Those were the days: Drunks and fighters
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ROBERT GARDNER
* EDITOR’S NOTE: The Daily Pilot has agreed to republish The Verdict,
the ever-popular column written for many years by retired Corona Del
Mar jurist and historian Robert Gardner, in exchange for donations to
the Surfrider Foundation. This particular column was originally
published in March 2003.
I was relieved to read that the people charged with Orange
County’s most recent multimillion-dollar theft, more than $7 million
I believe, came not from Newport Beach but from Mission Viejo. For a
while, I thought Newport Beach had a corner on the
multimillion-dollar theft market.
‘Twas not always so. During my career as a deputy district
attorney (1937-38) and as this town’s city judge (1938-1941 and
1945-1947), I can remember only two theft cases arising in Newport
Beach, and they certainly weren’t in the multimillion-dollar class.
Far from it. In my day, Newport Beach seemed to specialize in such
nontheft, antisocial activities as rum running, bootlegging, illegal
gambling plus considerable over-consumption of alcohol and fighting.
We filled the jail every Saturday night with drunks and fighters, but
no thieves.
The first Newport Beach theft case I can remember occurred when I
was a deputy district attorney. A man was charged with stealing a
fish net. The biggest problem in the case was proving that the net
was worth $200, the amount necessary for a grand theft conviction.
However, the thing that stands out in my memory is that after being
sentenced to prison, the guy was dragged out of court screaming that
when he got out he was going to kill Chief of Police Rowland
Hodgkinson and me. I’m still alive and Hodge died of natural causes,
so that man is either the oldest inmate of the prison system or he
had a bad memory.
The other theft occurred during my stint as city judge. It
certainly didn’t qualify as grand theft. The guy stole a manhole
cover. I suppose that today those things are called people-hole
covers, but in those thoughtless, sexist days they were called
manhole covers. I’ve been racking my feeble brain trying to remember
why he stole a manhole cover or what he intended to do with it after
he stole it. I guess there are some things in life that simply defy
explanation.
So there we have it -- a fish net and a manhole cover. Pretty
small potatoes compared with the current multimillion-dollar jobs. I
guess we’ve climbed a long way up civilization’s ladder.
As I say, in my day, antisocial behavior usually consisted of
getting drunk or getting in a fight. While not endorsing either
activity, I must admit that it was sort of fun to go out on the beach
in front of the Rendezvous nearly every Saturday night to watch a
couple of young bucks slug it out. Well, slug it out may be a touch
of hyperbole. On that dark beach, the antagonists seldom connected.
One did, and knocked all the front teeth out of the mouth of my law
school buddy, Greg Bautzer. Afterward, Greg had a highly publicized
affair with Joan Crawford and became a famous Hollywood lawyer. I
think the Balboa incident may have helped. Greg’s false teeth were a
big improvement on his old ones.
I don’t want to sound like I’m advocating drinking and fighting,
but I do submit that they are rather harmless activities compared
with stealing millions of dollars. As to the latter, I must admit
it’s a little embarrassing to confess that the only two thefts I can
remember from my youth were of a fish net and a manhole cover. I
guess that if you’re going to be a thief, you ought to go first
class, and the new breed seems to be doing just that.
* ROBERT GARDNER, a Corona del Mar resident, is a retired judge
and a longtime observer of life in Newport Beach.
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