The 10 stories that headlined 2004
Rape-trial details
shock community
1 After a year’s worth of legal wrangling from both sides,
19-year-old Greg Haidl will ring in the new year from behind bars.
Haidl, son of former Orange County Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl,
and friends Kyle Nachreiner and Keith Spann went on trial in May,
charged with raping an unconscious 16-year-old girl. The incident
took place in 2002 on a pool table in the garage of the elder Haidl’s
Corona del Mar home.
The boys, 17 at the time of the incident, faced up to 55 years in
prison if convicted.
Three days after the trial started, Orange County sheriff’s
deputies stopped Greg Haidl in Dana Point for allegedly trespassing
on private property. It was the second time since the beginning of
the year that he was stopped by authorities and let go.
The trial lasted more than a month and ended in a hung jury. The
three teenagers were freed on $100,000 bail each.
The night Judge Francisco Briseno declared a mistrial, Don Haidl
threw a party at his home. Greg Haidl reportedly met a 16-year-old
girl there.
Two weeks later, sheriff’s deputies were called to a San Clemente
home to check on a barking dog.
There, they found Greg Haidl hiding in the backyard and arrested
him for allegedly having sex with the girl.
Greg Haidl and Jane Doe 2 claimed the sex was consensual.
She filed a lawsuit against the district attorney’s office,
claiming her civil rights were violated when they got a warrant to
collect her DNA through a mouth swab.
Nonetheless, in August Briseno put a series of restrictions on
Greg Haidl’s bail.
Those included a curfew, staying away from drugs, alcohol and
girls, and not breaking any laws.
Less than two months later, the car Greg Haidl was driving crossed
a double-yellow line on a Santa Ana street, just a half-hour before
his curfew, and hit another car. Police reported that he seemed
intoxicated, and a breath test suggested he had drunk some alcohol
but was below the legal limit.
A day later, he checked himself into a hospital for depression.
His doctor testified in a bail hearing that Greg Haidl told him he
had taken tranquilizers and drunk half a beer the night of the
accident and had headed out to buy more drugs to kill himself.
Briseno revoked his bail and, despite his defense attorneys’ attempts
to talk the judge into letting their client stay in the hospital,
sent Greg Haidl to jail in November.
Less than a week later, CBS’ “48 Hours” aired an hour-long show
about the first trial.
And less than a month after his incarceration, Greg Haidl, who is
under suicide watch in Orange County Jail, was shot with a Taser gun
after allegedly sharing a candy bar with another inmate and
vociferously objecting when deputies told him he could not.
The retrial is scheduled to start Jan. 31. The three face reduced
counts and less jail time.
Greg Haidl will likely stay in jail at least until the conclusion
of the trial.
No hotel on hot parkland property
2 A grass-roots effort rose up and quashed a hotel proposed for
the city’s last piece of harbor-front property in yet another testy
political campaign now defined by Newport Beach’s slow-growth
Greenlight movement.
A Greenlight offshoot, Protect Our Parks, successfully mounted a
campaign for public use of the space between 15th and 18th streets on
the Balboa Peninsula where the Marinapark mobile-home park sits.
The city had entered into an agreement with hotel designer Stephen
Sutherland to have the first right to develop a hotel on the
property.
But this agreement was lambasted by residents who accused the city
of not knowing who it was dealing with.
Sutherland’s company changed several times since the city had
given Sutherland Talla Hospitality an exclusive right to develop the
hotel project in 2000.
The campaign included personal attacks, arguments back and forth
and, finally, solid voter turnout.
Ultimately, the ballot initiative that asked voters to approve a
change to the general plan to allow a hotel was rejected 66% to 34%.
Conservative revolution starts in Newport Beach
3 An Episcopal Church nestled on the Balboa Peninsula jumped onto
a controversial bandwagon in August, announcing it was going to break
away from the Episcopal Church USA and remove the word “Episcopal”
from its name.
St. James’ pastor, Praveen Bunyan, said church members had major
concerns about the Episcopal Church’s liberal views about
homosexuality, the divinity of Jesus Christ and the supremacy of the
Bible.
