Vandals deface Surf City candidate signs
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Vandals have reportedly attacked the campaign
signs of City Council candidates Connie Boardman, Bill Borden, Debbie
Cook and John Thomas -- defacing, removing and even igniting the
political message boards.
Early Saturday, resident Jerri Nelson came home from her night job to
find a Connie Boardman campaign sign aflame on her front lawn.
“I think it’s really a sad example of our democracy,” said Mike
Nelson, Jerri’s husband. “It looked kind of scary, like a burnt cross on
our lawn. I’ve seen signs spray-painted and knocked over, but never on
fire in my frontyard.”
Nelson said he immediately alerted police, who then confiscated the
remains of the charred sign and told him that although it was an isolated
incident, any further burnings would be followed up with an
investigation.
“It [vandalism] happens all the time, to all kinds of signs,” said Lt.
Dan Johnson of the Huntington Beach Police Department. “From presidential
elections to the city’s, we see signs stolen or removed each time there’s
a race.”
Some sign removals, he added, are at the city’s hands, with volunteers
taking down illegally posted campaign material from stop signs, street
lights and other public intersections. City law makes it is a misdemeanor
to place campaign signs on any public property and private property
without owner consent.
“This has never happened before,” said Boardman, who ran for City
Council in 1998. “I feel like it’s a violation of my 1st Amendment
rights.”
Of 20 council candidates running for office this year, these four have
found their signs stolen or vandalized this year, though Thomas said his
have been minor incidents. Police said that some of it is to be expected.
Others disagree.
“To have kids write or draw on the signs, that is to be expected,”
said Borden, who lost several signs when someone removed them from a
fence and threw them in a trash bin. “But to deliberately uproot a sign .
. . those aren’t kids.”
Cook said about half of her signs have been either removed or stolen,
while others have been defaced to form a vulgar word. She has been
repainting her remaining signs to correct them.
“I don’t see the signs. I just put them up, and people call me to tell
me of the defacement,” she said, adding that the rudest part is the
vulgarity forced on the public. “As far as I’m concerned, the person
responsible for this doesn’t appreciate the freedoms that we have in this
country.”
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