Ruling may mean D.A. drops case
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Deepa Bharath
A Supreme Court decision on Thursday to strike down a California law
that allows prosecution of old sex crimes may force the Orange County
district attorney’s office to drop its case against a former pastor
of a Costa Mesa church accused of molesting a local boy about 25
years ago.
In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that the government
cannot retroactively erase statutes of limitations, a defeat for
prosecutors trying to pursue people accused of sex abuse, officials
said. The law was challenged by Marion Stogner, a 72-year-old man
accused of molesting his daughters when they were children.
Stogner is among hundreds of people charged under a 1994
California law that changed the statute of limitations for some sex
offenses.
The decision is “frustrating and disappointing” to prosecutors,
said Assistant Dist. Atty. Rosanne Froeberg, who supervises the
district attorney’s sexual assault unit.
“But we have to be respectful of the Supreme Court’s decision,”
she said.
Froeberg said her office is double-checking, pulling out old files
and reviewing cases to find out if any such accused offenders have
been found guilty in the past and are spending time in prison.
“If so, we need to put them back through the court process so it
can be determined if the Supreme Court’s decision is going to affect
their case,” she said.
Most of the cases are “problematic,” especially the one involving
68-year-old Denis Lyons, who served as pastor of St. John the Baptist
Church on Baker Street for 18 years. He was arrested by Costa Mesa
Police on April 25 in his Seal Beach home and charged with one count
of performing a lewd and lascivious act against a child younger than
16 and four counts of oral copulation -- all felonies.
Police said the investigation began in the spring of 2002 when a
38-year-old Costa Mesa man complained that he had been abused by
Lyons between 1979 and 1981 during one-on-one counseling sessions.
Thursday’s decision is definitely “not victim-friendly,” Costa
Mesa Det. Sgt. Jack Archer said.
“It hurts victims,” he said. “But it’s the law. There’s nothing we
can do about it.”
Deputy Dist. Atty. Beth Costello, who is the prosecutor on the
Lyons case, had earlier said it was a “strong case” with proof of
“substantial sexual conduct.”
Archer, whose department investigated Lyons’ case, said that case
is now in the district attorney’s hands. He said that is the only
Costa Mesa case which will be affected by the decision.
Newport Beach has no such pending cases that could be affected,
Sgt. Steve Shulman said.
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