The church then placed itself under the more conservative Diocese
of Luwero in the Anglican Province of Uganda, Africa.
All Saints Church in Long Beach and St David’s in North Hollywood
also broke away from the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles, prompting
Bishop J. Jon Bruno to file a lawsuit against all three churches
stating that their buildings and properties still belong to the
diocese. That suit will be heard in Orange County.
Expanding church leads to expansive debate
4 A proposed expansion of St. Andrew’s Church that would have
added nearly 36,000 square feet had church officials and neighbors in
battling all year long. The Newport Beach Planning Commission ordered
the two sides to talk out their differences, but hammering out a
compromise has taken nearly two years.
Residents in the Cliff Haven and Newport Heights neighborhoods
said excess noise and traffic caused by the church’s existing
facilities would only be exacerbated by adding space.
While neighbors thought the facilities plan was bloated, size
reductions church officials made to the new youth and family center
of nearly 40% may have left them with a shrinking feeling.
After several lengthy public hearings, planning commissioners in
mid-December approved the expansion with a list of 23 operating
conditions -- but commission chairman Larry Tucker still advised the
church not to build the project in its current form because of the
animosity it has created.
The City Council must still approve the St. Andrew’s expansion and
will likely discuss it in 2005, so more skirmishes on the project are
in the offing. One Cliff Haven resident already has threatened a
lawsuit if the council approves the project.
Voters turn the incumbents out
5 In an unprecedented act of voter rebellion, two incumbents were
knocked off the Costa Mesa City Council: Chris Steel, who had served
four years, and Mike Scheafer, who had served about a year and a
half. Scheafer was appointed in 2003 to replace former Mayor Karen
Robinson, who left to become an Orange County Superior Court judge.
The winners were Planning Commissioner Katrina Foley, former Mayor
Linda Dixon and Planning Commissioner Eric Bever, who had stepped
aside and allowed Scheafer to take Robinson’s seat.
Bever and Garlich jostled for third place for a month following
the election. Initially on election night, Garlich edged Bever for
third place.
By the next day, the two had switched places, and Bever had taken
a solid lead. The gap eventually narrowed to the 44-vote margin.
Garlich decided not to ask for a recount because he didn’t think
that would change the results, with the electronic voting machines
being so precise.
In Newport Beach, there was no such rebellion. All three
incumbents, Steve Bromberg, John Heffernan and Steve Rosansky won
their races. Voter denial of the Marinapark resort, however, signaled
that residents don’t agree with everything their council is doing.
Agreement puts
many out of joint
6 As Costa Mesa city officials found out this year, even city
business as arcane as “joint-use agreements” are not immune from
controversy.
The city is taking a harder look at one such document, which
establishes a partnership between the city and the school district
with regard to field use after several high school coaches resigned
over a scuffle with the city about using and maintaining their teams’
fields. The agreement dictates that any high school, community group
or league secure a permit from the city to use a field.
Joined at the hip of the joint-use agreement is another document
called the “field allocation policy,” which spells out how fields are
allotted and the rules governing allotments.
To add to the school district’s problems, Mark Gleason, president
of Estancia High’s girls’ soccer boosters filed a complaint in
September with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil
Rights alleging that the school district was favoring Newport Beach
schools, which have a majority of white students as opposed to Costa
Mesa schools, which have bigger Latino populations. School district
officials denied the allegations and met with school principals right
away in an attempt to fix the problems.
Missing couple nets national attention
7 The mysterious disappearance of a retired couple after they sold
their yacht, on which they’d lived in Newport Harbor, captured
nationwide media attention in December.
Family members reported Tom and Jackie Hawks missing after they
sold their 55-foot cabin cruiser, the Well Deserved, in mid-November
and suddenly fell out of touch.
That raised concern from relatives and friends because the couple
were normally in close contact. Despite the fact that the boat’s
buyer told police he paid $400,000 cash for the vessel, which
remained at its mooring in the harbor, none of that money turned up
in the Hawkses’ accounts.
In fact, none of their accounts showed any activity since their
disappearance.
