Sheriffs’ actions chided in pot incident
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Deepa Bharath
The Orange County grand jury on Thursday criticized the way Orange
County Sheriff’s officials handled a marijuana incident involving a
high-ranking county official’s son, who also stands accused of
gang-rape, but deemed there was no criminal intent.
Prosecutors say Greg Haidl, 19, son of Orange County Assistant
Sheriff Don Haidl, Kyle Nachreiner and Keith Spann raped a girl and
sexually assaulted her with various objects at the Haidls’ Corona del
Mar home.
A jury on Monday deadlocked on the case, forcing the judge to
declare a mistrial. The Orange County district attorney refiled the
case Tuesday.
The incident in question occurred on Oct. 26 when Greg Haidl was
stopped by sheriff’s deputies while skateboarding with friends in a
“No Skateboarding” area in San Clemente. A subsequent search of the
teens’ car reportedly revealed marijuana and drug paraphernalia on
the rear floorboard next to Haidl’s seat and near Haidl’s keys,
cigarettes and a bottle of tea.
A 16-year-old boy, who was with Haidl, said the marijuana belonged
to him. In a tape that has been publicized on television and radio,
sheriff’s officials decided they would not put the incident on the
log because “the press would be all over” it and that the matter
would remain “our little secret.”
A lieutenant then instructed the field sergeant to release the
teenagers without filing a report and then asked a field deputy to
drive Greg Haidl home. The sergeant then took the marijuana back to
the office and locked it in his file cabinet, the grand jury report
said. Another official then edited information from the deputy’s
report that Haidl’s belongings were grouped with the marijuana, it
said.
In an eight-page report titled “A Tempest in a Teapot or a
Violation of Public Trust?” released Thursday, members of the grand
jury who participated in a seven-month investigation said the
incident seemed very much like a cover-up, but there is no evidence
of a criminal conspiracy to obstruct justice.
The grand jury report was being withheld until the completion of
Haidl’s jury trial.
The district attorney’s office, which took over the investigation
from the sheriff, has concluded there was no evidence to support
criminal charges.
But the grand jury report points out “interference by the higher
levels of the Sheriff’s Department that gave the appearance of a
cover-up.”
“This behavior continued to snowball, resulting in several
misleading reports and public pronouncements,” the report said.
A recorded telephone conversation also showed “a concerted effort
to suppress information and keep the matter from the press and
public,” the report said.
On the other hand, it is customary for field officers to let
people off with a warning and not give them a citation and for police
officers to be intimated if their children had a brush with the law,
the report said.
Officials were probably too eager to guard a fellow officer’s son
from adverse publicity, the report said.
The grand jury recommended that the sheriff use an outside law
enforcement agency to conduct an independent investigation.
Orange County Sheriff’s spokesman Jim Amormino could not be
reached for comment on Thursday.
Deputy Dist. Atty. Susan Schroeder said the report “stands on its
own.”
“The district attorney’s office agrees with the grand jury’s
findings,” she said. “I’m legally unable to talk about other matters
until the investigation is over.”
Greg Haidl’s attorney, Pete Scalisi, said he had not looked at the
report yet, but the marijuana incident was insignificant because no
charges were filed against his client.
He said he wasn’t surprised that the grand jury didn’t find
criminal culpability on the part of the Sheriff’s Department.
“There’s no surprise there,” Scalisi said. “It was expected.”
Don Haidl said he “wasn’t paying much attention” to the grand jury
investigation.
“I want to stay away from it,” the assistant sheriff said. “I want
to let the Sheriff’s Department deal with it.”
* 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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