Detective suspected of filing false claim
Deepa Bharath
A police detective who investigated several high-profile sex crimes
and won a merit award for her work is suspected of falsely collecting
workers’ compensation benefits, officials said, a charge that could
come up in a heavily publicized gang-rape case now in the courts.
Teri Fischer, who investigated the rape of an unconscious
16-year-old girl in the Corona del Mar home of Assistant Sheriff Don
Haidl, is being scrutinized by state officials who saw “a few
irregularities” in her claim, Newport Beach Police Sgt. Steve Shulman
said.
“We’re not conducting a criminal investigation,” he said.
The city’s workers’ compensation claims administrator passed
Fischer’s file on to the police department, citing irregularities,
and the department in turn forwarded the case to the Orange County
district attorney, Shulman said.
He would not comment about the nature of Fischer’s injuries
because it is a “personnel issue.”
“The district attorney has also instructed us not to discuss this
case,” Shulman said.
Fischer has been off work since September 2002. She could not be
reached for comment on Thursday.
The Orange County district attorney’s office cannot comment on any
case referred for investigation, spokeswoman and Deputy Dist. Atty.
Susan Schroeder said.
Fischer previously testified in the high-profile gang-rape trial
involving Greg Haidl, son of Don Haidl, Kyle Nachreiner and Keith
Spann -- all teenagers accused of sexually assaulting the unconscious
girl with several objects as she lay on a pool table.
The jury trial in the case began on Monday. Defense attorneys
brought up Fischer during their opening statements, saying the
detective coaxed a reluctant victim to pursue the case. Spann’s
attorney, Peter Morreale, said Fischer met with the girl in
restaurants and at the girl’s home in Rancho Cucamonga in an attempt
to convince the girl to agree to the prosecution.
Haidl’s attorney, Joseph Cavallo, said Fischer interviewed the
girl twice, once in July 2002 and again in March 2003, because she
knew the case “had a lot of holes.”
Fischer testified during a pretrial hearing in January 2003 that
the victim did not want to go forward with the case. Fischer also
told the court she watched the 20-minute videotape the defendants had
made of the alleged rape and said it was so disturbing that it made
her vomit.
Schroeder said prosecutors don’t intend to call Fischer to testify
in the jury trial.
“Det. John Hougan is the lead investigator in this case,” she
said.
The defense may still call her as one of their witnesses. Whether
they will bring up the claims against her is unclear.
Fischer was also one of the key investigators in the case of
Trenton Veches, a city recreation coordinator who was sentenced to
life in prison for sucking the toes of several young boys enrolled in
city after-school and holiday programs.
She and other investigators, who were part of the Sexual Assault
Investigation Team including Hougan, won the Award of Merit from the
Police Department for its work in 2002. Detectives went through
hundreds of images and compact discs in the Veches case trying to
identify victims.
Fischer came to the department in 1998 after working for two years
in the Los Angeles Police Department. She started off as a patrol
officer and was transferred to the detective division.
City Councilman Steve Bromberg said he never heard about the
investigation of Fischer.
“It was totally out of my radar,” he said. “But it is an internal
matter and must be dealt with internally.”
* 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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