Ruling may help judge hopeful
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June Casagrande
COSTA MESA -- A ruling Thursday to keep an Orange County Superior
Court judge off the November ballot could put life into a Costa Mesa
attorney’s hopes to take his seat.
Superior Court Judge Ronald C. Kline, who is facing charges of child
molestation and child pornography, had asked to be removed from the
November ballot, when he is up for reelection.
Kline, who is now under house arrest because of the charges, was one
of two parties to request that the county registrar remove his name from
the ballot. Costa Mesa resident Gay Sandoval had also asked to have
Kline’s name removed, arguing that he is unfit to serve in the post.
Election rules state that candidates cannot withdraw from the race
after a certain point, but attorneys involved in the case offered
differing interpretations of what this meant for the November vote for
the judge’s seat.
After Wednesday’s decision by a Superior Court judge in Los Angeles,
Sandoval said she will ask the registrar’s office to put her name on the
ballot to contest Dana Point attorney John Adams.
In March, Adams edged out Sandoval for a spot on the ballot to contest
Kline. Of the 11 write-in candidates vying to get their names on the
November ballot, Adams received 33.2% of the vote; Sandoval, a former
Daily Pilot columnist, earned 10.8% of the votes, making her the
second-most-popular challenger to Kline.
Now that Kline is out of the picture, Sandoval wants to be the other
candidate in what is customarily a two-person contest.
“I don’t think it’s fair for the voters to have one choice,” said
Sandoval, who was Kline’s first challenger. “They should have two people
to choose from.”
Sandoval said she will ask the registrar’s office to put her name on
the ballot along with Adams’ for Superior Court Judge Office No. 21. If
her request is shot down, she said, she will begin legal proceedings.
A spokesman for Adams could not be reached Wednesday afternoon;
neither could a spokeswoman for the registrar’s office.
Kline’s attorney said he was pleased with Wednesday’s decision.
“The judge made the right call,” Paul S. Meyer said in a statement.
“Fairness and the facts support our position. For Judge Kline, the
election controversy is now over. We will focus our full attention on the
legal defense of charges.”
Kline was charged late last year with possessing explicit images
involving children. He has also been charged with oral copulation of a
14-year-old boy about 25 years ago. Kline has pleaded not guilty to the
charges.
“We’re continuing to get discovery, and we’ll continue pressing in
that area,” Meyer said in a phone interview.
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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