PUBLIC SAFETY Activists arrested after protest ends...
PUBLIC SAFETY
Activists arrested after protest ends in vandalism
Newport Beach police arrested 16 activists -- seven adults and
nine minors -- on suspicion of felony conspiracy to commit vandalism
during a protest earlier this month that police said resulted in
damage to the home of a local developer.
Some of the protesters were members of environmental activist
group Orange County Earth First, who are against a proposed housing
development in Trabuco Canyon. Police said the protesters smashed
windows on the Ocean Front West home of David Eadie, president of
Rutter Development, which is handling the project. The district
attorney’s office has yet to decide if they will press charges and
all have been released.
* The state Assembly on Tuesday voted to make the names and
addresses of the most serious sex offenders available to the public.
Until those changes are signed into law, residents can only get
general information -- like a name, offenses and a photograph but no
address -- on offenders at the Costa Mesa and Newport Beach police
departments. On its website, Newport Beach Police Department has a
map with a general area of where offenders live, but no personal
information about them.
* Three local police officers brought home medals from law
enforcement’s version of the Olympic Games this summer.
Newport Beach Police Station Officer Brad Aubuchon won two gold
medals for mountain biking earlier this month at the International
Police and Fire Games in Las Vegas. Costa Mesa Officer Dan Miles and
Det. Bakkila won medals for swimming at the California Police and
Fire Games in Stockton this June.
* The family of an underage girl who allegedly had sex with Greg
Haidl, a defendant in a gang-rape trial who is out on bail, filed a
lawsuit on Thursday against the Orange County District Attorney’s
office, alleging it illegally obtained a search warrant for the
girl’s DNA.
The 16-year-old girl and her family want her DNA excluded from a
misdemeanor statutory rape case against 19-year-old Haidl -- son of
prominent Orange County Asst. Sheriff Don Haidl -- and un unspecified
amount of money, said Adam Stull, the attorney for the family, during
a press conference at his Irvine office. The district attorney’s
office violated the girl’s civil rights in obtaining the DNA when the
girl and her family want no part of the case against Haidl, he
argued.
COSTA MESA
Leaders agree to study of proposed Gisler bridge
City officials gave their blessing to a study of a proposed bridge
to connect Gisler Avenue in Costa Mesa to Garfield Avenue in Fountain
Valley, after long-standing opposition. The Orange County
Transportation Authority voted Monday to fund an environmental study
and preliminary design of the bridge.
The city agreed to drop its opposition to the study because they
will retain veto power if plans for the bridge move forward. City
officials have opposed the bridge, which they believe will dump
Fountain Valley traffic in their city without providing any traffic
relief.
* The fair board voted to tell state officials the Orange County
Fairgrounds are not underused, contrary to how the property is
described in a state report on how to increase the efficiency of
state government. The report suggested the 150-acre fairgrounds as an
example of state property that could be sold off to help the state
budget deficit.
Costa Mesa officials and residents have adamantly opposed the idea
of relocating the fair and selling the property.
NEWPORT BEACH
Seceding churches feel backlash from diocese
Attorneys for the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles on Friday sent
out a letter to three churches, including St. James Church in Newport
Beach, which seceded from the diocese, ordering them to surrender
parish properties to the bishop by 10 a.m. on Monday.
The letter states that Bishop J. Jon Bruno still has authority
over church property and that any attempt to supersede that authority
is against state and canonical law.
Attorneys also demand on behalf of the bishop that the churches
submit current financial statements along with copies of all bank
account and investment statements from Aug. 1, 2003 to present.
The three churches, St. James, All Saints’ in Long Beach and most
recently St. David’s in North Hollywood, announced their secession
from the Episcopal Church of the United States on grounds that the
church’s liberal ideologies don’t match their own conservative
beliefs relating to the divinity of Jesus Christ and the supremacy of
the Bible.
All three churches placed themselves under the Diocese of Luwero
in the Anglican Province of Uganda, Africa.
The three churches are also opposed to the Episcopal Church’s
appointment of Gene Robinson, an openly gay man, as the Bishop of New
Hampshire.
St. James administrators have maintained that the church property
does not belong to the diocese any more. The bishop however received
strong backing last week from the presiding bishop of the Episcopal
Church of the United States, Frank T. Griswold.
St. James and the other churches in turn got the support of the
Archbishop Henry Orombi in Africa who said that the churches are now
part of the Anglican Communion and that Bruno has no authority over
them.
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