How to resolve AdBlock issue?
Refresh this page
How to resolve AdBlock issue?
Refresh this page
Lake County News,California
  • Home
    • Registration Form
  • News
    • Education
    • Veterans
    • Community
      • Obituaries
      • Letters
      • Commentary
    • Police Logs
    • Business
    • Recreation
    • Health
    • Religion
    • Legals
    • Arts & Life
    • Regional
  • Calendar
  • Contact us
    • FAQs
    • Phones, E-Mail
    • Subscribe
  • Advertise Here
  • Login
How to resolve AdBlock issue?
Refresh this page

News

Voters across county, state say no to five of six propositions

Details
Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 19 May 2009
LAKEPORT – Californians soundly defeated all but one of the propositions put before them in a special statewide ballot on Tuesday.


Voters rejected the financial package by wide margins. The only proposition to pass was 1F, which would prevent certain elected officials from receiving salary increases during years when the state has a deficit.


Lake County voters closely mirrored the overall state results. With all 27 precincts reporting, Lake County voters said no to Propositions 1A through 1E, but approved Proposition 1F.


Registrar of Voters Diane Fridley's office reported that of the 33,010 registered voters, 9,746 – or 29.5 percent – case votes in Tuesday's special election.


Of that total, 11 percent, or 3,626 ballots, were cast at precincts, with 6,120, or 18.5 percent, cast by absentee.


Absentee, or vote by mail, voters have grown to account for about half of the county's registered voters, as Lake County News has reported.


Fridley reported that her office started processing absentee ballots last Friday. The official canvass will begin Wednesday and will continue daily – with the exception of weekends and the holiday – until completed.


The local and state results for the special election ballot measures are as follows, according to the Registrar of Voters office and the office of California Secretary of State Debra Bowen.


Proposition 1A: “Rainy Day” Stabilization Fund


Lake County

Yes  3,259  33.7%

No   6,399   66.3%


California

Yes   1,327,400   34.1 %

No    2,555,519    65.9 %


Proposition 1B: Education Fund Payment Plan


Lake County

Yes   3,586    37.2%

No     6,063   62.8%


California

Yes   1,452,535    37.4%

No     2,421,906   62.6%


Proposition 1C: Lottery Modernization Act


Lake County

Yes   3,384   35.0%

No    6,271   65.0%


California

Yes  1,368,222  35.4%

No   2,493,770   64.6%


Proposition 1D: Children's Services Funding


Lake County

Yes   3,121   32.4%

No    6,514    67.6%


California

Yes   1,324,252   34.2%

No    2,536,657   65.8%


Proposition 1E: Mental Health Fund Temporary Reallocation


Lake County

Yes     2,953    31.1%

No       6,557   68.9%


California

Yes   1,292,437  33.6%

No    2,549,361  66.4%


Prop 1F: Elected Officials' Salaries


Lake County

Yes     7,192    75.3%

No       2,358    24.7%


California

Yes     2,859,122   73.9%

No      1,010,457   26.1%


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

Mendocino College announces local graduates; commencement set for May 22

Details
Written by: Lake County News Reports
Published: 19 May 2009
UKIAH – When Mendocino College holds its commencement ceremony this Friday, May 22, approximately 66 local graduates will receive associates of arts or sciences degrees.


The ceremony will take place at 6 p.m. in the gymnasium at the Ukiah campus.


The following is the list of Lake County graduates with the following notations: H1 – with Honors; H2 – Dean’s List; H3 – President’s List; H4 – Highest Honors; PTK – PTK membership.


Hidden Valley Lake:


Bradley Finley: AA, Liberal Arts; AA General Studies

Erica S. Park: AS, Registered Nurse

Chantal Stanton: AS, Registered Nurse


Finley:

 

Letitia Garcia: AS, Child Development/ Family Relations


Kelseyville:


Adriana G. Arroyo: AA, Liberal Arts

Timothy Boyd: Cert, Business - Management

Btaka T. Brown: AS, Administration of Justice

Margaret Catterton: AA, General Studies

Diana R. Dixon: AS, Business - Management

Meagan Duncan: AA, General Studies

Johnie W. Finch: AS, Automotive Technology; Cert, Automotive Technician; Cert, Automotive Chassis Specialist; Cert, Automotive Tune-Up and Electronics Specialist

