Development in Hawks case
Marisa O’Neil
Prosecutors on Friday said a man who told police he bought a boat
from a retired couple just before they disappeared is now the prime
suspect in their murder and in another, unrelated homicide.
Long Beach resident Skylar DeLeon, 25, appeared in court Friday at
a pretrial hearing on an unrelated grand theft charge. But before the
hearing took place, Senior Deputy Dist. Atty. Matt Murphy told the
judge that DeLeon is also “the main suspect in a double homicide in
Newport Beach.”
DeLeon told Newport Beach police in November that he paid $400,000
cash for a 55-foot cabin cruiser that retired couple Tom and Jackie
Hawks lived on in Newport Harbor. Family members reported them
missing in November and despite national media coverage, they have
not turned up.
“We don’t believe the Hawkses are alive,” Newport Beach Police
Sgt. Steve Shulman said outside the Newport Beach courthouse. “He is
a suspect in their disappearance and likely homicide.”
Murder charges have not yet been filed against DeLeon. He is in
the Orange County Jail on the grand theft charge and is ineligible
for his $200,000 bail because of parole violations.
The grand theft charge stems from $7,000 in unpaid repairs done at
a Costa Mesa shop on another boat DeLeon owned in 2003. DeLeon paid
$18,000 cash up front for a portion of the repairs -- money
prosecutors say connect him to another crime.
“The money in the initial transaction may be the result of an
additional homicide that DeLeon may have committed,” Murphy told
Orange County Superior Court Judge Susanne Shaw.
DeLeon’s 23-year-old wife, Jennifer DeLeon, shook her head when
Murphy made the statement. She sat in the courtroom, cradling the
couple’s newborn baby in a royal blue blanket.
A Newport Beach police investigation into the grand theft -- which
they say is unrelated to the Hawkses -- connected the money to a
homicide in which the victim’s throat was cut, Murphy said. The body
was found Dec. 26, 2003, Murphy said, the day before he paid $18,000
for boat repairs on his 26-foot boat named Doctor Crunch.
The location and identity of the body were not revealed. It is an
unsolved homicide that did not take place in Newport Beach but has a
“nexus” to Orange County, Shulman said.
Skylar DeLeon’s attorney, Ed Welbourn, said that a brief meeting
with Murphy and the judge before the hearing was the first he’d heard
of the alleged homicide connections. He came to court Friday morning
with the possibility of a settlement on the theft charge in mind.
“I was very surprised,” Welbourn said outside the courtroom.
He delayed the pretrial hearing until March 11 to review the new
information but did not reschedule the March 21 trial date.
Newport Beach police first arrested Skylar DeLeon in December on
money laundering charges, the day after police found the Hawkses’ car
in Ensenada, Mexico. Those charges were later dropped and the grand
theft charge filed.
Skylar DeLeon has a previous burglary conviction in Los Angeles
County, Murphy said. At the time of his arrest, he had plastic
handcuffs and a gun with him, Murphy said.
Tom Hawks, a 57-year-old retired probation officer and
firefighter, and 47-year-old Jackie Hawks, an Ohio native who lost
her first husband to a drunken driver, were living on the 55-foot
yacht Well Deserved at the time of their disappearance. They were
also spending time in Prescott, Ariz., and San Carlos, Mexico, family
members said.
They had been married 17 years and were new grandparents at the
time of their disappearance. Family members of the couple, who always
stayed in close touch, said they weren’t surprised by the latest
allegations.
“I just want justice done,” said San Diego resident Dixie Hawks,
Tom Hawks’ first wife and mother to his two sons. “I just can’t
imagine how this happened. Tom was so capable. We’re still in the
dark.”
Jackie Hawks’ family in Ohio said that they were devastated by the
disappearance and presumed murder. They said they’re “yearning” to
learn what happened to the couple.
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