The fugitive made the name for himself
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Lolita Harper
What happened to the outspoken, defiant, yet charming, Sid Soffer?
Soffer, who has dubbed himself, “The Fugitive,” lives in Las Vegas
and continues to avoid a jail sentence stemming from building code
violations.
Many may remember Soffer’s make-shift car lot. His popular steak
house. His aversion to city codes.
He was a candid man. A blunt speaker. He did not mince words. He
did not stay quiet.
Soffer, who had always lived near the beach, said he misses
Newport-Mesa.
“I have noticed that there is very, very little ocean breeze in
Vegas, practically none,” Soffer said. “There is just something
lacking here.”
The fugitive, who has persistently fought to clear his name, said
he plans to be home soon. His in the middle of the legal process to
prove there are Costa Mesa planning documents that prove his evidence
of innocence. Soffer claims the city has kept that evidence from him.
City officials claim it doesn’t exist.
Those in the know, still keep in touch with Soffer, who always has
an earful about the latest city blunder.
“I hear from him all the time,” said Costa Mesa Mayor Gary
Monahan.
Monahan described Soffer in one word: “cantankerous.”
“He spoke out about everything,” Monahan said. “I remember him at
a meeting wearing an elect Skosh Monahan T-shirt after I was already
on the council.”
Monahan was the manager at Sid’s old steak house on Newport
Boulevard -- before opening his own pub -- and said he learned more
from the disagreeable man about the restaurant business than anyone.
Although Soffer had already retreated to Sin City, Monahan ran the
steakhouse following Soffer’s instructions.
Costa Mesa resident Cass Spence, who works as a Newport Beach code
enforcement officer, said he had the pleasure of knowing Soffer
professionally. Although Spence represented the type of intrusive
government Soffer hated, he never took it out on him personally.
Oddly enough, the two men got along, Spence said. He is one of a
kind, he said.
“Sid was very hands on and knowledgeable, he’s been doing this for
40 years and succeeding,” Monahan said. “He would explain things and
make you think. He always played the devil’s advocate.”
Although he may not reside in the boundaries of Newport-Mesa,
Soffer continues to inflict a little pain on its officials.
The fugitive routinely reads the Pilot on the Internet and writes
letters to the editor and City Hall. Soffer weighs in on various
topics, such as second-story additions and the 19th Street
Transitional area. He also continues to fight his conviction.
In December 2002, Soffer wrote then Mayor Karen Robinson alleging
most of Costa Mesa’s city codes, including the one he was convicted
of violating, were not law because they were not properly “enacted”
as required in the state constitution.
“As Sidney Lester Soffer was charged and convicted of violating
Costa Mesa Municipal Codes which were not law, that means that
information shall be given to the trial court with the request the
conviction be overturned as being void for lack of the court having
jurisdiction,” he wrote.
Still fighting, still fleeing, Soffer is a reoccurring part of
Newport-Mesa history.
* LOOKING BACK runs Sundays. Do you know of a person, place or
event that deserves a historical Look Back? Let us know. Contact
James Meier by fax at (949) 646-4170; e-mail at james.meier@
latimes.com; or mail him at c/o Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa, CA 92627.
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