Counsel says defendants were charged too heavily
- Share via
Deepa Bharath
The three teenagers accused of gang-raping a 16-year-old girl have
been treated equally in a case that has created a media frenzy
because of the high-power position held by one defendant’s father, a
spokeswoman for the Orange County district attorney said.
Orange County Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl and his son’s defense
team, however, have said they believe that the Orange County district
attorney overcharged this case because of Don Haidl’s position of
power and his role in county politics.
Prosecutors allege that Greg Haidl, Kyle Nachreiner and Keith
Spann, sexually assaulted the girl in the older Haidl’s Corona del
Mar home in July 2002.
Deputy Dist. Atty. Susan Schroeder said that the district attorney
has charged all three defendants alike and the videotape that is
expected to be played for jurors on Tuesday will prove every single
charge beyond a reasonable doubt. The teens face 24 felony counts.
“The complaint against these defendants is like a program guide
for the criminal acts that have been caught on the videotape,”
Schroeder said. “You can tick off the charges as you watch the tape.”
The prosecution’s main piece of evidence is a 20-minute digital
videotape, which has reportedly captured the alleged rape. Defense
attorneys have consistently argued that the sexual acts seen on tape
were consensual.
She said Don Haidl’s position as an assistant sheriff has no
bearing on the case. But, she added, that this is an unusual case
because of Haidl’s affluence and influence.
“It’s a unique situation where the defendants have had every
resource available to them,” she said. “They are being defended by
the best in the business. They’ve had eight attorneys argue their
case at different points, six of them for Haidl, including a former
judge.”
The Haidl family has also hired Tori Richards, a former
spokeswoman for the Orange County district attorney, as well as a
jury consultant, Schroeder said.
But she added that she understood Don Haidl’s plight as a parent
facing the possibility of his son going to state prison for up to 55
years, if convicted.
“It’s obvious he loves his son very much,” she said. “But his
perception seems very different from the reality. The truth will come
out during the trial and justice will be done.”
Schroeder said the defendants have been in the limelight from the
beginning.
“No one understands how much the victim has suffered,” she said.
“Her reputation has been trashed and the defense has depicted her in
a way that seems less than human. We’re happy that she is going to
have her day in court.”
Don Haidl said his son and the other defendants and their families
have been traumatized by all the notoriety and attention this case
has brought to them.
But Schroeder said that the defendants fed the media frenzy in
their own way.
“On the day of their arraignment Haidl and Nachreiner made obscene
gestures at the television cameras,” she said. “It started right then
and there for them. They brought it on themselves.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.