passengers inside before continuing on and slamming into a power pole, knocking out electricity for up to 12 1/2 hours for 300 households. The Orange County Criminal Attorney's Office later revealed Quach had a blood alcohol level of 0.26 percent, which is more than three times the legal limit of 0.08 percent. He was charged with one misdemeanor count of driving under the influence of alcohol, driving with a blood alcohol level of more than 0.08 percent, and an enhancement for having a blood alcohol over 0.20 percent while driving. But applying the logic used to charge drunken drivers with murder, why not hold Quach up on attempted murder when he faces the music Sept. 2 at the West Justice Center in Westminster?
The Daily Pilot reported. Police are looking for three masked men who stormed a Newport Beach bank, emptied the cash drawers, then got away in a white SUV. About 11 a.m., police said, witnesses reported seeing men wearing home-made masks walk into Bank of America, 2501 Eastbluff Drive, in the Eastbluff Shopping Center. "This is a robbery, everyone get on the floor!" the robbers shouted, according to police. Two of the men jumped over the counters and emptied the cash drawers into a white mesh bag, said Sgt. Evan Sailor. The men were in and out of the bank in three minutes, he said. No witnesses reported seeing weapons, he said.
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Orange County Criminal Lawyer
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Officers at the scene found a white Chevy Tahoe reported stolen from Los Angeles this morning unoccupied with the engine running behind the shopping center. Police believe the men used it to get away from the scene and switched cars there.
SANTA ANA The Orange County Register reported. An Anaheim man pleaded guilty today to extortion for contacting a high school band instructor and demanding money and pornographic photos in exchange for keeping silent about allegations she was having sex with a minor.
Miguel Lopez, 23, Anaheim, was sentenced by Superior Court Judge Thomas Goethals to three years probation pursuant to a plea negotiated with the Orange County Criminal Attorney's Office.
Lopez first contacted El Modena High band instructor Carlie Rose Attebury in the spring of 2008 using a fake name on a MySpace account, threatening to expose her sexual relationship with a male student if she did not confess on her own, according to a statement released today from the District Attorney's Office.
Days later, Lopez again contacted Attebury, 30, of Orange, again using a fake name, this time demanding money in exchange for his silence, according to Senior Trial Counsel Todd Spitzer, who prosecuted the case.
Lopez later switched to a Yahoo! e-mail account and demanded at first $20,000 from Attebury, and then later reducing that down to $3,500 plus some sexually explicit photos, Spitzer said.
But Attebury -- after initially complying with some of the demands by e-mailing nude photos of herself -- later went to the Orange Police Department on June 16, 2008 and reported that she was being extorted.
When Lopez was arrested at his Anaheim apartment four days later, he had pornographic images of Attebury on his computer.
Attebury was arrested on Oct. 13, 2008, after Orange Police detectives conducted a follow-up investigation.
She is charged with unlawful sexual intercourse, oral copulation of a minor sexual penetration by foreign object of minor, lewd acts on child, dissuading a witness from reporting a crime, and two misdemeanor counts of violating a protective order.
If convicted, she faces a maximum sentence of nine years and four months in state prison.
Her case was continued today for arraignment in Superior Court on Sept. 22,
Attebury is accused of meeting a 15-year-old male student while working at El Modena High and engaging in various sex acts with him on numerous occasions between February and September 2008 at her home in Orange.
Lopez, a former El Modena High School student, learned of the unlawful sexual relationship after hearing about it from other former students in May of 2008 in a band group of then current and former high school musicians called the Vanguard Percussion Ensemble. Lopez said he played bass drum in the ensemble.
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Orange County Criminal Lawyer
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After the original criminal charges were filed against Attebury for the unlawful sexual relationship, a judge issued a protective order barring her from having any contact with the male student she is charged with molesting or any other student.
Attebury then allegedly violated that protective order by communicating over the Internet on one occasion with the male student and on one occasion with a female student.
SANTA ANA - The Orange County Register reportedCounty prosecutors said today that a Cypress church group leader faces criminal charges for smoking marijuana and having unlawful sex with a teen-age girl in the church's parking lot.
