Dubious Distinctions
JANUARY
Newport Beach police were handed an unusual assignment when they were
asked to get rid of a swarm of killer Africanized honeybees that probably
hoped to set up shop atop a trash can on Newport Pier. The killers soon
after became the victims after officers summoned exterminators.
Those were hard times for Higgens, a lost, yellow Labrador who was
spotted by Costa Mesa Animal Control officials roaming the streets after
unknown vile hands had spray-painted his coat a bright neon pink.
Higgens’ fur had to be shaved because his paint could not be removed. The
sad story, however, did have a happy ending. Higgens was adopted after a
nervous few days of waiting at a Huntington Beach animal shelter.
It was a one-of-a-kind bank robbery at Fidelity Federal Bank on
Westcliff Drive in Newport Beach. The robber strolled into the branch, no
weapon and -- as people later found out -- no escape vehicle, either. He
demanded cash from the teller, got what he asked for and walked out of
the building. And that was the last anybody saw of the man.
FEBRUARY
It was a landmark period for West Newport’s notorious party host,
Dennis Rodman, who decided to fork over an undisclosed amount of money to
Kevin Finegold, owner of Josh Slocums restaurant on West Coast Highway.
It was also the start of Rodman’s involvement with the restaurant, as he
gave it a touch of his own flamboyant personality. In came red velvet
curtains, leopard-skin couches and disco balls. A different ambience for
sure.
Olive and Tino had their special day as their wedding helped raise
$300 for the Little Angels Pug Rescue and helped 12 of their kind to get
adopted. It was a fun affair on Balboa Island. Dog lovers watched
affectionately as Yoda the ring bearer and Pepper the flower girl,
dressed in pink satin, were wheeled down the aisle in a wagon.
“Do you, Olive, take Tino to be your stud puppy and Dog Chow dog?”
read Rudy Horwitz, the minister. “Do you promise to love and cherish his
smashed-in mug, wet nose and squatty legs?” How could a girl not say “I
do” to a guy like that?
Traffic can be crazy, especially near schools. But PTA mom Carla
Hummel made sure she would do her part to ensure a smooth opening day for
Newport Coast Elementary School. She put on a cow suit as she directed
traffic. And that did quite a bit to keep tempers down and the mood light
-- not to mention that it made opening day an “udder” success.
MARCH
Costa Mesa good Samaritan Jan McCandless rescued at least 15 cats and
put them up for adoption at an Irvine animal shelter after the animals
were abandoned by their owner -- the neighborhood “cat lady” who was
evicted from her home. McCandless said she found urine-soaked furniture
and carpets in the home and that she ran the cats out of the house and
cut down some of the bushes around the home to keep them from hiding
there.
Rupert, the black swan who rides the gentle waves off of Newport
Harbor, was rescued by harbor patrol deputies after they spotted him with
a fish hook in his beak and a string of fishing line injuring his throat.
The bird is a regular and a pal of the officers. Deputies say he can be a
pain during rescues sometimes, aggressively fluttering around and
sometimes even poking them with his beak. Well, Rupert will be Rupert.
APRIL
Newport Beach boasts a dubious expertise, but nonetheless one that has
been a big help for bordering Costa Mesa. Thanks to Newport Beach’s
shared savvy in dealing with massage parlors used as fronts for
prostitution, Costa Mesa too has made huge strides in eradicating the
problem.
It was the kind of archeological discovery you definitely don’t want
to share with your kids. Costa Mesa police said a jawbone found in the
backyard of a family home is less than 10 years old -- not what Evan and
Amy Chalmers wanted to hear about the apparently human bone found outside
their 2-year-old daughter’s bedroom.
When Mary Phillips heard a crash outside her Heather Lane home at 2:28
a.m. one morning, she wasn’t too surprised to step outside and see
portions of a Lexus in her garden. It was the eighth time a wall
sheltering the garden outside her Newport Beach home had been crashed
into by cars.
MAY
At the same time that neighboring Newport Beach was scrambling for
ways to keep crud out of storm drains and, ultimately, local waters, a
Costa Mesa homeowners association head was leading the charge against
parking restrictions to allow street sweeping. “I have a big party coming
in July,” Lance Hailstone said. “A lot of [guests] are driving here from
out of the state, and where are they going to put their cars?”
Don’t drive drunk, but if you do, don’t drive drunk directly into a
Costa Mesa police cruiser as Hector Renya of Bradley was accused of
doing. Police said the 39-year-old struck a patrol car that was parked at
the scene of a traffic collision. He was arrested on suspicion of driving
under the influence of alcohol, officials said.
There’s a special place in a jail cell for the kind of thief that
would steal the bike of a rider for an AIDS charity. Caroline Good, who
had been preparing to do the 575-mile AIDS Ride in June, was without her
wheels after a thief stole her bike. She was up a creek without her
pedals until Dover Shores resident Chris Miller bought her a new bike.
