Prominent Newport Beach attorney dies suddenly
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Deepa Bharath
David Shores, an attorney most known for defending several
Newport-Mesa students expelled from school under the district’s
zero-tolerance policy, died Sunday of sudden heart failure. He was
58.
Shores collapsed on the driveway of his Corona del Mar home on
Sunday night, his sister Joan Ortolano said. He was taken to Hoag
Memorial Hospital Presbyterian, where he died, she said.
“He was my younger brother,” Ortolano said. “I’m nine years older
than him. So I practically raised him. This is almost like losing one
of my children.”
Shores is known for successfully arguing the 1998 case of Ryan
Huntsman, a Corona del Mar High School senior who police said had a
marijuana pipe in his car. Huntsman was ordered suspended and
transferred to Newport Harbor High School halfway through his senior
year.
On Wednesday, Ortolano, an attorney herself, was in her brother’s
office trying to make sure his clients were not affected by his
sudden demise. She said she is impressed by the “collegiality of the
Orange County Bar.”
“I’ve had at least 10 attorneys walk into this office today asking
if they can help,” she said.
Shores did not work with a partner and the future of his
flourishing business is now uncertain, Ortolano said.
Shores is survived by his wife, Diane Kawata Shores, son Ryan
Shores, a senior in Corona del Mar High, and another sister, Taffy
Walmsley.
Shores was “full of integrity and loyal to his friends and
family,” Diane Shores said.
“He was extremely well-respected as an attorney,” she said. “He
was driven and took on causes, sometimes not getting paid for cases
he believed in. He was a knight in shining armor for a lot of
people.”
Diane Shores worked long hours with her husband in his Fashion
Island office, she said.
“I spent a lot of time with him,” she said, choking up. “I’m going
to miss him so much.”
Ryan Shores was expected to sing a graduation song he had composed
at a memorial service in the school on Monday night for Matthew
Ramirez, who died in a motocross accident in Glamis on Halloween.
But instead, a week after his friend’s passing, Ryan was faced
with the death of his own father. His mother, Patricia Pillar, died
of breast cancer when he was 7.
“It’s Ryan’s birthday on Sunday,” Ortolano said. “And he’s the
lead in the high school’s play next week.”
David Shores was eager to watch his son perform every night during
the four days, Diane Shores said.
She said Ryan has decided to do the play and dedicate his
performance in memory of his dad.
Ryan was a big part of his father’s life, Ortolano said.
“David was very proud of his son,” she said. “He always told him,
‘You have to play the hand life deals you.’ And he’s been dealt a
pretty rough hand.”
Ryan has been through more in his short life than most people
have, said John Emme, Corona del Mar High baseball coach. David
Shores was Emme’s attorney in a case brought against the coach by
parent Marc Martinez, who alleged that Emme slandered his son and
ruined his chances of being recruited by college teams.
The case got national attention and was featured in shows such as
“Good Morning America” and HBO’s “Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel.”
Emme’s counter lawsuit against Martinez is yet to be heard in court,
but the coach says that’s “the last thing in my mind right now.”
“I’m concerned for the family -- for Ryan and Diane,” he said.
Emme said David Shores was “a good man and a brilliant lawyer.”
He was a brave attorney with a positive attitude, said friend
David Sprowl, a Newport Beach attorney.
“He was passionate on behalf of his clients,” he said. “He took on
anything that was thrown at him, and he was courageous in court.”
David Shores genuinely cared about his clients, said Barry Allen,
a Santa Ana attorney and Corona del Mar resident. Allen had known
David Shores for more than 30 years.
“We played football in a team together and became good friends,”
he said. “I talked to him a week before he died about a case. The
last time I saw him was at the Arches restaurant two weeks before he
died. He was there with his wife to celebrate her birthday.”
The Newport Beach City Council was to adjourn Wednesday night’s
meeting in memory of David Shores and Bobby Hatfield of the Righteous
Brothers, who died on Nov. 5.
“David was an outstanding attorney,” said Mayor Steve Bromberg,
whose law office is in the same building as Shores’.
“He was very local,” he said. “He was not afraid to take on a
difficult fight. His heart was always in the right place, and he was
a class act.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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