Liberty plea denied
Marisa O’Neil
Letters from supporters of a Corona del Mar woman, decrying her
conviction on felony charges that she molested a teenage girl, didn’t
convince a judge to let her out of jail Friday while she awaits
sentencing.
An attorney for Victoria Hawlish submitted to the court volumes of
letters in support of the mother of two, who was scheduled to be
sentenced Friday on three felony counts of attempted lewd acts on a
minor. But the letters, including a lengthy note from Hawlish’s
husband, gave the impression that the family’s ties to the community
were loosening and that the family’s ability to move had increased,
Orange County Superior Court Judge Carla M. Singer said.
Many of the letters called the conviction a “travesty” and a
“miscarriage of justice,” Singer said.
“It appears to me that attitude gives the court cause for
concern,” Singer said.
A standing-room-only group of onlookers crowded into the small
11th-floor courtroom in anticipation of Hawlish’s sentencing. Many
gave words of support to her husband, Jeff Hawlish.
Victoria Hawlish, wearing navy blue prison scrubs and orange
tennis shoes and her hair pulled back in a small bun, sobbed as a
bailiff brought her in the courtroom.
She raised her cuffed hands to her face and crossed her manicured
fingers as she looked at her husband.
A group of women in the courtroom sobbed as they watched.
Defense attorney Albert DeBlanc Jr. asked the judge to postpone
Friday’s scheduled sentencing to allow his client more time to work
with a psychologist. If reports from the psychologist and probation
department were favorable to Hawlish, Singer said, she might consider
probation for the 41-year-old woman.
But on Friday, Singer said she was inclined to deny probation
based on what she’d seen so far.
DeBlanc argued that Victoria Hawlish was not a predator or a risk
to the community.
“She realizes now is the time to change her life, and she has done
that,” he said. “She lived outside the boundaries and recognizes that
now and is humbled.”
Prosecutors believe Victoria Hawlish inappropriately touched a
15-year-old girl on numerous occasions while the girl was living in
Hawlish’s Corona del Mar home. She repeatedly crossed the line of
appropriate behavior, Deputy Dist. Atty. Jana Hoffmann said during
the trial in March.
DeBlanc countered that his client, a former stripper, was simply
an outgoing woman who was comfortable with her sexuality.
A jury found Victoria Hawlish not guilty of five counts of lewd
acts with a minor. They did, however, find her guilty of three counts
of attempted lewd acts with a minor, a felony.
She faces nearly three years in prison, but could also get
probation.
Victoria Hawlish is scheduled to be sentenced June 10.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.