JUNE
The ones who most loved Costa Mesa’s Lions Park have been all but
booted out. But, for obvious reasons, no one’s crying foul. Pigeons in
the park were creating a smelly, slimy mess until the park’s gazebo
rafters were made much less friendly by netting the city put up to keep
the birds from nesting.
New Orleans would love it, so would Las Vegas, but West Newport Beach
is hardly honored by being dubbed “party central.” With professional bad
boy Dennis Rodman just one reason residents have dubbed the area “Rowdy
Town.” Along with dealing with an influx of up to 100,000 beachgoers on
summer weekends, officers also get called out to West Newport Beach much
more frequently when the renters arrive, reported Sgt. Steve Shulman,
spokesman for the Newport Beach Police Department.
How much boat is too much boat for the otherwise yacht-loving Balboa
Island? Ask Lowdrick Cook, whose humongous vessel drew humongous outrage
from about 50 neighbors who packed City Council chambers to protest his
plan to park his 55-foot Carole Diane. The sometime Newport Beach
resident tried docking the boat parallel to the shore, but that drew
complaints that he was blocking the navigational waterway. He suggested
parking it perpendicular, but some said that defied the rules. At least
in the latter plan he’s not hogging up anyone else’s frontyard because he
owns both homes at 1106 and 1108 S. Bay Front.
JULY
The night life in Costa Mesa is crackling hot, at least on one night
of the year. Costa Mesa is one of the only cities in the area that still
allows fireworks, and people come from all over Orange County to satisfy
their pyrotechnic tendencies. You just haven’t lived until you’ve felt
the warmth from the flame of a Piccolo Pete.
One major perk of living in Newport Beach is having the Pacific in
your backyard -- except when it is filled with harmful bacteria, animal
waste and other muck. Levels of harmful bacteria were more than three
times the normal permitted level and Orange County Health Care Agency
officials tacked up signs near 38th Street to warn folks. So much for
summer vacation on the beach.
It’s true -- money doesn’t grow on trees. But apparently some people
found a way around that cliche when they passed $1,500 in counterfeit
bills at the Orange County Fair. Luckily, fair officials were keeping a
close watch on their cash. The bogus bills were discovered after a
staffer noticed the same serial numbers on five bills.
Forget the Olympics or major league baseball. Start molding your kids
for the sport of the future -- professional bubble blowing. Future
all-stars in the up-and-coming pastime could be found this summer at the
Orange County Fair in the biggest bubble-blowing contest. So throw out
those oily old mitts, and stock up on some Hubba Bubba.
AUGUST
Got pants? A parolee from state prison could have used them after he
lost his while jumping head first out of a police car on the Costa Mesa
Freeway. Apparently, the impact with the pavement was enough to rip the
pants right off Abraham John Derain of Montebello. Derain was being
transferred from the Newport Beach Police Department to Orange County
Jail because he was thrashing around too much in his holding cell. On the
way, he escaped, allegedly carjacked a catering truck, led police on a
wild chase and was finally arrested by La Habra police. Just imagine that
police sketch.
“Bubbles,” a popular entertainer at the notorious Panther Palace
swingers lounge, is out of work. Costa Mesa won a victory in its fight to
close down the sex parties at a seemingly harmless 10-bedroom house in an
otherwise quiet neighborhood. Neighbors were happy with the city’s win,
hoping it would return the street to a normal, family environment.
Duane Kressin was obviously not listening when his mother told him to
respect his elders. The Newport Beach resident has been accused of
scamming local senior citizens out of thousands of dollars by allegedly
making false promises to clean air ducts and eliminate fire hazards in
their homes. He was charged with 15 counts of elder abuse, 18 counts of
felony grand theft and four misdemeanor counts of contracting without a
license.
Tagging is bad enough, but when you start defacing religious property
your gambling with a fate worse than jail time. Guillermo Omar Amaro, 20,
allegedly covered about 16 square feet of a Catholic church with
spray-painted gang monikers. Officials at Our Lady of Mount Caramel may
have had to pay about $500 to clean up the mess, but it may cost Amaro
more than that in the end.
Bumper-to-bumper traffic is certainly annoying, but in at least one
case it proved to be a helpful crime-fighting tool. Newport Beach police
caught up with alleged carjacker Wilson Villanueva after a 20-mile chase
when the driver got stuck in a traffic jam in Laguna Niguel. The next
time you’re stuck in traffic, don’t get frustrated, just think of all the
crime you could be preventing.
