Dubious distinctions
JANUARY
Costa Mesa Police learned a local company was moving more than
furniture when an office drug bust revealed more than 1,000 marijuana
plants at Starving College Students Moving Co. Police arrested Paul
Harrington, 42, on suspicion of cultivating marijuana for sale, and
they said he had stolen electricity to run an irrigation system for
his illegal garden.
Being an elected official is often a thankless job, but sometimes
it even gets you death threats. That’s what Rep. Dana Rohrabacher got
after a radio show discussed his efforts to pass a bill limiting
health care for illegal immigrants. His Huntington Beach office
received dozens of calls -- one labeling him a racist and another
mentioning Hitler -- after he pushed a bill that would have made
hospitals check the immigration status of patients and pass the
information on to federal authorities. The bill was voted down in
May.
FEBRUARY
Newport Beach residents like their dolphins in the water, not on
the bluffs overlooking the beach. An outcry from residents led Corona
del Mar centennial celebration planners to scrap the idea of a
commemorative dolphin statue at Inspiration Point. Residents
complained that the statue would obstruct their ocean view.
Chalk this one up to bio-weapons paranoia. Workers in a Santa Ana
Heights office building called Newport Beach Fire Department
officials saying someone received a greeting card in an envelope
containing a strange powder that turned out to be chalk. It may have
been an attempt to scare the card’s recipient, but U.S. Postal
Service and FBI officials even looked into the case, which was the
third suspicious-substance incident in Newport-Mesa in two weeks.
MARCH
Telling kids what to wear earned Newport-Mesa school officials a
big pink headache, thanks in part to the media. When Ensign
Intermediate School Principal Edward Wong pulled students from a
class photo because he thought their pink clothes signified gang-like
affiliation, he landed the school in the media spotlight. Radio and
television host Ryan Seacrest announced “Think Pink” week, and local
TV crews stopped by the school. As pre-teens often do, some at the
school grew tired of the issue and the controversial color before the
week was out.
You didn’t really want to vote, did you? Technophobes’ worst fears
were realized when glitches with Orange County’s new electronic
voting system caused voters in some precincts, including four in
Newport-Mesa, to get the wrong ballots on March 2. Election officials
blamed the problems on inadequate training for poll workers, but some
observers said the issue typifies how electronic voting machines are
susceptible to fraud or just plain old incompetence.
APRIL
When Newport Beach resident Rick Gorski saw a flash in the sky
behind his home last year, and then found a tantalizingly
alien-looking rock behind his home, he felt sure a rare meteorite had
paid him a visit. The more he read up on the subject and the more he
looked at the rock -- about the size of a human skull -- the more
convinced he became. Even experts from the University of Arizona,
UCLA, Griffith Observatory, Orange Coast College and Irvine Valley
College declaring the find an Earthling couldn’t convince him
otherwise.
Newport Beach city officials got a special delivery from a
Riverside County girl -- an envelope containing two shells and a note
asking for forgiveness. It seems little Katherine, who didn’t give
her last name, had visited Corona del Mar’s tide pools and picked up
a couple of souvenirs. When her teacher warned that she may have
unwittingly left a couple of hermit crabs homeless, she sent the
shells back with a note apologizing for her sticky fingers.
MAY
The Newport Beach City Council voted to ban the firing of airsoft
guns, which fire plastic pellets but look strikingly like real guns.
Before the ban, groups of children bearing replica machine guns and
handguns gathered in out-of-the-way, wooded areas to stage mock
battles with the guns. Some argued that boys need a place to run
around and play, but police and city officials worried the toys would
be mistaken for real guns and could end in a shooting by officers.
Pamela Rose came to visit Cameo Shores Beach early Mother’s Day
morn. Problem was, Pamela Rose is a 60-foot, steel-hulled bait boat
that wasn’t invited on the rocky shore. The boat ran aground after a
deckhand fell asleep at the wheel of the boat. Three crew members
abandoned ship and made it ashore safely. A fourth was found in a
tide pool, suffering from hypothermia and minor injuries.
Here’s a hint: If you’re a well-known cross-dresser who works in a
local store, don’t try to rob a nearby bank. Police arrested
53-year-old Brianna Catherine Cery, also known as Bryan Cery, for
allegedly robbing a Newport Beach Bank. Cery was wearing blue jeans,
a blue tank-top with spaghetti straps and a blond wig at the time of
his arrest. One of the bank customers recognized Cery as an employee
at a Costa Mesa grocery store and positively identified the suspect.
JUNE
Costa Mesa resident Anthony James Ellis, 53, was sentenced to 960
hours of community service for punching his pet macaw and slamming
him against his boat. Ellis claimed he was drunk at the time and
reacted to the bird biting him. He was also ordered to take anger
management classes, pay the Newport Beach Police Department $3,500
for his bird’s vet bills and not drink or own a pet for three years.
