Trial kicks off with tales of sordid past
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Deepa Bharath
Tears streamed down Barbara Brogli’s face on Monday when the
prosecutor read the charge accusing James Lee Crummel of murdering
her son, Jamey Trotter.
The 60-year-old man, already serving a life sentence for sexually
abusing a teenager in his Newport Crest condo, will face the death
penalty if found guilty of murdering 13-year-old Jamey, the youngest
of Brogli’s sons.
During opening statements Monday, the prosecution and defense
converged on one point that was indisputable -- Crummel’s long,
squalid history of pedophilia. But the defense maintained that
despite Crummel’s infamous past, he did not kill Jamey and that the
prosecution’s case was strung together on assumptions based on his
past.
Police arrested Crummel in Newport Beach in 1997 in connection
with Jamey’s death after he reportedly led police to the boy’s
charred remains in a wooded area off the Ortega Highway.
Jamey disappeared on April 19, 1979, reportedly on his way to
school in Costa Mesa. He was walking from a motel near the corner of
Harbor Boulevard and Victoria Street where he was supposed to have
taken a bus to Gisler Middle School. There was no trace of Jamey
until his dental records and braces were matched with those that
Crummel led police to in Riverside County.
Deputy Atty. Bill Mitchell painted the picture of Crummel as a
hard-core criminal who enjoyed traumatizing children -- time after
time.
“He is a pedophile who sadistically enjoys sexually abusing boys
between 9 and 15 years of age,” Mitchell said.
But Public Defender Mary Ann Galante contends this case is weak
because it is lacking in evidence.
“The cause of death is undetermined,” she said. “There is no proof
[Jamey] was sexually molested. There were no traumatic injuries
noted. This is a case based on assumptions, not proof beyond a
reasonable doubt.”
But she admitted Crummel had a “very, very bad past.”
“He’s done many bad things,” she told the jury during her brief
opening statement. “In the end of all this, you’re not going to like
Mr. Crummel.”
Crummel’s record began as early as 1962, when he was a private in
the U.S. Army, Mitchell said. He was then accused of luring two young
boys to a hill where he performed sexual acts on them. Crummel was
tried in military court, convicted and spent four years in prison,
Mitchell said.
He didn’t stop there. In 1967, in Wisconsin, Crummel picked up a
14-year-old boy who was hitchhiking, took him to the woods near Lake
Michigan, sexually abused him, then hit him on the head with a tree
branch and left him to die in a ravine, Mitchell said.
“But the boy survived,” he said. “He crawled out the next day and
was rescued. The boy told. And [Crummel] was caught.”
He was convicted and went to prison again, but was released in the
mid-’70s on parole.
“Mr. Crummel realized something right then,” Mitchell said. “It
was a lesson he learned. Dead boys can’t tell. Dead boys can’t send
him back to prison.”
Crummel was also Newport Beach’s first high-profile Megan’s Law
case. In the days leading to Crummel’s arrest, residents picketed day
and night outside his Newport Crest condo to get the man, identified
by police as a high-risk sex offender, out of their neighborhood.
On Monday, Jamey’s mother, Brogli, testified that her son, on the
day of his disappearance, had told her that he was going to school.
Brogli and Jamey were temporarily staying at a motel on Harbor
Boulevard. Jamey’s two older brothers were living with their father.
The Trotters had just gone through a bitter divorce.
On the day of his disappearance, Brogli, who usually dropped off
Jamey at school, asked him to take the city bus because she was
running late for work and he had overslept and was already late for
school, she said. Brogli said her son left the hotel room at 7:30
a.m. with a tote bag filled with his school books, navy blue pants
and an orange T-shirt that read: “I’d rather be sailing in St. Thomas
Island.”
Jamey was, in fact, planning on ditching school that day, his
friend Keith Johnson testified.
“We were going to meet before school in the park adjacent to the
school and then go to a pizza parlor and play video games,” said
Johnson, who flew in from Florida to testify on Monday.
But Jamey never showed up at the park that day or at school, he
said.
Johnson said he and Jamey were “best friends.”
“Jamey was a straight-A student and I was a straight-D student,”
he said.
They normally hung out at the beach, skim-boarded, bodysurfed,
checked out girls and rode go-carts, he said. The boys also smoked
marijuana on a daily basis, Johnson said.
“It’s what everybody did at the beach,” he said. “We were doing
what we thought we were supposed to be doing.”
But the blond-haired, blue-eyed Jamey was a happy-go-lucky person,
an outgoing, friendly character who just about got along with
everyone, Johnson said.
The prosecution is expected to continue presenting its witnesses
today.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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