SEPTEMBER
Want to hear a joke? What happens when a Laguna Niguel man uses the
valet at Costa Mesa’s Hilton, leaving a gag gift of a bunch of road
flares taped together with an alarm clock in the car? Answer: Bristol
Street is closed for 90 minutes. The hotel is partially evacuated, and
the bomb squad is called out -- bomb robot and all. Funny, huh? Police
didn’t think so, but it was something they just had to laugh off.
The Costa Mesa City Council used the terrorist attacks as an excuse to
hold a closed-door session on something that should have been approved
weeks before the tragic event at the World Trade Center. The council
stated that a need for the “urgency action” existed because there were
concerns over the state of the economy in relation to the terrorist acts
of Sept. 11. Sounds like a feeble excuse for an emergency closed session
to discuss a police contract that expired Aug. 31 and was on the consent
calendar earlier that same month.
Some may say Rupert the swan’s troubled past may have led him to a
life of crime. Dramatic events in the striking black bird’s life -- such
as a brush with death after an oil spill and an unfortunate run-in with
some fishing wire and a hook -- may have pushed the local mascot to rebel
against the residents of Newport Beach. A feisty Rupert was found pecking
at two teenagers who capsized their sailboat and then hindered the harbor
patrol’s rescue.
OCTOBER
Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustee Jim Ferryman disregarded
the district’s zero-tolerance policy and got arrested on suspicion of
drunk driving after his car was involved in a minor traffic accident in
Costa Mesa. Fellow trustee Wendy Leece called for Ferryman’s resignation
if he was convicted. Ferryman continues to delay his trial, probably
until next year’s school board elections are over.
About-face: Supervisor Jim Silva’s head spun faster than the girl in
“The Exorcist” as he did a 180-degree turn on putting the county’s
proposed El Toro airport to a public vote. First he offered to let
residents vote on turning the former Marine base into an airport. The
next day, he changed his mind, promising to support the county’s plan.
Later in the month, Republican candidate for governor Richard Riordan did
an about-face as well, retracting his former support for the airport,
backing a more regional solution (which possibly includes an El Toro
airport) instead.
Dennis Rodman was still partying like its 1999 at the age of 40 and
paying the price -- pleading guilty to three misdemeanor charges relating
to noise violations at his 40th birthday party in May.
Bikers tried to bolster their nice-guy image by engaging in a bloody
brawl at the Orange County Fairgrounds during a swap meet. Another swap
meet later in the year was canceled after the melee was blamed on rival
members of the Hells Angels, Vagos and Mongols motorcycle gangs.
NOVEMBER
Greenlight means...? In its first test, a special election of the
Greenlight Initiative -- a slow-growth measure passed in Newport Beach a
year ago -- proved fatal for a developer. Measure G -- expansion of the
Koll Center near the airport -- failed, managing to confuse everyone in
the process, as both sides tried to use the “Greenlight” name to their
advantage. Even the backing of the City Council, the Chamber of Commerce
and the Daily Pilot could not sway the majority of residents to green
light the project.
The school district admitted to negligence on the part of teaching and
assessing English-language learners only after the federal government
found the district does not fully meet the needs of students with limited
English proficiency. The initial charge was filed by Mirna Burciaga, a
parent who was concerned about children other than her own who were
missing out on core curriculum classes to learn English.
Close encounters of the offensive kind: Two county health officers
sued the leader of a religious sect and a former member, claiming they
were victims of libel in newspaper advertisements and newsletters. The
officers, who visited the Piecemaker County Store for unannounced
probationary inspections, said public statements made by the Piecemakers
caused them to suffer “loss of their reputation, shame, mortification and
hurt feelings.”
DECEMBER
You’re part of Newport Beach whether you like it or not: Newport Coast
residents who tried to challenge the annexation of their enclave failed
in their attempt to gather enough signatures to force a public vote.
Simple Vote, a group of residents headed by attorney Phillip Greer, could
not muster 25% of the area’s registered voters. Maybe they should have
used the name “Greenlight.”
School board trustee Wendy Leece, tired of being passed over in the
annual election of board officials, took her campaign for the presidency
public. Again, she was denied because of what other board members
characterized as her lack of team spirit. It probably didn’t help that
Leece accused fellow board members of being intolerant and prejudiced for
excluding her in the past.
Sandals are more than a fashion trend at John Wayne Airport (and other
airports around the country) these days -- they can now expedite the
cumbersome security process. After an FAA directive, airport security
personnel are now randomly checking shoes because a man who had converted
to Islam tried to light explosives that were hidden in his shoes. “I
think it’s a good thing to check everything that’s possible to check,”
said one good-natured traveler. Let’s just hope rubber gloves don’t make
an appearance any time soon.
And last, but not least, Newport Coast Elementary School Principal
Monique VanZeeBroeck puckered up and kissed a dog dressed up as a
reindeer. VanZeeBroeck’s gesture of goodwill was to honor her students
for exceeding their fall reading goal.
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