In a move that might have the Duke rolling in his grave, Orange
County Supervisor Chris Norby suggested renaming John Wayne Airport
after Fox’s successful prime-time soap “The OC.” The idea was greeted
by a unanimous “Ew!” by locals, and supervisors backed off the idea
quicker than it takes a fight to break out at a posh party from any
given episode of the show.
Remorseful bandits returned American flags and poles stolen from
the Balboa Island Bridge after leaving many in the community
“outraged,” according to one homeowner. Those who swiped the Stars
and Stripes brought them to the police the next day, saying they had
gotten drunk and stole the flags. The homeowners association that
reported the theft did not press charges.
JULY
An Orange County judge condemned 50 uniformed Costa Mesa Police
officers July 28 for their attendance in court to support a fellow
officer who’d been hit by a drunken driver. Prosecutors said Costa
Mesa officer Dennis Dickens suffered severe cuts, broken bones and
post-traumatic stress disorder after he was hit by a Mission Viejo
motorcyclist traveling at speeds in excess of 100 mph. Judge Geoffrey
Glass told the officers that their presence in court was having a
“negative impact” on the case. “Your being here isn’t making things
any easier,” he said, adding that he was concerned uniformed officers
were sitting in a courtroom instead of patrolling the streets. “But
hey, this is a free country.”
A Costa Mesa Police officer alleged she was assaulted by a
homeless man who was upset about receiving a bicycle citation.
Officer Jinna Johnson said the man, John Christopher Bauer, 37,
struck her with his fist and continued to hit her after he found out
he was receiving the citation. Bauer was later arrested, and Johnson
was treated for minor injuries.
AUGUST
The 4th District Court of Appeal overturned an Orange County
Superior Court judge’s ruling that prohibited Balboa Island resident
Anne Lemen from initiating contact with people she knows to be
Village Inn employees and from making alleged defamatory statements
about the bar to others. The appellate court ruling said Lemen, a
neighbor of the bar, called customers and employees “whores,”
“drunks,” “Satan” and “Satan’s spawn,” but Lemen contended she never
said any of those things. The court ruled that, according to the
legal conceptions of “prior restraint,” her remarks couldn’t be
restrained before they were made. Lemen had raised her concerns with
the Village Inn’s alleged noise and public disturbances for years,
filing several complaints with police and getting about 400
signatures on petitions against the bar, the appellate ruling stated.
SEPTEMBER
What would “W” do? Costa Mesa resident Steve Gooden theorized on
his website, www.thepassionofbush.com, that the presidential
candidate -- George W. Bush or John Kerry -- who people most
associate with Jesus Christ would end up winning the election. As of
Sept. 10, 75% of the people polled on the site felt Bush’s views were
closer to those of Jesus, said Gooden, a self-proclaimed conservative
Christian and Republican. Bush won the election, though his margin of
victory wasn’t quite as wide. Gooden said he started the site to show
people “the tremendous influence the Christian vote has on the
presidential elections.”
Talk about rubbing people the wrong way. Two Los Angeles County
women were arrested in September on suspicion of prostitution at a
local massage parlor. Costa Mesa Police officials said an undercover
officer was solicited for sex at New Oriental Mass. on Harbor
Boulevard and Fair Drive in Costa Mesa. Alhambra resident Yanling
Sun, 39, and Hacienda Heights resident Chunyan Li, 31, were arrested and subsequently released with a written notice to appear in court,
and the business was shut down, officials said. The business didn’t
have a license, which is required by the city.
OCTOBER
The Newport Beach Walk of Fame -- what could be controversial
about that? A lot, if the first inductee is known for a mix of sex,
drugs and all the other unsavory topics that lure viewers to
prime-time television. The Newport Beach Conference and Visitors
Bureau selected the cast of Fox Network’s “The OC” to be the
inaugural inductee into the city’s Walk of Fame at the Balboa
Pavilion, and Mayor Tod Ridgeway handed the actors the key to the
city at the ceremony. The bureau wanted to capitalize on the show’s
popularity to boost tourism, but a vocal segment of Newport Beach --
or should it be “N.B.”? -- thought the honor besmirched the city’s
good name. The Daily Pilot received several charged letters to the
editor about the show. One writer called the program “absolute
garbage,” while others wrote that if “The OC” had the key to the
city, it was time to change the lock. A Costa Mesa man jibed both the
show and his neighbors to the south, writing: “I guess Newport really
is as desperate for attention and as superficial as the show’s
characters and premise.”
Blame it on the rain for Balboa Peninsula’s unofficial mascot
being found wandering along Bayside Drive. A Newport Beach animal
control officer encountered Rupert the black swan in bad shape after
a rainstorm. The popular avian was taken to the All Creatures Care
Cottage in Costa Mesa for blood work, having survived yet another
trauma. Rupert, believed to be 16 years old, has been a frequent
guest at Huntington Beach’s Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center. The
feathered guy’s need for veterinary care is not that surprising.