Jennifer J. Gentry: AS, Registered Nurse

Tammy L. Hamil: AA, Psychology

Mitchell Higley: AS, Administration of Justice

Jose O. Jimenez: AA, Liberal Arts

Hollie Johnson: AA, Liberal Arts

Michael A. Jonsen: PTK; AA, Psychology

Tracy Klein: AS, Business – Management; AS, Business - Accounting

Joshua Lauderdale: PTK; AA ,Liberal Arts

Andrea I. Lewis: AA, Liberal Arts

Monica Martinez: AS, Business - Administration

Maria Del Rosario Medina: AS, Child Development/ Family Relations

Raylene Morin: AA, General Studies

Carla Mottor: Cert, Child Development

Monique Redding: AS, LVN to RN Career Ladder

Megann Rubash: AA, Liberal Arts


Lakeport:

 

Jenny Allen: AA, Liberal Arts

Lori Bacci: Cert, Business Office Technology - Medical Billing/ Coding

Jenean N. Ballard: AA, Liberal Arts

Melissa Borg: H1; AS, Child Development/ Family Relations

Quincey-Kaye J. Bourgeois-Butler: PTK; AA, Liberal Arts

Jennifer K. Carley: AS, Mathematics

Rebecca Combs: AA, General Studies

Maria Del Rosario Damas: PTK; AS, Mathematics

Carlos David De Luna: AS, Business – Management; AS, Business – Accounting; Cert, Business - Management

Nikol K. Deccanier: AA, Liberal Arts

Isaac F. Eaquinto: H2; PTK; AA, Liberal Arts

Susanna De Angelo Fraser: AA, General Studies

Georgina M. Guardado: AS, Administration of Justice

Linda J. King: PTK; AS, Registered Nurse AA General Studies

Mark Leon: AA, Liberal Arts

Daniel S. LoDolce: H1; AS, Business - Administration

Amanda Lyons: AA, General Studies

Patrick W. Mick: AA, Social Science

Nicole M. Reimers: H1; Cert, Business – Management; AS, Business – Management; AS, Business - Accounting

Refugio Rosas: AA, Liberal Arts

Molly C. Ryan: AA, Social Science

Pamela J. Salsedo: AS, Business – Management; AS, Business - Administration

Michael D. Swartz: AS; Computer and Information Sciences; AA, Liberal Arts

Ashton Vagnone: AA, Liberal Arts

Breanne Vanlanen: AA, General Studies


Lower Lake:

 

Axel R. Zijderveld: AS, Administration of Justice

Wynton C. Zijderveld: AS, Fire Science


Lucerne:

 

Timothy Matlack: AS, Business Administration

Melody N. Shepherd: AA, Liberal Arts


Middletown:

 

Nicolas A. LaVelle: H1; AS, Administration of Justice


Nice:


Debra A. Gardner: H2; AA, Liberal Arts AA Social Science

Luke Gardner: H3; AA, Social Science AA Liberal Arts

Megan M. Gardner: H3; AA, Social Science; AA, Liberal Arts

Jessica Lane: AS, Child Development/ Family Relations

Kimberly R. Marcks: AA, General Studies

Terri J. Rave: AS, Business - Management


Upper Lake:

 

Christina D. Birge: AS, LVN to RN Career Ladder

Robin L. Boke: AS, Child Development/ Family Relations

Roy McCutcheon: AS Computer and Information Applications

Cecil White: AA Liberal Arts

Lake County marks 148th anniversary of founding Wednesday

Details
Written by: Lake County News Reports
Published: 19 May 2009
LAKE COUNTY – On Wednesday, Lake County will mark the 148th year since its formation.

Local historian Donna J Howard reported that Lake County was formerly known as the Hot Springs sector of Napa County.

According to the “History of Napa and Lake County 1881,” Lake County was formed on May 20, 1861, by adding some land in the northwest from Mendocino County and some from the northeast of Colusa County.

The act organizing the county of Lake was approved by the Governor of California.

After the county government was organized, Lakeport was chosen as the county seat and a courthouse was erected, according to the 1881 history.

Lake County will celebrate its sesquicentennial – the 150th anniversary of its formation – in 2011.

Judge sets Dinius trial for June 30; prosecution concerned about time for investigation

Details
Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 19 May 2009

THIS STORY HAS BEEN UPDATED.

LAKEPORT – The trial date for a Carmichael man accused of vehicular manslaughter and boating under the influence in connection with a fatal 2006 sailboat crash has been moved.

Bismarck Dinius, 40, was scheduled to go on trial beginning on Tuesday, but visiting Judge J. Michael Byrne granted a delay in the trial date, which now is tentatively scheduled for June 30.

However, there's a possibility that the trial may not even take place then.

