Prosecutors let Rodman off the hook
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SUE DOYLE
NEWPORT BEACH -- After reviewing three dozen complaints of loud
parties and disturbances at Dennis Rodman’s oceanfront home, prosecutors
Wednesday declined to press criminal charges against the former
professional basketball star.
Newport Beach police logged more than 40 calls to Rodman’s home
between July 5, 1999 and June 17, 2000. The ex-Los Angeles Laker has paid
$3,000 in fines, but the penalties don’t seem to keep things quiet.
Police submitted their files to the district attorney’s office earlier
this year because they couldn’t find any other way to curb Rodman’s
late-night affairs.
Rodman, 39, holds the city’s all-time record for the highest number of
disturbance calls to his home, police said, adding that the department
has 117 pages of dispatch notes for phone calls complaining about the
noise at his address.
The district attorney’s office said there is not enough evidence
against Rodman, but will consider reopening the case if there are more
problems with boisterous bashes at his home.
Rodman’s attorney, Paul S. Meyer, was out of town and could not be
reached for comment.
Although the police turned over reports, taped 911 calls and videotape
footage from patrol cars, officials said there is not enough
documentation to prove that Rodman was present at 15 of the incidents.
The other 16 calls were not related to loud noise.
In addition, many complaints were left anonymously or by people who
refused to cooperate.
Rodman’s celebrity status was not a factor in the decision not to file
charges, said Deputy Dist. Atty. Carolyn Carlisle-Raines.
“There was no different treatment of Dennis Rodman than anyone else
would have received. We did a thorough review of the evidence based on
the legal standard, not the status of the person who allegedly violated
the law,” she said.
But there are some who are intimidated by the flamboyant forward, who
won NBA championships with the Detroit Pistons and Chicago Bulls.
Some neighbors complain about noise from Rodman’s parties, but do not
want to face him in court.
“We need the help from the community to step up and testify if they
want this to stop,” said Newport Beach Police Sgt. Mike McDermott.
For Rodman, the district attorney’s decision leaves him with only one
court case. In April, he pleaded not guilty to charges that he was
driving under the influence of alcohol in December as he left the
Clubhouse Restaurant in South Coast Plaza. Tests revealed Rodman’s
blood-alcohol level was twice the legal limit.
He was also arrested in August 1999 at Woody’s Wharf on public
drunkenness charges. The charges were later dropped. Three months later,
he and his wife, actress Carmen Electra, were arrested in Miami Beach for
a domestic dispute. Those charges were also dismissed.
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