[Moxley Confidential] DA Rackauckas and Sheriff Hutchens skirmish over investigation of deputy

Suicide Notes
DA Tony Rackauckas and Sheriff Sandra Hutchens skirmish over investigation of suspected-child-molester deputy

 

Hutchens to DA: Butt out
Keith May
Hutchens to DA: Butt out

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Under the leadership of Mike Carona—our N-word-tossing, fanny-slapping, vodka-slurping, money-hungry, FBI-indicted ex-sheriff—the Orange County Sheriff’s Department (OCSD) sank into an ethical cesspool. It didn’t make a difference if a deputy was a hard-working public servant (and I know quite a few in this category) or a lazy degenerate. OCSD careers promised damn-good pay, lots of paid time off, no repercussions for wrongdoing and generously funded retirement at the spry age of 50, more than a decade and a half before the rest of us. But there’s apparently another unpublicized perk: If you happen to be a deputy and a pedophile, count on the department to shield you from justice, too.

Before you starched-jeans types at the deputies’ union hyperventilate, swallow the olives from your martinis, drop your glossy vacation brochures and spout off about me, know that this is not me saying this.

The accusation was made by District Attorney Tony Rackauckas, a former superior-court judge.

On June 11—after reportedly unsatisfactory meetings with sheriff’s deputies, Rackauckas sent then-Acting Sheriff Jack Anderson a four-page letter detailing dereliction-of-duty concerns that, if half-true, should make OC residents vomit. According to Rackauckas, the OCSD appears to have attempted to protect a serial pedophile, Deputy Gerald F. Stenger III, from criminal prosecution. Ultimately, Stenger escaped prosecution by committing suicide in April. But at the top of a long list of blunders, according to Rackauckas, was the department assigning the investigation to Myrna Caballero, a deputy who was on a first-name basis with Stenger—and who the DA says repeatedly botched the probe in ways that made it tougher to win a conviction.

John McDonald, spokesman for the sheriff’s department, please tell us Rackauckas is wrong.

“That gets into a personnel matter, and we can’t talk about that,” McDonald says.

It’s against the law to tell the public if a deputy and the deputy she had been assigned to investigate were buddies?

“We investigate our own all the time,” he says.

In his letter, Rackauckas spelled out his concerns, including:

• Caballero failed to conduct separate interviews with potential key sex-crimes witnesses and victims, tainting the information.

• Caballero told one victim, a boy allegedly molested by the deputy beginning at the age of 8, to make what would have clearly been a suspicious call to the deputy at work (he’d never called the deputy at work before), and then failed to ensure the call was recorded.

• Despite the fact that Stenger attempted suicide two hours after Caballero officially revealed the investigation in November 2007, sheriff’s officials let him return to full duty without a single condition or any special oversight—and, get this, allowed him to monitor the investigation via department computers. (Five months later, he later fatally shot himself in the head in an unmarked patrol car in a parking lot near a South County shopping center where his alleged victim worked.)

• Twelve days after Stenger’s November suicide attempt, Caballero and colleague Sergeant Jim England were “oddly” chummy with the 41-year-old Stenger, soothing his fears by assuring him that charges wouldn’t be filed—a claim Rackauckas called “highly unusual” for deputies beginning to interrogate a suspect.

• Though Caballero knew the unmarried Stenger had an adopted son in his Aliso Viejo home, she never interviewed the child to see if he’d been molested; Stenger was under suspicion of molesting a boy he had befriended through local Little League baseball and the Big Brothers Big Sisters of Orange County programs.

• Though it’s standard procedure to seek a search warrant in such cases because pedophiles often store images of their crimes on home computers, Caballero didn’t bother to get one. (Later, DA’s office investigators searched Stenger’s computer and, despite his efforts to erase images, were able to retrieve videos of the deputy molesting his own adopted young son, as well as “thousands” of other child-porn images, according to Rackauckas’ letter.)

• After the sloppy investigation, Caballero told Deputy District Attorney Tony Ferrentino in the sex-crimes unit that he should “reject” prosecuting Stenger because of her “feelings” that no crime had been committed.

Under Carona, the sheriff’s department would have responded to such a letter from Rackauckas with a stiff middle finger. But times have changed, right? After all, there’s a new sheriff in town. And Sandra Hutchens won her mid-June appointment to replace Carona and Acting Sheriff Anderson by portraying herself as the Angel of Anti-Internal OCSD Corruption. Surely, Hutchens would be horrified to learn that the department may have protected a pedophile deputy.

Nope.

Hutchens was appointed to her post on June 10, the day before Rackauckas sent his letter; she was sworn in on June 19. Proving she’s not a novice bureaucrat, the newly minted sheriff fired off a defensive June 26 blame-the-messenger letter to Rackauckas. Hutchens wrote that Captain Tim Board, who oversees criminal investigations, “assumes full responsibility for failing to identify any deficiencies in the investigation,” and then, despite that admission, she got pompous.

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  • sickened mother 10/02/2008 9:57:00 AM

    OK, so Hutchens doesn't have an easy job, stepping into a tainted OCSD. But when blatant facts are smack in front of her, she should at least take action to resolve the problems. Caballero was covering for a pedophile deputy and purposely did an investigation that was beneath a new recruit. You think the public should look the other way? How would you feel if it were your child who had been molested? Would it be ginger-peachy for Caballero to protect a pedophile then? This was a golden opportunity for Hutchens to begin a reformation plan. Instead Caballero has been left "protecting" the abuse victims. Had this happened in any other police agency, Caballero would no longer be working as an investigator.

  • sickened mother 10/02/2008 9:56:00 AM

    OK, so Hutchens doesn't have an easy job, stepping into a tainted OCSD. But when blatant facts are smack in front of her, she should at least take action to resolve the problems. Caballero was covering for a pedophile deputy and purposely did an investigation that was beneath a new recruit. You think the public should look the other way? How would you feel if it were your child who had been molested? Would it be ginger-peachy for Caballero to protect a pedophile then? This was a golden opportunity for Hutchens to begin a reformation plan. Instead Caballero has been left "protecting" the abuse victims. Had this happened in any other police agency, Caballero would no longer be working as an investigator.

  • Andre Leonard 10/01/2008 11:26:00 PM

    Let's be fair and give Sheriff Hutchens a break here. She is a qualified police administrator. She has taken the reins of the second largest police agency in the state and is attempting to do the job she was appointed to do. It will be neither easy or quick. There are many challenges and obstacles that she has inherited. I am sure as she puts her command staff in place and begins to deal with the problems that have been identified, she will do an excellent job. It is no easy task to come into an organization much less a police organization and begin radical change. The culture of the organization was formed years before she got there. So, in the interest of fairness. Let's give Sheriff Hutchens time to effect these much needed changes and allow her the opportunity to provide leadership and healing. Remember, at this point in time, we need evolution, not revolution in the Orange County Sheriff's Office. Let's give Sheriff Hutchens our support and allow her to have an opportunity to make it the very best.

 

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