Hearing rescheduled in post-Sept. 11 case...
Hearing rescheduled in post-Sept. 11 case
A preliminary hearing for a former Huntington Beach resident
charged with making a criminal threat has been rescheduled until next
month due to scheduling conflicts.
Steven James McManus, 44, has been charged with two felony counts
of making a criminal threat, including hate crime enhancements, as
well as with five misdemeanors -- two counts of elder abuse, two
counts of civil rights violations and one count of obstructing a
police officer.
A pre-trial hearing will be held Nov. 14 at the West Justice
Center in Westminster.
Prosecutors allege that after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks,
McManus, a former Marine, threatened to kill an elderly Iranian
couple while they were out on a daily early morning walk Sept. 23.
While driving on Bushard Street, McManus spotted the couple and
made a sudden U-turn and parked his car, police said.
Police said he approached the couple, asked them where they were
from and then told them to cross the street or he would kill them.
Fearing for their safety, the couple crossed the street, where a
neighbor picked them up and drove them to the home of their son, who
lived nearby, police said. Another neighbor who saw McManus threaten
the couple called police and directed them to his home.
Officers arrived at his home later that afternoon to interview
him. He was taken into custody and later released.
If convicted on all counts, McManus could face eight years in
prison.
-- Jose Paul Corona
Substitute appears in court on sex charges
A 35-year-old teacher made an initial court appearance Friday in
Santa Ana to address several counts of sexually related criminal
charges.
Todd Jerome Haluch of Huntington Beach is facing a total of 22
counts ranging from oral copulation with someone under 14, oral
copulation with someone under 16, lewd acts upon a child, using a
minor for a sex act, unlawful sexual intercourse with someone under
16, witness intimidation and one count of distributing and/or
duplicating child pornography, said Beth Costello, an Orange County
deputy district attorney.
Haluch, a former substitute teacher in the Newport-Mesa Unified,
Huntington Beach City, Garden Grove and Los Alamitos school
districts, was arrested last month after he was accused of engaging
in sexual acts with several female students.
Haluch will have be back in court on Nov. 14 for a pre-trial
hearing and will have to appear again on Dec. 5 for a preliminary
hearing, Costello said.
The incidents reportedly occurred between 1997 and 2001.
So far, five victims have come forward, and authorities are still
investigating whether the incidents took place on any of the campuses
where Haluch taught.
If convicted on all of the charges, Haluch could face life in
prison, Costello said.
-- Jose Paul Corona
Surf City man faces federal charges
A Huntington Beach man appeared in a Santa Ana courtroom Monday
morning after being arrested on federal charges of manufacturing and
trafficking in counterfeit Compaq computer parts.
Tony Minh Nguyen, 37, was taken into custody after being indicted
last week by a federal grand jury in Santa Ana.
Nguyen was in charge of sales and production at Dynasty Memory,
Inc., a Santa Ana-based computer supply company.
Authorities allege that between August and December of 2000 Nguyen
instructed Dynasty employees to buy out-of-date Compaq memory
components. Under Nguyen’s direction, employees would then remove the
Compaq labels and place them on non-Compaq memory components, which
were then sold as genuine Compaq products.
An investigation into the matter began when customers started
returning the memory components to Compaq. When the company learned
that the parts were counterfeit, they contacted the FBI, which
investigated the case and arrested Nguyen.
“We’re pursuing it [the case] because it’s a violation of federal
criminal law,” said Tom McConville, an assistant U.S. attorney.
If he is convicted on both charges, Nguyen could face a statutory
maximum penalty of 20 years in federal prison and fines of up to $4
million.
“Hewlett-Packard intends to defend its intellectual property and
fight counterfeiters, who not only hurt our company and shareholders
but also our customers, because counterfeit products don’t meet our
quality standards,” said Rebeca Robboy, corporate spokeswoman for
Hewlett-Packard, which owns Compaq.
Nguyen and officials at Dynasty could not be reached for comment.
Nguyen will be arraigned in Santa Ana on Monday.
-- Jose Paul Corona
Missing money box turns up, but not without problems
A box containing about $1,300 in cash, check and credit card
receipts that was thought to have been stolen has been found.
The money, which was raised during The Bolsa Chica Conservancy’s
Conservator of the Year event at the Waterfront Hilton last week, was
thought to have been stolen from the car of Adrianne Morrisson,
conservancy director.
“The items were misplaced,” Morrisson said. “I overreacted, I
panicked, so that’s why we ended thinking that [it] was stolen.”
While the money, checks and credit card receipts have been
recovered, Morrisson now has a “huge mess” on her hands. She had told
everyone who donated money in the form of checks to have them
canceled, she said.
“Thank God it was found,” Morrisson said. “It’s just one of those
things.”
-- Jose Paul Corona
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