Deputy District Attorney John Langan told the court on Tuesday that he is concerned that his investigators may not be able to complete in-depth followup on new information in the case, as well as researching 911 calls regarding the crash that have since been purged.

He's asked for a June 12 setting date, at which time he said he might ask to dismiss the case.

“It's a possibility given the amount of investigation that we believe we would need to ethically do now before presenting a trial that would be fair to both sides,” said Langan.

“What I don't want to have happen is for us to try to rush this and do a sloppy job,” he said.

Dinius, who was present in court on Tuesday, is being tried for the April 29, 2006, crash in which Willows resident Lynn Thornton was mortally injured.

He was at the tiller of a sailboat owned by Thornton's fiancé, Mark Weber, when it was hit by a powerboat driven by Russell Perdock, an off-duty chief deputy with the Lake County Sheriff's Office.

Langan had requested a new trial date, telling the court that his investigators need to look into new information about Perdock's activities before the crash.

They're also looking into statements from former Lake County sheriff's sergeant and current deputy Mike Morshed regarding an order that he gave to former sheriff's Sgt. James Beland to not test Perdock with a breathalyzer at the crash scene.

Dinius' defense attorney, Victor Haltom of Sacramento, had pulled a time waiver on May 8, which means the trial couldn't start any later than July 7.

Byrne said he was concerned about continuing the case beyond that statutory limit, considering the age of the case.

The judge also granted a motion from Langan to release Beland's personnel records.

Judge looks first at motion seeking personnel records

The morning hearing took place in two parts, beginning with Langan presenting his Pitchess motion for Beland's records, since Byrne pointed out that Langan's motion to continue counted on the records request.

Pointing to differences in federal and state approaches to releasing peace officers' records, Langan said he recognized it was a difficult question for the court.

He said it was a “unique and interesting” position he was in, because he had a duty to try to get the records because of what they might mean for the case.

Part of Beland's records – a 35-page transcript from an internal affairs investigation interview last June – were released by his attorney, Scott Lewis of Santa Rosa, to Haltom, who in turn included them in his opposition to a gag order Langan had filed earlier this month, as Lake County News has reported.

In one of Langan's latest filings on the case, discussing his Pitchess motion, he also had attached the transcript, which detailed an interview with Beland before he was terminated last year. In it, he stated that he was ordered not to administer the breathalyzer test to Perdock.

Byrne asked Langan what specific parts of Beland's files he wanted. “Are we talking about his total records or are we talking about what led to the termination?”

Langan suggested he wanted records either from May 18, 2008 – the date Beland had a conversation with him, prior to testifying in the preliminary hearing, in which he stated he had been given the order – or from the date of the crash in April 2006 and forward.

Lewis, who called in to the hearing, said he didn't oppose an “in camera” review – which is conducted in private in the judge's chambers – of the records.

He explained that there are two different files – Beland's normal personnel file and a more extensive one connected to the discipline proceeding he's going through now. Throughout that entire investigatory file there are names of many other witnesses.

Byrne suggested he would do an initial in camera review to protect Beland's private rights and privileges.

Deputy County Counsel Ryan Lambert, representing the Lake County Sheriff's Office, said the agency filed its opposition to release the records last week.

Since then, Lambert said he has learned more about the case's records. “Knowing what I know now, Mr. Beland has turned over at least portions of his confidential files,” he said, noting that because of that there is a question of a waiver.

The sheriff's office policy is to respond to Pitchess motions with objections, but Lambert added, “How that comes together with an apparent disclosure by an employee, I'm not prepared to respond to.”

Lambert said he objected to Langan's assertion that he should be able to participate in the in camera review.

He suggested that, since Haltom had access to and is aware of exculpatory information in the case, they should have filed their own Pitchess motion for the material. “There's no reason the district attorney needs to conduct this investigation on their behalf,” Lambert said.

Haltom stated during the hearing that he believed Beland was fired because “he didn't tow the party line.”

“The file will show that, in our opinion, the allegations resulting in him being terminated were trumped up,” said Haltom, asserting that the real reason Beland was fired had more to do with providing information harmful to Perdock and helpful to Dinius.

Byrne said the situation didn't involve the usual principles protecting law enforcement officers' records.

“The credibility of Mr. Perdock is probably the core of the case,” said Byrne.

He said what took place on the lake, the breathalyzer test, Beland and the witnesses are all very important. Byrne said he didn't think there was relevance for personnel records previous to the crash, as he had no indication there was anything in Beland's background beforehand to justify those releases.

