D.A. files charges against Rodman
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Deepa Bharath
SANTA ANA -- The Orange County district attorney charged Dennis Rodman
with three counts of criminal misdemeanor Thursday, alleging he used
amplifiers illegally during his May 12 birthday bash on the beach.
The charges state that Rodman violated the Newport Beach Municipal
Code by disturbing the peace and causing “loud, raucous noise” in a
public place by possessing and operating sound amplifying equipment
without a permit.
If convicted, Rodman could face 18 months in jail and a $3,000 fine.
He would also get an additional year and a $2,000 fine for violating
probation. Rodman was arrested last year for driving under the influence
of alcohol and driving without a valid license.
The charges come on the heels of a civil lawsuit filed May 25 by the
city of Newport Beach against Josh Slocum’s seafood restaurant, which is
partly owned by Rodman. City officials said the intent of the suit is to
make the restaurant comply with city codes for live music, dancing and
overcrowding.
“But the two cases are separate and distinct,” said Newport Beach City
Atty. Dan Ohl. He said none of the seven defendants have been served with
a copy of the lawsuit yet.
Rodman’s attorney, Paul Meyer, said the city and the district attorney
have “singled out” his client for prosecution.
“This involves a birthday party during the day on a weekend at the
beach,” he said.
Meyer pointed out, sarcastically, that misdemeanor charges against
anyone else wouldn’t fetch the press a news conference. Both Meyer and
the district attorney’s office held separate media conferences Thursday
afternoon.
“This is all very strange,” he said. “Clearly [Rodman] is being
singled out.”
Deputy Dist. Atty. Mike Fell refuted the argument that Rodman was
being discriminated against because he is a celebrity. He said his
conference was held merely for convenience and not to blow the issue out
of proportion.
“This is by no means a witch hunt,” Fell said. “Newport Beach police
have shown a great deal of professionalism and restraint in this case.”
He said police contacted Rodman the day before the party and told him
that use of sound amplifying equipment required apermit from the city.
They warned him twice on the day of the party, Fell said.
“They gave him the opportunity to abide by the law,” he said. “And his
response was ‘I’m gonna do what I’m gonna do.”’
But Meyer says that if somebody wants to have a birthday party in his
house, he should be able to do so without police interference.
“This was not a loud or unreasonable party,” he said. “Anybody who
knows that area knows what it’s like during the day and what it’s like at
night.”
Newport Beach Councilman Gary Proctor, a West Newport resident
himself, said Meyer’s criticism of law enforcement is “unfair.”
“There are parties in that area,” said Proctor, who lives half a mile
from Rodman’s Seashore Drive home. “But the police respond only when
there are complaints. And they have responded to [Rodman’s] parties
almost 80 times.”
The volume of noise-related complaints warranted the action, said the
councilman, who recently pushed for a change to the city’s noise
ordinance that will make it easier to bring criminal charges against
violators.
“It’s like saying that the intersection of Jamboree [Road] and Pacific
Coast Highway has been singled out for traffic investigation,” Proctor
rationalized. “If there are more than an average number of accidents
there, then obviously there would be an investigation into the matter.”
Rodman is scheduled to be arraigned June 20 at Harbor Justice Center.
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