Timothy Han, 21, a youth group leader at Miracle Land Baptist Church, is accused of bringing the 15-year-old girl to the church on June 22, 2008, and engaging in sex, prosecutors said.
Han, of Fullerton, is charged with two felony sex charges and one misdemeanor count of contributing to the delinquency of a minor.
He remains out free on $50,000 bail, and is scheduled to be arraigned Thursday at West Justice Center in Westminster on the charges.The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County Criminal Attorney or an Orange County Criminal Defense Lawyer
Han faces a maximum sentence of three years and eight months in state prison if convicted, prosecutors add.
The Orange County Register reported. A former All-Star pitcher and husband of a "Real Housewives of Orange County" cast member was arrested Saturday on suspicion of Orange County DUI and driving under the influence of alcohol, evading arrest, an Orange County Sheriff's Department spokesman said.
Deputies arrested Matthew Lon Keough, 54, at his Coto de Caza home around 1:30 p.m., according to Jim Amormino, OCSD spokesman.
Amormino said deputies saw Keough drive through a stop sign and when the officers flashed their lights at him he failed to stop. Officers then followed Keough as he slowly drove home, where they arrested him on suspicion of evading arrest, in addition to Orange County drunken driving suspicions.
A blood test found Keough's blood alcohol level about 0.29, nearly four times the legal limit of .08 percent, the Sheriff's Department said.
"At nearly four times the limit, it's extremely dangerous to be on the road," Amormino said. "A little higher and it's not safe to be walking, let alone driving."
Keough was released from Central Men's Jail in Santa Ana at 1:13 a.m. on Sunday after posting bail of $10,000, according to the OCSD arrest logs.
Keough, appeared, along with his former Playboy centerfold wife and three teenage children, in the reality TV show "The Real Housewives of Orange County."
In the show's third season, Keough's wife, Jeana, announced the couple had separated.
From the late '70s to the mid '80s, Keough pitched for a number of Major League Baseball teams including the Oakland Athletics, the New York Yankees, The St. Louis Cardinals, the Chicago Cubs and the Houston Astros.
In 2005, Keough pleaded guilty in 2005 to felony charges of Orange County DUI after he crashed his SUV into another SUV at a Rancho Santa Margarita red light, pushing the SUV into a man walking his bicycle across the street.
The man had to be hospitalized. Keough wandered away from the accident. His blood alcohol level was 2.5 times the legal limit more than three hours after sheriff's deputies tracked down the former Oakland pitcher in a nearby store, according to Amormino.
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Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County DUI Attorney
Keough was arrested in 2007 on charges he violated the terms of his parole and in January 2008 was sentenced to 180 days in jail.
The Orange County Register followed up on an Orange County DUI involving a councilman.Councilman. Andy Quach, who is facing an Orange County DUI after clipping another vehicle and crashing into a pole Aug. 2, might attend Wednesday night's City Council meeting where many are expected to talk about his Orange County DUI arrest.
Quach said he had dinner at West Coast Seafood Buffet on Beach Boulevard and was on his way home when the crash occurred. The councilman's Mercedes S550 took out the Southern California Edison pole, leaving 300 Westminster homes without power for the next 12 hours or so. The Orange County District Attorney charged Quach with an Orange County DUI and blood-alcohol level of more than 0.20 percent. Officials said Quach's blood alcohol level immediately after the accident was 0.26 percent - more than three times the legal limit of 0.08 percent.
Rice said she has received numerous "nasty calls and e-mails" from angry residents asking council members to take Quach off the council. Quite a few e-mails she received called for the councilman's resignation and others said a recall effort will begin, Rice said.
"What people don't understand is that the City Council does not have the authority to do that," she said. "The people put him on the council, and if the people don't like him, they can take him out. I can't do anything as the mayor."
Rice said Quach has canceled his vacation because he was himself hurt in the accident and not in a position to travel.
"He said he wants to be there at the meeting Wednesday and personally apologize to everyone," Rice said. However, she added, Quach had not decided on whether to attend Wednesday night's meeting.
The Orange County Register on Aug 15, 2009, reported on results of an Orange County DUI checkpoint. An Orange County DUI checkpoint on Friday night netted four arrests and 19 citations, police announced today.
