Week in review
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A 31-year-old city employee charged with lewd conduct involving
several children who participated in city programs could face life in
prison if convicted, officials said Friday.
The Orange County district attorney has charged Trenton Michael Veches
with seven counts of lewd conduct with children. He also faces a special
one-strike enhancement on each of those charges, which, if proved, can
send him to prison for life without eligibility for parole for at least
25 years.
Veches is suspected of engaging in inappropriate behavior with at
least 47 boys between ages 6 and 10, police said last week. Investigators
recovered hundreds of digital images from his personal computer, some of
which showed Veches sucking the boys’ toes.
He was arrested April 17 after a co-worker reported the alleged
criminal activity, police said. More charges may be filed if more victims
come forward. A pretrial hearing for Veches scheduled for Friday was
postponed to June 7. He was arraigned April 19, when he pleaded not
guilty to the charges.
Also, about 70 parents attended a city-organized meeting Thursday
night. The meeting was open only to parents who had their children in any
of the programs supervised by Veches over the last two years.
City officials said during the meeting parents received information
and advice from child advocates about how to approach their children when
talking about such a sensitive issue. The meeting was reportedly charged
with emotion when several parents of the affected children shared their
traumatic experiences.
* Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
Emulex going Home (Ranch)
Development of 93 acres of former lima bean farm was prevalent last
week as Emulex officials announced they would move their Harbor Gateway
headquarters to the Home Ranch site.
Costa Mesa-based Emulex has outgrown its current home on Harbor
Boulevard and will move its corporate headquarters to 14.5 acres of the
Segerstrom-owned land, bordered by Susan Street, Harbor Boulevard and
South Coast Drive. The lease with C.J. Segerstrom & Sons calls for the
development of a two-story, campus-style headquarters totaling 180,000
square feet.
Mayor Linda Dixon announced last week that her beloved tortoise Tex
had disappeared. The small, green reptile is still missing in action. The
Dixons are worried about the Texan desert tortoise and ask that anyone
with information call the mayor’s office at (714)854-5285.
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
A distinguished pair
Two district schools are reveling in their distinguished-ness, having
been selected as California Distinguished Schools, one of the highest
honors the state can bestow.
Sonora Elementary in Costa Mesa and Andersen Elementary in Newport
Beach were chosen mainly based on academic excellence.
“It’s been a really good couple of weeks,” said Sonora Elementary
Principal Lorie Hoggard.
The school board’s president, Judy Franco, said the honor reflects the
diligence of everyone involved with the distinguished schools.
“You need to have principals, staff, parents who are willing to take
the time,” Franco said. “It’s an exciting time for those two schools.”
* Deirdre Newman covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
A little Clinton-like waffling
City Councilman John Heffernan shocked colleagues and constituents
when he announced Tuesday night he would vacate his council seat early.
Citing family priorities, but later explaining that council dynamics
also motivated the decision, Heffernan said he had not yet decided when
he would leave.
By the end of the week, however, he was vacillating on his decision.
Balboa Theater boosters got a big boost this week when the city
decided to put its money where its marquee is. Adding to the $480,000 the
city has already invested in creating a performing arts theater on Balboa
Peninsula, council members agreed to pursue buying the building at 111
Main St. as needed space for the theater.
Building the hopes of skateboarders across the city’s border, Newport
Beach City Manager Homer Bludau met with Costa Mesa City Manager Allan
Roeder to discuss possible places to build a skateboard park. Bludau
cautioned, though, that it’s too early to predict whether these talks
will solidify a skate park into concrete form.
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
A report that didn’t go to waste
It was a good week for Newport Beach environmentalists.
The Orange County Grand Jury issued a harsh critique of the Orange
County Sanitation District’s decision to withhold crucial data about
bacterial contamination near Newport Beach’s shoreline.
The grand jury report said sanitation district leaders have “not
disclosed the existence of all publicly funded studies.”
Though the district published data from a round of test data taken
during a two-month period in 1996 -- from Sept. 26 to Nov. 25 of that
year -- it did not provide any summary or analysis of it.
The study shows that a plume of waste water thought to have encroached
no closer than three miles from the shoreline was traveling along the
ocean floor toward the beach.
The contamination was as close as 1.5 miles out to sea and just 20
meters below the surface. Newport Beach officials and activists have long
suspected that the surf zone was contaminated.
Newport Beach and other cities are trying to get the waiver the
sanitation district enjoys ended so the waste will have to be treated
more thoroughly.
* Daily Pilot staff. To contact the newsroom, call (949) 642-5680 or
by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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