Crime and punishment
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ROBERT GARDNER
It seems like every time there’s a story about someone bilking others
out of millions of dollars, if you read far enough, it says the
accused lives in Newport Beach. Not only do we have expensive real
estate, we have expensive crime.
It wasn’t always that way. During my career as a deputy district
attorney (1937-41) and as this town’s city judge (1938-41 and
1945-47), I can remember only two theft cases arising in Newport
Beach, and they certainly weren’t in the million-dollar class. Not
that we were squeaky clean. It’s just that in those days, Newport
Beach and in particular Balboa specialized in different kinds of
antisocial activities, such as rum-running, bootlegging, illegal
gambling, plus considerable over-consumption of alcohol and fighting.
We filled the jail every Saturday night with drunks and fighters, but
as for thieves, we only had the two.
The first theft occurred when I was a deputy district attorney.
The man was accused not of cheating investors but of stealing a fish
net. The biggest problem I had in the case was proving that the net
was worth $200, the amount necessary for a grand theft conviction. It
sounds like small potatoes today, but the thief’s reaction was
big-time. After being sentenced to prison, he was dragged out of
court screaming that when he got out he was going to kill Police
Chief Rowland Hodgkinson. Twenty-five years later, Hodge died of
emphysema, so if the thief was responsible he was about as good at
murder as he was at stealing.
The other theft occurred during my stint as city judge and
involved a manhole cover. One night someone took a manhole cover off
the street. Working on a tip, Officer Jack Kennedy of the Newport
Beach Police Department found the manhole cover in the room of one of
the local characters, Shorty Charle, right beside his bed. When
awakened, Shorty denied any knowledge of it, but the evidence was
there, and he was charged. The trial was like old home week for
Rendezvous Ballroom alumni, since all three of us, Shorty, Jack
Kennedy and I, had worked together at the Rendezvous during its
nickel-a-dance era.
The prosecution was simple and straightforward. Someone had taken
the manhole cover, the property of the city of Newport Beach, and
transported it six blocks to the place where Shorty had a room. There
the manhole cover had been transported up a flight of stairs, where
it was found in Shorty’s room with Shorty sleeping beside it. The
prosecution’s conclusion -- it had to be Shorty.
The defense was equally straightforward. Shorty went to bed one
night with no manhole cover in his room. When he awoke, there was the
manhole cover on the floor beside his bed plus his old friend Officer
Jack Kennedy. That was all he knew.
I found Shorty not guilty. I had several reasons for my decisions.
First, although Shorty was often guilty of the usual Balboa crimes of
boozing and fighting, he was no thief. Second, it was very doubtful
that Shorty, drunk or sober, could have carried the manhole cover
from its normal resting place six blocks down Central Avenue, then up
a flight of stairs to his room, all by himself. Also, there wasn’t
much activity in the used manhole market, particularly one marked
“City of Newport Beach.” It smelled of a prank, and I let him go.
So there we have it -- a fish net and a manhole cover. Pretty
small potatoes compared with the current multi-million-dollar jobs,
but in those days we were just a small town and didn’t know any
better.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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