Posted on 11/13/2002 2:15:49 AM PST by ppaul
SAN DIEGO, Nov. 12 One of the bitterest San Diego campaigns in memory came to a welcome close today, when officials declared that a state judge had ousted the district attorney after an 18-month campaign featuring charges of corruption, anti-Semitism, mental instability and sex discrimination.
But one issue that was not aired in this conservative county was the winner's sexual orientation. With her victory over District Attorney Paul Pfingst sealed, Judge Bonnie Dumanis of Superior Court will become the first openly gay prosecutor elected in the country, gay advocates say.
Judge Dumanis eked out her victory by about 3,500 votes of more than 570,000 cast in San Diego County. The race is nonpartisan, but it was no secret to the voters that she is a Democrat and he a moderate Republican. The same voters preferred the conservative Republican candidate for governor, Bill Simon Jr., by more than 11 percentage points over Gov. Gray Davis.
Judge Dumanis claimed victory this afternoon and addressed a question about her sexual orientation, saying, "My orientation doesn't have anything to do with the job and I don't intend it to have anything to do with the job.
"It is a part of me that I am proud of," she added. "And I do, by the way, have an agenda, and that is public safety."
Judge Dumanis's campaign manager, Kevin Tilden, said it was a mark of social progress that homosexuality was not an issue in the campaign, even in a city with so conservative a reputation.
"There was enough meat to chew on without getting into Bonnie's sexual orientation," said Mr. Tilden, who is also chairman of the Lesbian and Gay Men's Community Center of San Diego.
He said Judge Dumanis's margin of victory could have been provided by the gay neighborhoods Hillcrest and North Park, which voted overwhelmingly for her. But he said it was just as likely that her sexual orientation had cost her thousands of votes in the suburbs.
"We don't know if people even knew she was gay or lesbian," Mr. Tilden said. "We can't hypothesize. But this is a countywide election and you could ask whether being gay cost her more votes than it netted her."
Mr. Pfingst gained a solid reputation as a prosecutor in his eight years in office, winning nationwide notice for an impressive felony conviction rate, a large increase in collections of child support payments and innovative programs for victims of rape and other violent crimes.
He won a death sentence this year in the highly publicized prosecution of David Westerfield for the murder of 7-year-old Danielle van Dam.
But what was perceived as his imperious manner and numerous missteps in his 300-lawyer office hurt his re-election chances. Most damaging was a no-confidence vote last year by 68 percent of the members of his office. Deputy district attorneys said he had failed to enforce ethics codes in his office; one lawyer was prosecuted for running a real estate business out of the district attorney's office on government time, and several prominent cases were taken over by the state attorney general. Two female lawyers said they were demoted after returning from maternity leaves, accusing Mr. Pfingst of sex discrimination.
A United States customs inspector who declined to give his name said that virtually all his colleauges voted against Mr. Pfingst because of his reluctance to charge people who assaulted officers.
"A lot of times, the D.A. wouldn't prosecute even if we're holding our teeth in our hands," he said. "Everybody I work with, whether extremely liberal or extremely conservative, voted for Dumanis."
Mr. Pfingst was also accused of planting a question about Judge Dumanis's mental health at a candidate forum during the primary campaign. She was forced to acknowledge that she attempted suicide in the 1980's after her sister's murder.
Judge Dumanis struck one of the most telling blows with a devastating television commercial featuring the parents of Stephanie Crowe, a 12-year-old girl from Escondido who was killed in January 1998. Mr. Pfingst's office charged her 14-year-old brother and two friends in the crime when evidence pointed to a drifter who was seen in the area the night of the killing. The charges against the boys were dropped a year later, and the transient is now awaiting trial. The Crowe family is suing the county.
Mr. Pfingst accused the judge of orchestrating a smear campaign against him for anti-Semitic remarks he was said to have made 17 years ago. A deputy in his office filed a discrimination suit against the county in September charging that Mr. Pfingst had used an ethnic slur in referring to a colleague in after-work comments with other young prosecutors. Judge Dumanis and her supporters gave copies of depositions in the case to reporters. Mr. Pfingst denied having made the comments but said he might have been present when a Jewish former colleague was ridiculed. Mr. Pfingst is Roman Catholic; Judge Dumanis is Jewish.
Mr. Pfingst did not raise Judge Dumanis's sexual orientation in the campaign, although in the final days he made frequent references to his wife and children and to his opponent's "lifestyle." Radio hosts and Christian conservatives carried on a relatively muted dialogue, but it never reached the level of ugliness seen in campaigns elsewhere.
"Nobody dared bring it up; it was as sotto voce as could be," said Samuel Popkin, a professor of political science at the University of California at San Diego. "What really decided the election was that Pfingst made a lot of enemies on his staff," Professor Popkin said. "And that never helps. When the other D.A.'s say, `We don't support you,' that's a very big slap in the face."
But one issue that was not aired in this conservative county was the winner's sexual orientation.Stealth perversion.
Nevertheless, with re-electing Davis for Governor, California holds its own against the national tide, retaining its place as the land of granola-munching perverts (with sympathies to Jim Robinson and the brave band of merry FReepers who are as voices crying out in the wilderness).
I agree with you on this.
Dumanis deserved to win. Pfingst deserved to lose.
The DA who is a crook, or whatever this guy is, offends me a whole lot. I don't care if the other person is gay as long as she does the job honestly, effectively, and leaves her private life...private.
So, he's a crook because he's not politically correct?
Where in the article does it indicate he took bribes or anything else that would cause you to smear him as a "crook"?
From the article it certainly sounds like his failings were more than not being 'politically correct'. I think it is likely the local voters were even more aware of this.
The same voters preferred the conservative Republican candidate for governor, Bill Simon Jr., by more than 11 percentage points over Gov. Gray Davis.
Look, I just don't care if she is a lesbian. Don't care a bit, so long as she does the job and keeps her private life to herself.
Ooooh, that sounds so, so, so openminded, doesn't it?
That was what they said about der Sinkmeister too.
Hmmmm....
Sexual orientation is a term made-up by the APA to legitimize the paraphilic disorder of homosexuality as normal. There are literally hundreds of research studies that prove homosexuality is a paraphilia and zero studies that dont, if the APA hadnt given in to the homosexual lobby within its own organization the disorder would still be listed in the DSM. There is only one sexual orientation; the rest are equally justifiable paraphilic disorders. Sadly, it looks like the good people of San Diego have fallen for the propaganda of perversion and dont mind its DA being mentally unbalanced.
Funny how projection is the only defense for the indefensible; or is it just a simple case of paranoia?
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