Police: Disappearance likely foul play
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Marisa O’Neil
The investigation into the mysterious disappearance of a local couple
is making progress, but detectives are no closer to finding the pair,
police said Monday.
Family and friends have not heard from Tom and Jackie Hawks, 57
and 47, respectively, for nearly two months, since they sold the Well
Deserved, a 55-foot yacht they had lived on in Newport Harbor. Their
disappearance now “absolutely” looks like foul play was involved,
Newport Beach Sgt. Steve Shulman said Monday.
“The investigation is continuing, and we’ve made significant
progress,” Shulman said.
Shulman declined to go into the details of what police have
uncovered, saying that doing so could jeopardize the investigation.
A pretrial hearing scheduled Tuesday for the boat’s buyer,
25-year-old Skylar DeLeon, on a grand theft charge was postponed
until Jan. 18. DeLeon has not been charged in connection with the
Hawkses’ disappearance and could go to trial on the theft charges
within 60 days of his next hearing, Senior Deputy Dist. Atty. Matt
Murphy said.
“That’s 60 days down the road,” he said. “A lot can happen.”
Prosecutors last week dropped charges of money laundering and
possession of money earned through large-scale drug sales originally
filed against DeLeon and substituted in the theft charge.
DeLeon, a former child actor who appeared on the “Mighty Morphin’
Power Rangers” television show, is being held on the grand theft
charge in connection with unpaid repairs on another boat he owned. He
is ineligible for bail because of probation violations in connection
with a previous burglary conviction.
DeLeon’s wife, 23-year-old Jennifer DeLeon, came to Tuesday’s
scheduled hearing. The couple have one young child, and Jennifer
DeLeon is scheduled to deliver a second soon, Skylar DeLeon’s
attorney Ed Welbourn said.
His client would like to be with his wife when she delivers, but
that may not be possible, Welbourn said.
Jennifer DeLeon has also hired an attorney.
Welbourn will first deal with Skylar DeLeon’s theft charge, then
address the probation issues, he said. It’s not clear, he said, if
his client will face other charges in connection with the couple’s
disappearance.
“I guess that’s what’s in everybody’s mind,” Welbourn said.
“What’s going on with the investigation?”
The Hawkses disappeared shortly after they told friends they were
meeting with prospective buyers for their boat in mid-November.
The couple had dreamed of living on a boat after Tom Hawks retired
from his job as a probation officer in Prescott, Ariz., family
members reported. They decided the 55-foot cabin cruiser was too
large for the two of them and wanted to sell it to buy a smaller one
and a home in San Carlos, Mexico, Tom Hawks’ son, 28-year-old Ryan
Hawks, said.
Before their disappearance, they had been in almost daily contact
with Tom Hawks’ other son, whose wife had just given the retired
couple their first grandchild. The $400,000 cash Skylar DeLeon
reportedly paid for the Well Deserved never showed up in their bank
account, and none of their accounts has shown any activity since
their disappearance.
Police found their Honda CRV in Ensenada, Mexico, in December.
Newport Beach detectives are processing it for evidence, but details
have not been released.
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