Police and family members appealed to the public in early
December, publicizing photographs and descriptions of Tom Hawks, 57,
and Jackie Hawks, 47, and their missing SUV.
Then police got a call that their SUV had been spotted in
Ensenada, Mexico. They found the car but not the couple.
The next day, they arrested the boat’s buyer, Long Beach resident
Skylar DeLeon, 25 -- a former actor on the “Mighty Morphin’ Power
Rangers” show -- on money-laundering charges.
By the time he made it to court for his arraignment, he faced
three counts of money laundering and three counts of possession of
money earned through large-scale sales of cocaine.
One of the county’s top prosecutors, who usually handles
high-profile homicides, is on the case.
Investigators have yet to determine what happened to the couple,
who had dreamed of retiring on a boat but wanted to sell the Well
Deserved and purchase a smaller one. Police now say they suspect foul
play.
Network still trying
to get on public TV
8 The continuing saga of Orange County’s only PBS channel finally
looked sewn up, but with just enough of an open ending for a sequel.
The Coast Community College District, which owned the station,
decided in 2003 to sell it to prop up its sagging budget.
All but one bid, from the station’s own fundraising arm, came from
religious broadcasters.
The district declared the $32-million bid from the KOCE-TV
Foundation the highest and chose to sell to it in October 2003.
The foundation, backed by local business and education leaders,
was the only bidder promising to preserve the PBS format.
But Dallas-based Daystar Television Network, the nation’s
second-largest religious broadcaster, made a last-ditch effort to buy
the station, boosting its $25 million cash offer to $40 million --
after the deadline for bids had passed.
Earlier this year, Daystar sued the district and its trustees,
claiming the district had not sold to the highest responsible bidder,
a violation of state law.
Though the foundation’s bid was revised downward to adjust for
programming and other compensation that was part of the deal and
included a substantial portion financed over a long-term note, a
judge declared that the district was not obligated to sell to
Daystar.
Daystar then filed an appeal and tried to block the FCC from
transferring the broadcast license to the foundation.
Meanwhile, the district granted the foundation three extensions on
its deadline to make the $8-million down payment.
The group finally came up with the cash in October.
The FCC approved the transfer at about the same time, and the
district gave its final OK at a meeting in November.
KOCE-TV is planning new programming to start in 2005 and in
November launched an endowment to fund arts and science education in
local schools.
Attorneys for Daystar are still promising to pursue the appeal,
though officials with the foundation and the district aren’t too
worried about it succeeding.
Stay tuned.
Get the sand out
9 A group of West Newport residents fought against the tide and
won in August when their complaints led the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers to change a $5-million dredging project that would have
spread 400,000 cubic yards of Santa Ana River sand on beaches from
32nd to 56th streets.
Residents were concerned the river sediment would contain trash
and bacteria and that enlarging the beach with more sand. At the
urging of Newport Beach city officials, the Corps agreed to pump the
sand offshore in Newport so waves could wash it onto beaches
naturally. The three-month project is underway, with workers on the
job 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Part of the sand is being used
to shore up an island for endangered least terns, and some will be
pumped to an offshore fill area north of 56th Street. The Corps is
swallowing about $500,000 in costs added by the change in plans.
The city had wanted the sand initially to combat gradual beach
erosion, and because it was free, but city officials and residents
are happy with the offshore disposal plan.
Everyone wants a
piece of ‘The OC’
10 Holding the key to the hearts of young people all over the
nation and some parts of the world, cast members and producers of Fox
Television’s hit series, “The OC,” came to Newport Beach in October
for a special ceremony where Mayor Tod Ridgeway handed them keys to
the city.
The show is set in Newport Beach, and its protagonists shop at
South Coast Plaza, go out to dinner at Aubergine, eat Balboa Bars and
even read the Daily Pilot. The event was the brainchild of the
Newport Beach Conference and Visitors Bureau.
Producers and cast members were received with great enthusiasm by
their local fans as opposed to a rather lukewarm reception from City
Council members and members of the community who said they didn’t
believe the show appropriately reflected the moral values of the
Newport Beach they live in.
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