BRIEFLY IN THE NEWS High-speed chase ends...
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BRIEFLY IN
THE NEWS
High-speed chase ends in Newport
A 46-year-old man led police on a high-speed chase on Tuesday
through Costa Mesa that ended inside an office building near John
Wayne Airport.
California Highway Patrol officers arrested Kenneth Olsen after he
led them on an hourlong chase that reached speeds up to 100 miles per
hour, Officer Katie Lundgren said. The CHP took him into custody
after he parked his car outside an office building at 4630 Campus
Drive in Newport Beach and ran into an attorney’s office before
turning himself in, she said.
The chase started just after 11 a.m. when Garden Grove police
tried to pull over Olsen for an expired registration tag at Haster
Street and Lampson Avenue, Garden Grove Police Lt. Paul Prince said.
The driver of the white sedan drove off, taking surface streets to
the eastbound Garden Grove Freeway, where he continued south on the
Santa Ana Freeway past San Clemente, turned around and went north on
the Santa Ana Freeway, transferred onto the San Diego Freeway through
Costa Mesa, took the San Joaquin Hills Toll Road south and exited at
Jamboree Road, Prince said.
During his arrest, Olsen reportedly shouted that he was on parole
and was from Canada. Prince said that Garden Grove police could not
find a confirmed city of residence for the suspect, who did appear to
be on parole.
Olsen faces felony charges of evading a police officer, Prince
said. CHP officers turned Olsen over to Garden Grove police for
booking.
Tran volunteer won’t be prosecuted
The state attorney general’s office has decided not to investigate
the possession of voted ballots by a volunteer for a candidate in the
March 2 primary election, Senior Assistant Atty. Gen. Gary Schons
said Thursday.
In early February, a volunteer for Republican 68th Assembly
District candidate Van Tran brought a number of absentee ballots to
the Orange County Registrar of Voters to exchange them for Republican
ballots, which is allowed by state election law, but some of the
ballots appeared to have been filled out and so should not have been
handled by anyone but an election official.
The registrar of voters’ office referred the matter to the Orange
County district attorney’s office, who asked the attorney general to
review it. Schons said he did not investigate the matter but
conducted an evaluation and determined that while there may have been
a technical violation of the law, it did not merit prosecution.
All of the 46 voters whose ballots were involved wanted new
ballots, including the two who had filled their ballots out, Schons
said.
“We found no grounds for a criminal investigation or prosecution,
and we’ve closed the matter,” he said.
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