Rupert has made his home in the not-so-clean waters of Newport
Harbor, and every rainfall makes his home even dirtier.
Three Los Angeles men reportedly tried to pull off a jewelry heist
in Corona del Mar, but all three were taken into custody after a
two-hour standoff during which one of the suspects hid in a gelato
store. The three men carried handguns into Corona del Mar’s Jewels by
Joseph and demanded jewelry from employees, police said. Employees
tripped a silent alarm, and when two of the men ran outside, the cops
were already there to slap on handcuffs. Things got more hairy when
the third suspect ran into Gelato Paradiso next door, and the sight
of an armed man reportedly sent that store’s employees running to
nearby Lingerie et Chocolate. Newport Beach SWAT officers surrounded
the gelato store and convinced the alleged thief to surrender. Police
stated the suspect probably hid in the ceiling and tried to sneak
back into the jewelry store while trying to make a getaway.
Have you ever called local police for help because you thought
your car had been illegally towed? Turns out that even if you’re
right, the cops aren’t allowed to help you. A Daily Pilot story
detailed that when property owners contract with private tow
companies, California law requires property owners to give motorists
a one-hour grace period and tell tow-truck drivers which cars they
want off their property. But the federal law that deregulated the
airline industry also applies to tow trucks, meaning the state is not
allowed to enforce its own law, unless safety is at stake. The Orange
County district attorney’s office stated it was investigating what
law enforcement called “predatory towing,” but in the meantime,
traffic cops are handcuffed on this issue.
NOVEMBER
The Anaheim Angels might be a few miles up from Newport-Mesa, but
the team’s owner, Arte Moreno, became a popular figure across Orange
County when he lowered beer prices and signed power-hitting
outfielder Vladimir Guerrero. But cheaper alcohol and home runs could
not assuage baseball fans’ and politicians’ disappointment when word
leaked that Moreno had contemplated what many locals considered a
grave insult. He wanted to rename the team the Los Angeles Angels.
Anaheim’s city council cried foul and asked for help. Newport Beach
joined counterparts up the freeway by passing a resolution opposing
the name change. Reps. Dana Rohrabacher and Christopher Cox also came
out in support of Anaheim. The Angels have recently added Steve
Finley and Orlando Cabrera to their roster, but the name issue has
yet to be resolved.
Officials said “no obvious problem” was found after 57 people
suffered a mysterious illness at a local hotel. The Orange County
Health Care Agency investigated the Hilton Costa Mesa Hotel food
preparation and serving facilities after conference guests fell ill
with nausea and diarrhea. Officials could not find the source of the
problem, and the kitchen remained open. Guests who were not a part of
the conference experienced no health problems.
DECEMBER
Dickensian may be the best term to describe a protest by members
of Orange County Musicians’ Assn., who were angered by the use of
synthesized music during a performance of “Oliver!” at the Orange
County Performing Arts Center. Union musicians argued the Sinfonia, a
high-tech music machine with computers and piano-style keyboards,
took jobs from local artists, though the machine’s defenders at the
performing arts center countered that without it, “Oliver!” would be
too expensive to show.
Christmas is supposed to be a time for giving, but tell that to
whoever stole the baby Jesus from the child-made creche that had
decorated Mesa Verde United Methodist Church. Sunday school students
crafted the life-sized plywood cutouts of Jesus, Mary, Joseph, the
three wise men and sheep in a re-creation of the famous manger scene.
The church puts the display out annually, and the theft was the
second time in the past three years someone ripped off the church’s
baby Jesus. For some reason, a wooden sheep is also believed to have
been stolen.
Could a list of unusual happenings around Newport-Mesa not include
Dennis Rodman? “The Worm” made the news when he renamed Josh
Slocum’s, the Mariners Mile club that he owns. The nightspot now
bears the eponymous moniker of Rodman’s. But the former rebounding
leader first returned to the pages of the Daily Pilot when he signed
with the Orange County Crush, a new team in the American Basketball
Assn. Rodman inked the contract in November and was set to play his
first game with the Crush in December. He did, and it was his last
game as a member of the struggling franchise. Rodman played the first
two minutes and 18 seconds of a Crush win against Las Vegas, and then
asked for his walking papers. He soon signed with the Long Beach Jam,
and his agent said the Crush’s problems finding a home court
motivated Rodman to look for a new team. After Rodman’s departure,
the Crush postponed all home games for the season. The team had been
playing at the Bren Events Center at UC Irvine, but stopped after
ticket buyers purchasing tickets through Ticketmaster were allegedly
forced to pay a $50 service fee for $10 seats. The team was set to
play in Irvine until a permanent home could be built at the Orange
County Fairgrounds. The team is looking for a place to play, and team
officials have talked with Huntington Beach’s Golden West College and
Cypress College.
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