STEVE SMITH -- What’s Up?
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The news was shocking.
Twenty-four years ago, Newport Beach Mayor John Noyes planned and carried
out the surreptitious removal of his two daughters, then 6 and 7, from
the custody of their mother, who then spent nine years and considerable
resources trying to locate them.
But as shocking as the news was, the reaction by some in the community
puzzles me even more.
Not long ago, revelations like these would have forced Noyes to be run
out of town on a rail.
That some citizens are now making the claim that Noyes’ past is a
“personal matter” that has no bearing on his current position as mayor of
Newport Beach is the result of decades of confusion about right and
wrong.
What was once crystal clear is now cause for hand-wringing, lest a critic
be labeled “judgmental.”
Smoke pot when you were a kid? Have one too many boyfriends when you were
young and stupid?
Sorry, but as a changed, mature adult, you’re now exempt from judging
anyone else’s behavior. And that’s too bad, for it was the fear of public
condemnation, of being judged, and the certainty that one would be
judged, that kept so many of us on the straight and narrow for so many
years.
Often, judging is now worse than the offense we judge. “Stay out of it,”
is the message we hear, “It’s a personal matter.”
And yet I wonder how many of Noyes supporters were calling for President
Clinton’s resignation a year ago over his own “personal matter.”
The president should have resigned but chose to weather the storm of
controversy. Why? As with Noyes, he calculated that he could remain in
office.
For this writer, there is no gray area--character does count.
Mistakes are made by elected officials who feel no shame, no remorse and
thus have no desire to account for their actions.
That they continue to do this is of less concern to me than our tolerance
of this irresponsible behavior. Because of our own guilt about our own
transgressions, we are weak and silent on these matters.
The standards to which we hold our public officials have fallen too far.
What Noyes did was wrong. He should apologize to his children, their
mother and his constituents for what he did.
After all, the mayor’s actions were not those of a young person doing
stupid things; of a person who has grown and matured and regrets his
irresponsible past.
I don’t know Noyes and he did not return my two phone calls to get a
comment for this column. But from the accounts I have read, Noyes offered
not a shred of remorse for taking two children and running from the law.
At the time of the abductions, he was a full-grown adult, a father, who
made a premeditated decision to circumvent an established legal system
for obtaining the physical custody of children.
In 1976, he acted as judge, jury and marshal to fulfill his own desires
of raising his children without their birth mother.
His reasons for carrying out those actions are hazy. Newspaper accounts
state there was no evidence the girls were being abused or neglected by
their mother.
And once he had the girls, did he provide for them a stable, secure home?
Not in my opinion. The accounts I have read were of a family on the run,
trying, it appears, to stay one step ahead of the law.
When asked about his family’s world tour, Noyes was quoted as saying,
“It’s against the law to travel?”
No, it’s not against the law, but I would challenge anyone’s assertion
that such prolific movements are better for two growing children than the
steadiness of one home and the same friends, school and surroundings.
That his kids are happy and well-adjusted is hardly an end to justify the
means, for no one can say that had they been left as they were that they
would not have had a better life.
It is this complete disregard for the law and the twisted logic that
Noyes’ actions were in the best interests of the children that disturbs
me.
Former Lemhi County prosecutor Fred Snook, who handled the case at the
time, is not wavering. “That kidnapping was an atrocious act,” he was
quoted as saying.
Snook charged Noyes with second-degree kidnapping. But when the law
finally caught up with Noyes, he never stood trial and the charges were
dropped.
Matters of personal responsibility are often best handled by the people
who are not confused by guilt, misguided loyalties or extenuating
circumstances.
Ask a child to comment on the mayor’s actions and you’re likely to get
the following responses, as I got from my two kids after I told them what
had happened:
“Did he go to jail?” Roy asked.
“No, Roy, he did not,” I replied.
And Bean asked, “Is he still the mayor?”
“Yes, Bean, he is,” I said.
“Why don’t they kick him out?” he responded.
See? This matter is so simple, even a child can understand it.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. You may
leave a message for him on our Readers Hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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