Talbert Park cleared of homeless campers
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Elise Gee and Greg Risling
TALBERT PARK -- As of Thursday night, there is no one living in
this nature preserve park.
That might change over the next several days as homeless people -- who
were forced out of their makeshift homes by a team of law enforcement
agencies that included the Costa Mesa and Newport Beach police
departments -- may return to the site.
Police officers gave the homeless campers living in Talbert Park a
verbal warning Tuesday, telling them they had 48 hours to leave. Police
arrived early Thursday morning and found only two people residing in a
dilapidated shack. Leandra Aguilar and her boyfriend, John Williamson,
were cited for camping illegally and released.
Authorities said it appears all of the campsites haven’t been
abandoned, but they expect some transients may try to return to the park
over the weekend.
“They weren’t there when we got there, but it sure looked like people
were still living there,” said Costa Mesa Police Lt. John FitzPatrick.
“From here on out, we will cite anyone living down there. We are going to
enforce a strict policy.”
FitzPatrick added that work crews will start dismantling the remaining
campsites Tuesday. Police also will confiscate any items left behind by
those who once lived there.
Police decided to step up their enforcement at the park after they
received numerous complaints this summer by nearby residents who live in
a group of condominiums on 19th Street. Citing a combination of neighbor
complaints and accounts of violent crime, police swept through the park
in August and arrested two men.
Police have defended their actions by noting they have tried to take
the best possible path in dealing with the homeless problem, but not
everyone agrees with them.
Aguilar said she doesn’t feel police have been professional or
patient. She said she feels harassed, pointing to the 15 tickets she’s received from the Costa Mesa and Newport Beach police departments in the
last four months.
The tickets have been for expired automobile registration tags and
lack of proof of insurance. The $59 fine that comes with each ticket is
more than a homeless person can pay, Aguilar said.
Aguilar said she thinks police officers are using the tickets as a way
to intimidate her into leaving the area, particularly the Talbert
Marshes.
“We don’t have anywhere to go,” Aguilar said.
Others have supported the police efforts, including Jim Palmer,
president of the Orange County Rescue Mission.
Palmer said the police have worked hard to deal with the homeless
humanely.
However, Aguilar said, she is not the only homeless person being
harassed. Others have been pestered about minor infractions such as
failing to register their bicycles, she said.
The former Talbert resident also questioned whether police had a legal
right to perform a background check on Bruce McDonald, who was deported
to Canada this week.
McDonald, who raised eyebrows when appearing at council meetings, was
never arrested for a crime in connection with camping in Talbert.
Police said McDonald was disruptive enough to make council members
fearful.
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