Posted on 08/04/2020 7:54:56 PM PDT by Mark
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Tuesday approved a $4.5 million settlement payout to a convicted child molester who was held in a state hospital for 17 years awaiting trial on whether he could be committed as a sexually violent predator.
George Vasquez pleaded no contest in 1995 to four counts of lewd or lascivious acts on a child under 14 and was sentenced to 12 years in state prison. The case involved boys ages 6 to 8 years old from his South Los Angeles neighborhood.
After Vasquez had served his time, in September 2000, the District Attorneys Office filed a petition seeking to have Vasquez committed to a state hospital as a sexually violent predator, arguing that he was too dangerous to be released and should be confined where he could receive mental health treatment.
A series of five deputy public defenders represented Vasquez, who was held at Coalinga State Hospital while awaiting trial on the prosecutions petition, as the case dragged on without a trial for 16 years.
In 2016, in response to Vasquez objection to postponing his trial date once again, the trial court judge removed the Public Defenders Office and appointed attorney Mark Brandt to represent Vasquez. Brandt filed a motion to dismiss the prosecutions petition, saying his clients constitutional right to a speedy trial had been violated. On Jan. 8, 2018, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge James Bianco ruled that Vasquez must be freed, citing oppressive delays and a systematic breakdown of the public defender system.
The District Attorneys Office fought the issue and lost on appeal, with a three-justice panel from Californias 2nd District Court of Appeal rejecting the bid to overturn Biancos decision.
It may well be there was strong evidence in the Peoples favor, but it was the governments burden to prove Vasquez was an SVP and Vasquez had a right to present evidence showing he did not pose a risk to the public. He was denied this right for 17 years, the appellate panel found.
The appellate panel noted in its ruling that Bianco had conceded the potential risk to public safety that attends Mr. Vasquezs release from custody, albeit 23 years after his crimes were committed.
The ruling pointed out that if the prosecution had prevailed at trial from the outset, Vasquez would have been committed for just two years.
A long history of evaluation reports recommended Vazquezs commitment as a sexually violent predator, according to the D.A.s petition. One doctor who offered an evaluation in support of the petition said that over a seven-week period in 1994, Vasquez offered candy to at least five boys, ages 5 to 8, who lived in his neighborhood, if they would show him their private parts. After the boys complied, Vasquez allegedly forced them to orally copulate him, according to court documents.
However, one of two state psychologists who examined Vasquez concluded he no longer qualified for the SVP designation, according to Biancos original ruling.
Vasquez sister told the Los Angeles Times shortly after Biancos ruling that her brother was treated unfairly. He already paid his time. Its unfair, the system was very unfair, Ana Federico told the newspaper. I know what he did was wrong, but why do poor people have to suffer more?
Vasquez said he had been molested as a child by an adult male neighbor, according to The Times.
After Biancos ruling and before the appeal had been settled, Vasquez filed a lawsuit against the Public Defenders Office alleging civil rights violations.
A summary corrective action plan presented to the Board of Supervisors said staff had been cut and attorneys felt they had insufficient resources to bring the case to trial. It also cited a failure to obtain clear time waivers from clients who preferred to remain at the state hospital during court (hearings).
Caseloads for the specialized unit tasked with handling the defense of accused SVPs increased dramatically after the passage of Jessicas Law in 2007, Vasquez first public defender told The Times. That voter initiative added crimes qualifying as sexually violent offenses and reduced the number of victims required for a designation of sexually violent predator.
County attorneys cited the risks and uncertainties of litigation in recommending the $4.5 million settlement. The board approved the payout without comment.
Should have just been given a .45 to the temple.
I have to agree with the ruling. 17 years awaiting a trial is too long.
However
It would not have been necessary had the correct sentence (execution) been applied at the first trial instead of a 12 year sentance.
SEVENTEEN Years? What the hell happened to the Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial? That is just outrageous.
Exactly..Give him 60 years to begin with.....
Mini Epstein in the making.
The trial should have taken place faster. That said, it was probably worth 4.5 million (plus the expense of the lockup) to keep him off the streets.
So save 4.5 million and try him.
Yes! If committed, that would be for 2 years and then out the door. Now, give him the money in cash, stuffed in his pockets and kick him out the front door and see how long he lasts.
I hope he runs into one of his former 6yo victims in a dark alley someday. They’d be in their late 20’s about now.
Barring that, maybe some of them will sue him for every red cent.
Keep voting Democrat.
More money than he could ever make in any three of his miserable life times.
Insane.
That is absurd.
Those type of predators never recover. They will always be predators with an obscene interest in children.
His victims suing him? PERFECT!
He’s got the deep pockets now.
I am completely unsurprised by this. This is apparently how many of these perverts are created.
The system completely broke down on this case. Too bad the money paid can't come from the people who actually caused it. Instead, the taxpayers are once again stuck with the bill.
I am completely unsurprised by this. This is apparently how many of these perverts are created.
Namely...faggots.
Yes. Justice should not be dragged out and when it is the delay itself is not just.
Courts need more supervision. There should be legislated laws governing their administration that can take priority setting of cases out of their hands.
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors MUST move him into one of their neighborhoods
Better yet, one of their homes
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