Lawyer wants judge out, rape case dropped
Marisa O’Neil
A defense attorney for 19-year-old Greg Haidl, accused in two
separate rape cases, is asking for a judge to recuse himself and for
one of the cases be thrown out because of an allegedly improper
arrest.
Following a statutory rape hearing for Greg Haidl, son of Orange
County Asst. Sheriff Don Haidl, in a South County courthouse Friday,
defense attorney Joe Cavallo asked Orange County Superior Court Judge
Luis Rodriguez to step down from the case for signing a search
warrant to obtain the DNA of the underage girl. The 16-year-old girl -- who admitted to having sex with Greg Haidl while he was out on
bail on charges that he and two other boys gang-raped an unconscious
16-year-old girl in July 2002 -- filed a federal lawsuit on Thursday
against Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas and others in
connection with the warrant.
Rodriguez was not named in the suit.
“The judge should be recused,” Cavallo said. “He’s now a potential
witness in a federal case.”
Cavallo said he would file the motion on Monday to remove
Rodriguez from the statutory rape case against Greg Haidl. He will
also file a motion to dismiss the case because officers did not read
Greg Haidl his Miranda rights at the time of that arrest, Cavallo
said.
“It’s unconscionable for law enforcement to conduct themselves
like that,” he said. “He was not read his rights. He was detained for
six hours.”
He was arrested on July 13 after sheriff’s deputies were called to
a San Clemente home to investigate a barking dog. When they showed
up, Greg Haidl hid in the back yard of the house, where he and other
teenagers were having a party, according to court documents.
A girl -- known in court documents as Jane Doe No. 2 -- who was
dog sitting at the house, admitted to having consensual sex with
Haidl and refused to press charges. Haidl is free on $100,000 bail on
that case and on another $100,000 bail after a jury deadlocked on the
gang-rape charges that he and 19-year-olds Kyle Nachreiner and Keith
Spann face.
That case is set to be retried starting in October.
Jane Doe No. 2 met Greg Haidl at a party held by his father the
night Judge Francisco Briseno declared a mistrial, prosecutors said.
Jane Doe. No. 2’s attorney, Adam Stull, filed the lawsuit against
the district attorney’s office on Thursday, alleging they illegally
obtained a search warrant to get her DNA for evidence. The girl does
not want to get involved in the case and did not want to supply a DNA
sample, said Stull, who claims her civil rights were violated.
UC Irvine criminology professor William Thompson, an attorney and
DNA expert who served on O.J. Simpson’s defense team, said that’s a
gray area.
“Technology has brought us into a new and unclear area,” he said.
If Jane Doe No. 2 was in possession of documents that would be
evidence in a case, prosecutors could obtain a subpoena or warrant
for them. And some judges have ruled that DNA from discarded
cigarette butts or soda cans is admissible -- essentially abandoned
property.
But using a warrant to get DNA from an unwilling party opens up
other questions, Thompson said.
“The big, unanswered legal question here is how the government is
going to treat people’s DNA,” he said.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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