COMMUNITY COMMENTARY -- Ila Johnson
- Share via
In an interesting development, school board trustee Jim Ferryman,
scheduled to be arraigned in Harbor Justice Center on charges related to
driving under the influence, exercised his option not to appear and
dispatched his attorney to request a continuance of the case. The
arraignment was continued to Nov. 29.
What does Ferryman hope to buy with the additional time before
entering a plea? Does he hope that the public fervor surrounding the
charges will simply fade away and become just another one-line account on
the back page of the paper? Or perhaps he hopes for the outside chance
that the court will lose his paperwork and (poof) no more case. That
would be good. But then Ferryman would never have the opportunity to
“benefit from consequences of my act that will probably include
suspension of my license, probation and counseling,” as he has said he
expects to do, (The Bell Curve -- “Ferryman Wants To Finish What He
Started,” Oct. 25) and “to serve as a positive role model by facing
squarely up to what I did.” By requesting a continuance, it seems rather
obvious that Ferryman does not intend to face “squarely up” to what he
did. One does not request a continuance of an arraignment with the
intention of facing up to anything.
Since I have referenced the column by Joseph N. Bell, I would also
like to add that, as one of those to whom Bell refers as having “the
absurd notion -- often rooted in a disapproval of drinking itself -- that
defending Ferryman somehow implied a lack of proper condemnation of drunk
driving,” I hold no such disapproval of drinking itself. I enjoy a glass
of good wine and, on occasion, a good Manhattan and the social settings
that accompany them. What I do wholeheartedly disapprove of is throwing
down a bunch of drinks and then getting behind the wheel of an
automobile.
I stand behind my opinion that that is not a sentiment universally
held. This belief is confirmed and evidenced by those who are of the
opinion that Ferryman’s past contributions to the community cancel out
this “one mistake.”
* ILA JOHNSON is a Costa Mesa resident who ran for a seat on the
school board in November 2000.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.