‘I would have said he was guilty too’
Stefanie Frith
NEWPORT-MESA -- Steve Ott laughed when he spoke about Eric Bechler’s
murder conviction Thursday. And he kept laughing as he discussed with his
friends near the Balboa Fun Zone how Bechler got just what he deserved.
“They nailed him. This was a good call,” the 46-year-old Newport Beach
resident said. “It was shaky from the beginning. I mean, I hate to see it
happen, but it was just. It’s funny because most knew he had done it all
along.”
Residents of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa were surprised Thursday to
hear that Bechler, a Newport Beach resident and father of three, was
convicted of murdering his wife while boating with her off the coast of
Newport Beach in 1997.
Most said, however, that he got what he deserved and that they had
never believed his story that his wife had drowned after a wave washed
her overboard.
“He [Bechler] used to work next-door to me in Newport Beach, and I
remember all the girls in my office would talk about how good-looking he
was,” said April Vida, 32, of Costa Mesa, while shopping at Westcliff
Court in Costa Mesa. “It’s hard to imagine that such a good-looking
person could do something like this. That is surprising.”
What Patricia Dashner, a thirtysomething facialist at James Albert
Salon in Costa Mesa, finds frightening is that she lives in the same city
as Bechler.
“I kept up on the story because it was someone from my own city, my
own neighborhood,” Dashner said. “I had that gut feeling all along that
he had done it, though. The fact that he would benefit from all that life
insurance was part of it. They say the first person to go to in something
like this is the spouse.”
Pat Kelly, 49, of Newport Beach said he was surprised Bechler was
convicted because there was so little evidence in the case.
“They never even found the wife’s body, so how do they know?” Kelly
asked as he took a break from a bike ride near the Fun Zone. “But I
smelled a rat. His story was always shaky. He probably deserved it. The
strange thing is that things like this just don’t happen around here.”
Susan Smith, 35, who grew up in Orange County and now lives in
Wyoming, said Newport Beach has the image of being a safe community,
where murders such as this do not happen.
“This was really surprising that this happened here, it seems so
safe,” Smith said while sitting in a courtyard at Fashion Island in
Newport Beach. “I have been on vacation here with family, and we have
been looking in the paper every day for the verdict. I had a suspicion
that he had done it. It was just too much like a Monday night movie and
he was the good-looking star. If I had been on the jury, I would have
said he was guilty too.”
Sitting behind the counter at Balboa Boat Rentals, where Bechler
rented the boat for that final cruise, manager Charlie Villaloboz, 45, of
Newport Beach said Bechler’s story is outlandish but possible.
“It reminds me of a movie plot, but the story could be true, you don’t
really know,” Villaloboz said. “I do know that when it happened, there
were a lot of people around here asking questions, but so far, no one
around really knows about it, which is fine with me. But you know, I
think people are getting weirder and weirder. Weird things happen a lot
these days.”
Debbie Smith, 42, a receptionist at the same salon as Dashner, said it
is sad that Bechler’s three children have lost their mother and now their
father.
“It’s all just like a movie, and it probably will become one,” Smith
said, shaking her head in dismay. “It’s all so sad. If they make a movie
though, the money should go to the kids, because what else do they have
left? It’s never the one you expect. Never.”
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