Saying he wasn't allowing a fishing expedition, Byrne took an hour to go into his chambers, where he reviewed an inch-thick manila envelope containing Beland's records. He was accompanied by a sheriff's staffer and a court reporter, and said he would have the records sealed afterward.

When court reconvened just after 10:30 a.m., Byrne said he had reviewed the documents and ordered that all the entire investigative reports and interviews by the sheriff's department pertaining to Beland's discipline action be released, with copies provided to both the prosecution and defense by day's end.

District attorney concerned about having enough time for investigation

In presenting his motion to change the trial date, Langan said he will need time to review and investigate Beland's documents.

He also reported that some important evidence – in this case, the 911 calls from April 29, 2006 – are “no longer in existence.”

“We're trying to create a record of the calls,” he said.

He said Beland also will need to be interviewed and new information on Perdock examined. With Haltom pulling the time waiver, the trial can start no later than July 7.

Langan said he wanted to talk to the judge in chambers about the motion to continue. However, Byrne responded, “I've always done this on the record. That's my practice.”

Haltom said that the request to delay the trial has to be based on the prosecution exercising due diligence. If the calls were germane, he asked, why weren't they examined three years ago?

The prosecution wanted to examine information both about Perdock and Beland, with all of that evidence being helpful only to the defense, said Haltom.

He objected to delaying the trial any longer. “We're ready to go.”

Haltom also questioned why, earlier on Tuesday, he had received 110 new pages of discovery material from the District Attorney's Office.

“I'm pretty troubled by it,” he said.

The evidence included a September 2008 report by the District Attorney's Office in which Perdock provided them with an investigative report from a Pleasanton-based private investigation firm, GAB Investigations. The documents included statements from witnesses saying they saw lights on the sailboat. Haltom said the prosecution's whole case is based on the lights not being on.

“Why on earth am I getting this on the day the trial is supposed to start from the DA's Office?” Haltom asked.

Byrne said he saw three factors coming into play regarding the trial date.

First, Lake is a small county and the case has generated a lot of publicity, which means the court will have to spend a lot of time getting a jury panel. They also have the revoking of Dinius' time waiver, which means they have a 60-day period within which to set the trial date. Then there's the new information from Beland's file that Byrne ordered released.

Based on his experience of the case, Byrne said he believed there is much to be revealed that's of interest to both sides, which justified moving the trial within the 60-day period. He said the 911 calls should have been investigated earlier.

“It is a very unusual case, with unusual circumstances, that continues to get unusual,” said Byrne.

Langan, noting that his investigators can't finish their inquiries by July 7, asked for a setting date at least two weeks out from the start of the trial so he make a decision about whether or not they'll be ready to proceed. Byrne gave him the June 12 date, in preparation for the June 30 trial.

 

Investigating the 911 calls

Langan, who took over prosecuting the case in February of 2008, told Lake County News Tuesday afternoon that he doesn't exactly know what happened to the 911 tapes from the day of the crash.

“I was told there was a significant number of calls that came in,” he said. “For whatever reason, those calls were not preserved.”

What they do have are the 911 calls Perdock made from his cell phone, reporting the crash.

Langan noted that not all of the day's calls pertained to the crash.

“What we are doing is to try to see if we can get records of the origins of those calls,” he said.

That involves tracking down numbers and who they were registered to, which involves a different process for land lines and cell phones. He said he provided some of that information to Haltom Tuesday, and will try to get the rest of the phone call information as soon as possible.

“We have to make the effort,” he said.

Capt. James Bauman of the Lake County Sheriff's Office said the law requires the sheriff's office to keep the audio recordings of 911 calls for six months.

The sheriff's office's actually keeps them twice that long, said Bauman. The sheriff's Mercom dispatch system automatically purges the audio recording on an ongoing basis every 365 days. So, as of Wednesday, the oldest voice recording in the system would be for May 21, 2008.

Bauman said the sheriff's incident reports will chronologically record comments and calls, but if they get numerous calls about the same incident – such as in the case of a wildland fire or other major situation – not every subsequent call will be logged once response has been dispatched.

E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

  1. New witness statements feature prominently in request to delay Dinius trial
  2. Lucerne student finishes fifth in state elementary school spelling bee
  3. Clearlake man injured in Sunday crash
  • 7222
  • 7223
  • 7224
  • 7225
  • 7226
  • 7227
  • 7228
  • 7229
  • 7230
  • 7231
How to resolve AdBlock issue?
Refresh this page