Steel pleads guilty to misdemeanor
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Deepa Bharath
A year and a half after the district attorney’s office charged
Chris Steel with felony perjury, the Costa Mesa councilman pleaded
guilty Friday to one misdemeanor charge of submitting false election
nomination papers.
Steel, who won a landslide victory in 2000, will retain his
council seat because the law requires that only convicted felons be
removed from office. Superior Court Judge Carla Singer placed him on
informal probation that ended once he paid about $1,100 in fines,
Steel attorney Ron Cordova said.
The Orange County district attorney charged Steel with two felony
charges on May 16, 2001. He was accused of allowing resident Richard
Noack to sign his wife’s name on nomination papers during the 2000
election.
He was also accused of signing for resident Alice Billioux during
the 1998 election. Billioux was legally blind at the time and has
since passed away.
Steel was charged with perjury for signing the Declaration of the
Circulator stating the signatures were genuine -- in both cases.
Steel faced up to three years and eight months in prison, as well
as losing his council seat, if convicted of those charges.
But the district attorney reduced both felony charges to
misdemeanors, and Singer later dismissed the charge relating to the
2000 election, Cordova said.
Another Superior Court judge tossed out that charge in July 2001
in a civil lawsuit brought by resident Michael Szkaradek, who has
appealed the decision.
Steel could not be reached for comment Friday, but Cordova said
his client felt “totally exonerated.”
“When Chris submitted those nomination papers, he thought he was
doing the right thing,” he said, referring to the 1998 charge. “We’re
not saying a violation did not occur. It did occur and he has taken
full responsibility for that.”
Deputy Dist. Atty. Jeff Winter could not be reached for comment.
Cordova said the felony charges were not warranted because Steel’s
actions “were not egregious enough to be deemed a felony.”
“There is a difference between an innocent mistake and a
deliberate violation of the law,” he said.
The district attorney made Steel several offers to plead guilty to
two misdemeanor charges, but the councilman continually refused to
accept them.
This, however, is not the end of the road for Steel. Szkaradek
said Friday that he intends to continue with his appeal despite the
outcome of the criminal trial. The appeal is scheduled to be heard in
March, he said.
“The idea of going through with the appeal is that Steel should
have never gotten on the council in the first place because of the
false nomination papers,” Szkaradek said. “For me, it’s a matter of
principle.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at deepa.bharath@ latimes.com.
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