Whiffs of defenses, endings
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A pair of above-the-fold police cases in Newport Beach crowds the
notepad this week. The first would be the shocking and despicable
gang-rape case that’s hogged the headlines in these parts for two
weeks now. The other is the nearly forgotten and soon-to-conclude
investigation surrounding the March 24 in-line skating accident that
ultimately took the life of resident Gary Holdren.
The headliner last week unfolded in Orange County Superior Court.
It’s there where Gregory Haidl, Kyle Nachreiner and Keith Spann --
the trio of 17-year-old young men accused of drugging and gang-raping
a 16-year-old in the Corona del Mar home of Haidl’s father -- pleaded
not guilty to 21 felony counts stemming from the July 5 videotaped
incident. The charges include rape, rape by a foreign object and
administering a drug to incapacitate the victim.
Now in these kinds of cases involving sex crimes and other acts of
depravity against women, it’s always quite interesting to see just
how soon the accused will be marketed as an acolyte and the victim as
some kind of consenting strumpet. In this case it didn’t take long.
Following the arraignment, separate attorneys representing Spann
and Haidl -- the son of Orange County Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl --
engaged in a subtle media play clearly designed to position their
clients as choir boys and the victim as a consenting, smitten kitten.
Haidl attorney Joseph Cavallo called his imp-faced client “my boy”
and claimed him the “least culpable of any of them.” In earlier press
reports, Cavallo had characterized Haidl as a good “boy” who “does
his chores,” “respects his mother” and “loves his family very much.”
And so we have the image of some cherub in untied P.F. Flyers and a
propeller hat. An innocent bystander chewing on a Tootsie Pop while
his buddies are chucking rocks through the school window.
Spann’s attorney, Ann Cunningham, chose the same unseemly tack.
“All I’ve heard is he is quiet, polite and respectful,” she said in
post-arraignment spin. She, too, in earlier press accounts gushed on
about her client’s “great relationship with his mother and his
grandmother. He’s a very shy, respectful young man.”
And then came this stinky bit of grimy gossip: “I understand the
victim,” Cunningham said, “likes him (Spann) a lot too.”
This, to my way of thinking, clearly put the Harlot Defense in
play, and foretold Friday’s news that at least one of the attorneys
representing the troika of “boys” believes the sex was consensual.
I’m not sure how one consents to sex when comatose, but we’ll see.
Now I’m kicking all of this around not so much to get some licks
in on these three young men who find themselves swamped in trouble,
and whom I presume to be innocent until proved otherwise. Rather,
it’s this shameless brand of pretrial flacking and bank-shot
character assassination that has me gagging.
And I find it most unfortunate. I mean, I’ve had enough lifelong
friendships and casual acquaintances with some fine judges and
attorneys to know that not all practitioners of law are wretches and
scoundrels lacking inventory in the conscience department. But every
so often, a particular breed of barrister -- usually those who defend
the accused -- says or does something that just wants to make you
take a long, hot shower.
We close out this Wednesday’s entry noting the return of the Gary
Holdren case to the community radar screen. You’ll recall that it was
March 24 when the artificial-heart-valve salesman took a violent fall
while in-line skating on a Back Bay trail in Eastbluff. Some days
later, he died as a result of the massive head trauma suffered during
the fall.
Early press accounts -- constructed around initial statements made
by the Newport Beach police -- reported that Holdren’s fall was the
result of a barrage of paint-ball gunfire. That theory was later
withdrawn when the Orange County coroner concluded Holdren had not
been struck by paint-ball rounds.
Since then, the inquiry has been quietly moving along and has,
according to one source, included a police reenactment of the event.
It reportedly revealed that Holdren could not have been struck in
the eye with a paint-ball round, as had originally been theorized.
Had that occurred, he would have suffered massive damage to his
eye’s skeletal orbit and his face would been covered with paint. In
fact, the investigation is expected to report that no paint (except
perhaps for trace amounts) was found on Holdren and that the incident
will be deemed a skating accident.
The investigation’s conclusions are said to be included in a
report that was finished just last week. Newport Beach Police Sgt.
Steve Shulman said investigators will probably reveal their findings
within the next “day or two.”
* BYRON DE ARAKAL is a writer and communications consultant. He
lives in Costa Mesa. Readers can reach him at byronwriter@msn.
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