Bailing out the boss
Marisa O’Neil
By 9:30 a.m. Thursday, Costa Mesa Police had four arrest warrants in
hand for some of the city’s top officials.
City employees, with at least a $20 donation, called in the
warrants to have their bosses arrested on “Executive Jail Bail” day.
Once incarcerated, the executives had to bail out with double the
amount that got them behind bars in the first place, with all the
money going to the United Way and Community Health Charities of
California for the city’s annual fundraising campaign.
But the word was out, and some folks were on the lam Thursday
morning.
“We’re playing cat and mouse,” Sgt. Marty Carver said, his
handcuffs ready for the first victim.
Carver and police volunteer Fred Gackler headed over to City Hall,
where they found wanted man Marc Puckett, the city’s treasurer,
hiding out next to a soda machine in the break room.
The look on his face showed his resignation. He knew he’d been
pinched by the coppers.
Police cuffed his hands in front and marched him through the
finance department for all to see, then out the back door. A group of
schoolchildren taking a tour of City Hall watched in wonder as Carver
and Gackler led the fugitive back to the police station.
Upstairs, Carver took a mug shot of Puckett behind a cardboard
“jail” door and led him into the conference room, which doubled as
the executive jail. Burt Morgan, the chief plans examiner for the
city, was already incarcerated and making calls to round up his $40
bail.
Puckett, meanwhile, had come prepared. He pulled $60 out of his
pocket, handed it over to the warden immediately and walked out a
free man.
“I went and drew some money out,” Puckett said. “I knew they were
going to get me sometime this morning.”
Next came the arrest of Colleen O’Donoghue, assistance finance
director, who had watched with relief as Puckett was led away.
One of their own at the Police Department, Capt. Tom Warnack,
followed shortly after -- blank check in hand for his bail.
Arrestee and Assistant City Manager Steve Hayman wasn’t as
concerned about his arrest as he was about recidivism. More donations
from his co-workers could raise his bail or get him nabbed again.
“My biggest worry is: How many times in the day can I be
arrested?” he said with a laugh. “There’s double jeopardy.”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4618 or by e-mail at marisa.oneil@latimes.com.
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