Police stopped 212 of the 647 vehicles that drove through the checkpoint at Newport Boulevard and 22nd Street and screened 25 drivers for driving under the influence.
Three people were arrested on suspicion of Orange Count DUI (driving under the influence), police said, along with one driver who was arrested on suspicion of Orange County Drug possession (possessing marijuana for sale).
Police also cited nine people for driving without a license and 10 others for various vehicle code violations and impounded nine cars.
The Orange County Register reported on an Orange County DUI checkpoint this Friday Aug 21, 2009. In Fountain valley, Police will be conducting an Orange County DUI/drivers license checkpoint from 9 p.m. Friday to 3 a.m. Saturday. Orange County DUI checkpoints are common on Friday nights.
Police department officials will disclose the location of the checkpoint on Friday. All vehicles will be checked; and motorists driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs will be arrested. An Orange County DUI is not something you want to have. An Orange County DUI can result in jail time.
Funding for the operation is provided by a grant from the state Office of Traffic Safety, through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
Naples News Reported. The Gulf Coast High School wrestling coach who was arrested on what police reports describe as a drunken road rage has been "suspended indefinitely," according to Collier Superintendent Dennis Thompson.
Shane Matthew Hillis, 24, will not coach this year regardless of the outcome of a district investigation, Thompson said.
Hillis was arrested at the intersection of Goodlette-Frank Road and Vanderbilt Drive on Saturday night.
He was charged with Orange County DUI and two related counts after a witness told deputies he was rear-ended in an apparent case of road rage after Hillis had been giving him an obscene gesture while they drove down the road in separate vehicles.
Allun Hamblett, deputy chief administrative officer for the Collier County School District, said Tuesday the district is investigating the matter.
Hamblett would not elaborate further, citing the open investigation.
The district's code of ethics policy requires all employees to maintain and promote the essentials as expressed in The Code of Ethics and the Principles of Professional Conduct of the Education Profession in Florida.
Among them, an employee can be disciplined for being "found guilty of personal conduct that seriously reduces that person's effectiveness as an employee of the district school board."
These Drunk Drivers in Orange County will need an experienced Orange County DUI Lawyer.
Here are a few websites to visit:
Orange County Dui Attorney
Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer
Orange County Dui Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County DUI Attorney
According to a deputy's report, Hillis asked the officer for a "break" after the stop, and said he was a coach and that he was sorry for his mistakes. As of the 2008-09 wrestling season, Hillis was head coach at Gulf Coast High School, though the arrest report lists his employer as Barron Collier High School.
On Gulf Coast's Web site, Hillis is still listed as the wrestling coach at the school. Barron Collier Athletic Director Mark Rosenbalm said Sunday that Hillis is not employed at his school.
Hillis was charged with DUI, DUI with property damage and leaving the scene of an accident.
He refused a Breathalyzer test, according to an arrest report.
Opinion editor Jeff Lytle contributed to this report.
TMZ reported. Being busted for DUI is nothing new for Matt Keough of " The Real Housewives of Orange County" -- but this latest bust takes the cake. Law enforcement sources tell TMZ they busted Keough on Saturday afternoon when he rolled a stop sign in Coto de Caza, Calif. But Keough didn't stop right away, so the Sheriff's say they had to follow him all the way back to his place. Law enforcement gave him a blood test -- and he was THREE TIMES over the legal limit.
Here are a few websites to visit:
Orange County Dui Attorney
Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer
Orange County Dui Lawyer
Orange County DUI Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney Orange County DUI AttorneyKeough was taken into custody and posted on $10,000 bond according to the O.C. Sheriff's Department. Keough was sentenced to 180 days in an O.C. jail back in January 2008 for violating the probation of a 2005 Orange County DUI arrest.
The LA Times reported. A Newport Beach man has been sentenced to two years in federal prison after he falsely claimed to be an attorney.
Harold Goldstein, 64, had previously been convicted of posing as a lawyer and sentenced to seven years in federal prison. He was released in May and arrested a month later for again impersonating a lawyer, the U.S. attorney's office said.
