Fourth man arrested in Hawks case
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Marisa O’Neil
Police on Thursday made a fourth arrest -- the third in just one week
-- in the disappearance and presumed homicide of a retired couple who
lived on a yacht in the harbor.
Newport Beach police detectives and Long Beach police gang-unit
officers arrested John Fitzgerald Kennedy, 39, of Long Beach on
suspicion of killing Tom and Jackie Hawks.
Kennedy was taken into custody at 11:30 a.m. after police stopped
his 1988 Cadillac at the corner of Long Beach Boulevard and 23rd
Street in Long Beach, Newport Beach Police Sgt. Steve Shulman said.
Shulman did not know if Kennedy was affiliated with a gang but
said the gang-unit officers had the information to locate him. He
would not discuss Kennedy’s alleged involvement in the case, citing
the ongoing investigation.
“[The multiple arrests] indicate the investigation is
progressing,” Shulman said. “We’re filling in a lot of the gaps.”
Last week, Newport Beach police arrested 21-year-old Alonso
Machain of Pico Rivera and Myron Gardner, 41, of Long Beach. They and
25-year-old Long Beach resident Skylar DeLeon, already in custody on
a grand theft charge and a probation violation, were each charged
March 4 with two counts of murder.
They are being held without bail in the Orange County Jail and are
due in court in April.
The murder charges include special circumstance allegations that
could give them the death penalty if convicted.
The latest arrest indicates an ever-widening conspiracy in what
police say was a plot laid out for financial gain.
“We believe there could very well be more arrests,” Shulman said.
“We don’t know in how long, or if for sure that will take place.”
Tom Hawks, 57, and Jackie Hawks, 47, of Prescott, Ariz., had been
living on their 55-foot cabin cruiser, the Well Deserved, in Newport
Harbor until their disappearance in mid-November. The last time
anyone heard from them, they left a phone message with a friend
saying they were at sea.
Their bodies have not been found. They are presumed dead.
The couple had advertised the Well Deserved for sale for $440,000
in a boating magazine. DeLeon told police that he had paid cash for
the yacht and saw the couple safely drive off with the money.
Police now say that the transaction never took place and that
documents indicating it had were forged. The Hawkses’ car turned up
in Ensenada, Mexico, in December, after its description and their
disappearance were widely publicized.
Police say that in the days following their disappearance, DeLeon
had twice tried to access their bank account and had called the
Ensenada home where their car was found.
A receipt for bleach and heavy-gauge garbage bags, purchased by
one of DeLeon’s relatives, was found on the Well Deserved, police
said.
The boat is still moored in Newport Harbor.
Kennedy is expected to be arraigned at Harbor Justice Center in
Newport Beach today or Monday.
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