Teen ends 2004 in jail, facing retrial
Marisa O’Neil
Depending upon whom you talk to, Greg Haidl is a misunderstood teen,
a spoiled brat mired in self-pity, a caring boy who has volunteered
his time to those in need or a cold-hearted rapist.
No matter what you think of Haidl, one thing is indisputable -- he
made headlines this year in the Daily Pilot and elsewhere.
The 19-year-old son of prominent businessman and Corona del Mar
resident Don Haidl is accused -- along with two friends -- of
gang-raping an allegedly unconscious 16-year-old girl and assaulting
her with different objects, including a lighted cigarette, on a pool
table at a party at his father’s home in 2002.
The case generated even more attention because the incident was
videotaped and because of Don Haidl’s position as Orange County
Assistant Sheriff until his retirement in September.
All of that added up to a media-ready trial this year, even making
it to prime time on CBS’s “48 Hours.”
The story has had definite impact on the community, even those who
do not know the Haidl family.
“It has sex, violence and political power,” Corona del Mar
resident Barry Allen said. “Obviously it’s going to gain the
attention of people.”
The first trial, which lasted a month, ended in a hung jury that
leaned toward acquittal on the major counts. Prosecutors will start
retrying the case in January.
Some who wrote letters to the editor believed that Greg Haidl --
along with Kyle Nachreiner and Keith Spann, both now 20 -- were tried
in the press before the case even hit the jury.
Other people contended that even Don Haidl and the rest of his
family were tried by the media and the public.
“If it were any other teenager, it wouldn’t be such a big deal,”
Huntington Beach resident Rose Campolito said of the significant news
coverage Greg Haidl received. “I hate to see people being so
judgmental. I think a lot of people with teenagers of their own were
saying: ‘Aren’t these terrible parents? Isn’t he the worst kid
around?’ If everyone’s problems were printed on the front page of the
newspaper, they wouldn’t look so swift either. I think it’s 99%
because of his father’s job and the fact he has money.”
Don Haidl resigned from his volunteer position as a high-ranking
official in the Sheriff’s Department in an attempt to ease the
pressure and attention he feels his position has brought on his son
as he goes into the second trial.
But the spotlight continues to shine on Greg Haidl, more than
co-defendants Nachreiner and Spann. While they have stayed out of the
headlines for the most part, the younger Haidl has remained in the
media’s glare through a series of run-ins with police, including
trespassing and the alleged statutory rape of another 16-year-old
girl.
Then, in November, a judge revoked Greg Haidl’s bail after he was
involved in an alcohol-related crash in Santa Ana.
Greg Haidl’s attorneys argued in court during the bail hearing the
teen got lost on his way home from his friend’s house and had not
been drinking. But hours later, his doctor testified that Greg Haidl
told him he drank part of a beer and took a large number of
tranquilizers and muscle relaxants before getting behind the wheel
that night.
The teen checked into a hospital for depression the day after the
crash.
Despite his attorneys’ attempts to let him stay there, he was
ordered to the Orange County Jail.
While in jail, sheriff’s deputies shot him with a stun gun after
he allegedly became argumentative.
Through it all, Don Haidl has stuck by his son, who volunteered
his time in a thrift store and tried to take classes at a local
college before the attention forced him to quit both, the elder Haidl
said.
“The Greg I know doesn’t have a mean bone in his body,” Don Haidl
told the Daily Pilot in May.
“When he sees blood on TV, he jerks his head away. If you raise
your voice at him, tears would roll down his face.
“I don’t know what went wrong. Every day, I look back and ask the
same question: What could I have done to change this?”
That parental support without proper discipline, some say, has
enabled Greg Haidl to repeatedly get into trouble.
“I see him as more of a victim than I did before,” Balboa Island
resident Susan Merrihew said.
“He’s a victim of circumstances and how he was raised.
“He has been able to continue to be a victim through enablers like
his parents and the police, being allowed to have a driver’s license
and being out in public. Unfortunately, his situation got passed on
[to Jane Doe].”
Costa Mesa resident Anna Rasmussen, who at 21 is close to the same
age as the parties involved in the case, said she has followed Greg
Haidl’s story closely.
The fact that Greg Haidl is starting the year and the second trial
in jail should show him that “not all the money in the world may get
you out of trouble,” she said.
His family, however, is hoping to soon have the Greg they know and
love back and put the attention behind them.
“As you can imagine this has caused a tremendous strain on our
family,” his aunt, Corona del Mar resident Peggy Haidl, said.
“Keep in mind, a person is innocent until proven guilty, and we
have faith that the justice system will prevail.
“We hope for a quick resolution, so we can get our lives and
privacy back.”
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