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Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
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Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
In the second case, Goldstein was sentenced for violating the terms of his supervised release. He claimed on Craigslist that he was an attorney and posted an ad soliciting other attorneys to work for him, authorities said.
The case was investigated by the FBI.
SACRAMENTO Fox40 reports.- CHP arrested Sacramento Sacramento Police Officer Chris Hughes, who goes by "Keith," and booked him in the Sacramento County jail for DUI.
"There are over 1,100 men and women in this department and we're all human. However we do expect our officers to hold themselves to a higher standard," Sgt. Konrad Von Schoech said. A higher standard, even when off-duty. CHP said witnesses spotted the officer in his car along a busy stretch of traffic on Hazel Avenue near Madison late Saturday afternoon. He was asleep at the wheel and his car was in drive. The fire department responded for what they thought may be a medical emergency. But when firefighters got there, they suspected Hughes was DUI and called police. On Monday, we tried to talk with Officer Hughes. No one answered at the front door. "What I can tell you is that a thorough and concise administrative investigation will be conducted by the Sacramento Police Department. And at the conclusion of that investigation, appropriate action will be taken," Von Schoech said
Here are a few websites to visit:
Orange County Dui Attorney
Orange County DUI Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County DUI Attorney . For now, Officer Hughes has been pulled from patrol.
Huntington Beach Independant reported. Jason Wahler, former star of the reality television series "Laguna Beach: The Real OC," was arrested outside a Laguna Beach bar about 10 p.m. July 31 after allegedly hurling his shoes and fists at bouncers seeking to eject him from the bar, according to police. Wahler, 22, who is on probation from a highly publicized 2007 incident in Washington involving an assault with racial slurs, was held overnight at the city jail to sober up and then released on his own recognizance, according to Laguna Beach Police Lt. Jason Kravetz. "We were called to the Marine Room on the report of a man fighting with the bouncers," Kravetz said. "We arrived and found Wahler out front. The bouncers told us he was inside the bar and tried to exit with a drink in his hand. When they stopped him, [they said] he responded by shoving one of them. They kicked him out of the bar, but unbeknownst to them, he got back inside."
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Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
When told to leave a second time, Wahler allegedly removed his shoes and threw them at the bouncers, hitting some patrons instead. A bouncer also alleged Wahler punched him in the eye. He was again ordered out of the bar, and police were summoned.
Police arrested Wahler on suspicion of public intoxication, and a bouncer placed him under citizen's arrest in the battery accusation.
Wahler, a Laguna Beach resident, is due to appear in court on the charges in a month, Kravetz said.
VILLA PARK -The Orange County Register reported. Man rifling through car pulls gun after confronted by teen A car burglar pointed a black handgun at a 16-year-old early this morning when he was confronted while trying to break into a parked car, authorities said.
It was just after 12 a.m. when a 16-year-old saw someone rummaging through his car at the 10000 block of Kenwick Drive, said Lt. Mike Jansen of the Orange County Sheriff's Department.
The 16-year-old started walking toward the vehicle and the man inside started to walk away, Jansen said.
The man inside had gone inside the unlocked Suburban and took out the car stereo.
The teenager began to chase the orange county burglar, who suddenly stopped, and pointed what appeared to be black handgun at the boy, Jansen said.
The burglar jumped inside an SUV that was waiting for him and left the area.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
A description of the suspect was not immediately available, but the SUV was described as a red Ford Explorer, Jansen said.
NEWPORT BEACH - The Orange County Register reported. The Bank of America at Eastbluff Drive and Vista del Sol was robbed just after 11 a.m. Tuesday.
Police are on the scene investigating, but it's unknown yet whether the robber was armed, Lt. Rob Morton of the Newport Beach Police Department.
For more information please visit the following websites.
Orange County Criminal Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Contact the writer: jcassidy@ocregister.com or 714-704-3782
ORANGE - The Orange County Register reported. A five-vehicle crash on the southbound 55 freeway just north of Meats Avenue at about 8:30 a.m. resulted in two people taken to a hospital and a SigAlert declared.
A Ford Explorer, bearing Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District decals, overturned, a black Volkswagen Jetta was spun out and a silver Honda Ridgeline was also involved, said California Highway Patrol Officer Alvin Yamaguchi.
