Jury watches tape of alleged gang rape
Deepa Bharath
SANTA ANA -- Jurors in a gang-rape trial watched a 20-minute digital
videotape Tuesday that reportedly shows three teenagers sexually
assaulting an unconscious 16-year-old girl in a Corona del Mar home.
Greg Haidl, son of Orange County Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl, Kyle
Nachreiner and Keith Spann are accused of sexually assaulting the
victim with various objects in the older Haidl’s Jade Cove home in
July 2002.
The teens recorded the entire incident on a tape, which
prosecutors believe is the piece of evidence that will convince the
jury to find the defendants guilty. Defense attorneys have argued
that the sexual acts were consensual.
Orange County Superior Court Judge Francisco Briseno ruled before
the jury trial that the tape bearing graphic sexual content must be
shown only to jurors and not to the public.
On Tuesday, three large television screens were turned away from
the gallery so that only the jury, attorneys, court staff members,
the judge and the three defendants could see it. The sound from the
tape, however, was heard by all.
What the public and members of the media heard was loud rap music
in the background. The songs were clearly about sex. The tape started
off with the girl giggling and laughing with the defendants. Less
than a minute later she is heard asking: “You want to take off my
clothes, huh Greg?”
Shortly after that, only the defendants’ voices were heard. There
was no sound from the girl. The defendants laughed and talked about
enjoying their sexual experience with the girl. Prosecutors said the
teens assaulted the unconscious girl with a Snapple bottle, a juice
can, a lighted cigarette and a pool cue.
Most jurors who watched the tape showed little reaction. One juror
turned her head away for a moment. Another juror shook his head after
he finished watching the tape. The three defendants, dressed in
short-sleeved shirts, ties and dark pants, looked down for the most
part and seemed to be writing notes as the tape was being played.
The tape was, and continues to be, a controversial element of the
trial. Defense attorneys contend that the tape is “incomplete,” that
it has been edited by police and that several minutes of important
footage is missing. Pretrial motions asking that the tape not be
admitted into evidence were denied.
On Tuesday, once again, defense attorneys cross-questioned
witnesses for the prosecution in an attempt to prove that the tape is
not legitimate.
Prosecutors brought in Ryan Weedall, Lindsay Picou and Kevin
Rogers, three acquaintances of Haidl and Nachreiner, who found the
tape and turned it in to the police. Weedall and Rogers rented a
beachfront home in Newport with four other friends during the summer
of 2002.
Haidl and Nachreiner visited the rental home on July 6 after
midnight, Rogers testified. After they came and left, Rogers found
the silver Sony camcorder in one of the bedrooms, he said. The
housemates ended up watching the tape, Rogers said.
Haidl and Nachreiner came back to the beach house on July 7,
looking for the tape, he said.
“They were opening cabinets and looking under beds,” Rogers said.
Both seemed “apprehensive and shaky,” he said.
But it was Picou, Weedall’s girlfriend, who took the tape with the
camcorder wrapped in a towel and turned it in to authorities.
Picou said she felt uncomfortable watching the tape.
“I would turn my head a few times,” she said.
Picou took the tape to her brother in Rancho Cucamonga and
together, they gave it to her brother’s neighbor, a Pasadena police
officer who in turn handed the tape to San Bernardino County
Sheriff’s officials.
Both Picou and Weedall testified that they initially lied to
Newport Beach detectives about who saw the tape because their other
friends “didn’t want to get involved.”
Testimony will continue today with more witnesses for the
prosecution.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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