These Drunk Drivers in Orange County will need an experienced Orange County DUI Lawyer.
Here are a few websites to visit:
Orange County Dui Attorney
Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer
Orange County Dui Lawyer
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Yamaguchi said two people from the Explorer, a woman and a minor, were transported to a hospital. The woman was reported to have an arm injury.
Officer Gabe Montoya said a SigAlert was declared at 8:46 a.m. for the No. 4 lane, which lasted until about 9:25 a.m
LOS ANGELES and IRVINE
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- CHP-reported DUI statistics concern only the arrests made by CHP officers, while the fatality totals cover all law enforcement jurisdictions in California, as reports are filed with the state. (File)
CBS
CBS2 News reported. Four traffic deaths were reported over the first 60 hours of the holiday period in Los Angeles County and arrests for drunk driving made by CHP officers were down about 44 percent from last year's total. Emelio Ramirez, 25, of Oxnard, was struck and killed by a hit-and-run drunk driver Christmas Eve while walking in the right-most lane of the San Diego (405) Freeway just south of the Marina (90) Freeway. Sheryl Thacker, 38, and Carmela Rodriguez, 64, both of San Pedro, died Christmas Day when a van they were in crashed and rolled over on the Harbor (110) Freeway near Pacific Coast Highway due to a DUI. Information on the fourth traffic fatality, which was not handled by the CHP, was not immediately available. Only one DUI traffic fatality was reported during the similar time period in 2008. Statewide, there were 16 traffic deaths this year as compared with 18 in 2007. Local CHP officers made 158 DUI arrests between 6 p.m. Wednesday and 6 a.m. Saturday, compared to 282 arrests in the similar period last year, CHP Officer Anthony Martin said. Drunk driving arrests are down by more than a third across the state -- from 1,303 at this point in 2007 to 824 this year, Martin said. Arrests for drunk driving by California Highway Patrol officers in Orange County over the first sixty hours of the holiday period were down about 20 percent from last year's total, it was reported Saturday. Local CHP officers made 42 DUI arrests between 6 p.m. Wednesday and 6 a.m. Saturday, compared to 53 arrests in the similar period last year, CHP Officer Rob Sanchez said. Drunk driving arrests are down by more than a third across the state -- from 1,303 at this point in 2007 to 824 this year, Sanchez said. A teenager died Saturday in the only reported traffic death in an Orange County DUI during the period. The 19-year-old passenger, who was not yet identified, was in a crash involving two allegedly drunk drivers, one of whom was driving the wrong way on the Santa Ana (5) Freeway. One fatality was also reported in Orange County during the similar period in 2007. Statewide 16 traffic deaths were reported as compared to 18 in 2007. CHP-reported DUI statistics concern only the arrests made by CHP officers, while the fatality totals cover all law enforcement jurisdictions in California, as reports are filed with the state.
MIAMI, Florida (CNN) -- Suspended Cleveland Browns wide receiver Donte Stallworth walked out of a Miami jail Friday after serving 24 days out of a 30-day sentence for killing a man while driving under the influence of alcohol.
The NFL has not decided how to discipline Donte Stallworth, who killed a man while driving drunk.
Stallworth, 28, left the jail in the pre-dawn hours of Friday and got into a waiting car, ignoring reporters' questions for comment. It is unclear why he did not serve his entire sentence.
Shortly after he pleaded guilty to DUI manslaughter last month, the National Football League suspended him indefinitely. He will be under house arrest for two years following his release, according to the terms of his plea agreement.
He is also required to donate $2,500 to Mothers Against Drunk Driving, serve eight years of probation and submit to random drug and alcohol testing throughout his probation.
His driver's license was permanently revoked.
Stallworth was driving his black Bentley GT east on the MacArthur Causeway, which connects Miami, Florida, to the South Beach area of Miami Beach, when he struck construction worker Mario Reyes on the morning of March 14, according to prosecutors.
Stallworth had been drinking at a Miami Beach club earlier, according to court documents. His blood alcohol level was 0.126 percent, prosecutors said; Florida's legal limit for Orange County DUI is 0.08.
Reyes, 59, reportedly was heading to a bus stop after work when he was struck. Court documents said he suffered "critical head, chest and abdominal injuries" and died at a hospital.
When police arrived, Stallworth told them he was the driver of the car and admitted striking Reyes. During the June 16 hearing, Stallworth said he offered his "deepest condolences to the Reyes family."
"Though I cannot bring back Mr. Reyes or ease his family's pain, I can and will honor his memory by committing my time, my resources and my voice by educating this community about the dangers of drunk driving," Stallworth said.
He reported to jail immediately after the hearing.
Stallworth could have served up to 15 years in prison on the charge. But state attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle said in a statement that he had cooperated with authorities and had no previous criminal record or traffic violations.
Reyes' family supported the plea agreement, she said.
Stallworth's attorney, Chris Lyons, told CNN sister network HLN last month that Stallworth had reached an amicable financial settlement with Reyes' family, but would not disclose the amount.
Lyons said the length of Stallworth's jail term "had nothing to do with Donte Stallworth being a celebrity, a professional football player or money."
Stallworth has shown genuine remorse and accepted responsibility for his actions, Lyons said.
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said that the league would contact Stallworth's attorney to schedule a meeting with him, after which a final determination would be made on discipline.
Goodell said that there is "ample evidence to warrant significant discipline" under both the NFL's personal conduct and substance abuse policies.
"The conduct reflected in your guilty plea resulted in the tragic loss of life and was inexcusable," Goodell told Stallworth in a letter.
"While the criminal justice system has determined the legal consequences of this incident, it is my responsibility as NFL commissioner to determine appropriate league discipline for your actions, which have caused irreparable harm to the victim and his family, your club, your fellow players and the NFL."
Goodell notified NFL clubs earlier this year that there would be increased emphasis on addressing driving under the influence and other misconduct, the league said. It noted the NFL offers a "safe rides" program used by most clubs to provide players and other employees with alternative transportation if they have been drinking.
The Daily Pilot reported on an Orange County DUI program. Costa Mesa police are set to begin a yearlong Orange County DUI program that will crack down on drunk drivers and educate the public to the dangers of drinking and driving, officials announced Tuesday. Thanks to a $300,000 grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety, Costa Mesa police have funding for another year of increased Orange County DUI checkpoints, saturation patrols and sting operations. The money will go to conducting warrant searches and stakeouts for repeat Orange County DUI offenders and stakeouts outside of local courts to see if people convicted of a Orange County DUI and prohibited from driving are in fact, following the law, official said. The department received a similar grant last year that funded more than half a dozen DUI checkpoints.
People.com reported. Michael Phelps told police that he drank a beer about an hour and 15 minutes before he was involved in an accident last week, but alcohol wasn't the reason for the incident, according to a police source. On Thursday, Phelps was driving a Cadillac Escalade when it collided with a Honda Accord driven by a Maryland woman. The athlete showed no signs of alcohol impairment, and was not given a field sobriety test. "No alcohol was involved. No drugs," a police source said. "It was just a car accident." Investigators found that the Accord's driver, Amanda E. Virkus, was at fault for the crash. She will be cited for failure to obey a red light, and for causing an accident. Phelps will be cited for driving with an invalid, out-of-state license. When police arrived on scene following the mishap, the Olympic swimmer presented an invalid Michigan drivers license. According to a police source, the Michigan license was no good because Phelps did not pay an earlier fine for not showing proof of insurance. "It looks like he didn't pay a reinstatement fee, and the license was suspended," the source said.
Here are a few websites to visit:
Orange County Dui Attorney
Orange County Drunk Driving Lawyer
Orange County Dui Lawyer
Orange County DUI Attorney
Orange County Criminal Attorney
Orange County DUI Attorney Phelps will have to appear in court to explain why he was driving without a valid license. In 2004, Phelps pleaded guilty to driving while impaired. He was sentenced to 18 months' probation. The 24-year-old swimmer, who holds the Olympic record with 14 gold medals for swimming, wrote on his Facebook page that he is nursing a sore ankle stemming from the Thursday crash, but that he plans to train as scheduled on Monday.
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