Deepa Bharath Darleen Savoji is still haunted...
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Deepa Bharath
Darleen Savoji is still haunted by thoughts of James Lee Crummel.
Savoji, who worked her day job and picketed by night to get the
57-year-old convicted sex offender out of her Newport Crest
neighborhood five years ago, shudders at the thought of what might
have happened had her two young boys accepted Crummel’s invitation
and followed him into the condo he then shared with psychiatrist
Burnell Forgey.
Newport Crest, otherwise a quiet neighborhood, recoiled in a
frightened rage when Newport Beach police circulated fliers there,
warning residents about Crummel and calling him a “high-risk
offender” believed to have a greater risk of re-offending and to pose
a worse danger to the public.
Crummel’s whereabouts were made known to the community through
Megan’s Law, passed in California in 1996. The law is named after
Megan Kanka, a New Jersey girl who was raped and killed by a child
molester on parole who lived in her neighborhood.
Savoji’s sons, then 13 and 7, immediately identified the face on
the flier as the man who had invited them into his house a few days
before, she said.
“They were riding their BMX bikes and fell down in front of his
house,” she said. “[Crummel] came outside and asked them if he could
get them a Band-Aid. Then he told them: “Let’s go in, have a Coke and
watch BMX movies.”
But the boys used their better judgment and declined the offer,
Savoji said.
An Associated Press investigation earlier this month revealed that
more than 33,000 sex offenders have fallen off the radar, a number
larger than the state’s previous estimate that the whereabouts of a
third of California’s sex criminals are not known. Convicted sex
offenders are required to register with the police department in
their city of residence. Also, under state law, every month cities
get a disc from the Department of Justice with a complete list of
registered offenders.
KEEPING TRACK OF OFFENDERS
Newport Beach currently has 26 registered sex criminals and Costa
Mesa has 137. Neither city is home to a high-risk offender such as
Crummel, officials said. Local police officials also say they have
had no problems keeping track of such offenders.
Chris Maese, who also picketed outside Crummel’s house with Savoji
five years ago, said she was shocked to hear that a high-risk sex
offender was living in “a nice neighborhood.”
“It’s very scary for people like myself with young children,” she
said. “I was even more shocked we weren’t notified about it. I’m glad
we have Megan’s Law.”
But Savoji says the law, as any other, has loopholes.
“I believe that Megan’s Law has done a lot of good,” she says.
“But how many people actually go down to the police station and check
the information?”
Savoji wonders if police departments have enough manpower to hunt
down offenders who don’t report to them. She wonders how many are
slipping away without being noticed.
“Megan’s Law is a great resource,” she said. “But there’s always
going to be that person who’ll find a way around it.”
The solution, she says, is for parents to talk to their children
and educate them about the perils that lurk around them.
Crummel, the city’s first high-profile case involving Megan’s Law,
has been behind bars since 1997 when he was arrested on suspicion of
murdering Jamey Trotter, a 13-year-old Costa Mesa boy who vanished on
April 19, 1979, on his way to school. Last seen walking along Harbor
Boulevard, the blond-haired boy was reported missing and feared dead
when investigators could not solve the case.
Eleven years later, the boy’s charred skull and teeth were found
by Crummel near the Ortega Highway in Riverside County. At that time
Crummel was not a suspect in Trotter’s death. But now, it has left
officials perplexed about why the boy’s suspected killer would lead
them to his remains.
A HISTORY OF SUSPICION
The Trotter case was not the first time Crummel had been suspected
of murdering a young boy. He was arrested in connection with the 1967
murder of 9-year-old Frank Clawson in Arizona, but that case was
thrown out by a judge in 1982 because a key witness changed his
statement.
The disappearance of 9-year-old Jack Phillips in 1995 near Big
Bear Lake also led investigators to Crummel. Phillips has never been
found and Crummel was not even charged in that case, although
detectives interviewed him.
The former Newport Beach resident’s rap sheet dates back three
decades and unfurls a squalid history of child molestation. More
recently, Crummel was sentenced to 60 years to life for sexually
abusing a 16-year-old boy at his Newport Crest condo. His roommate,
Forgey, was convicted for molesting the 16-year-old and was in jail
for a few years.
Family members said Forgey died in November 2001 at Veteran’s
Hospital in San Bernardino of complications from pneumonia at age 83.
Last week, a trial date was set in Riverside County Superior Court
for the Trotter trial. It is scheduled for April 7, almost a year
late because some of the forensic evidence had to be tested further,
said prosecutor Bill Mitchell. Pretrial motions are expected to be
made on Tuesday.
Mitchell said he had requested additional DNA testing on Trotter’s
remains using newer techniques. When that was done, forensic
anthropologists suspected there were probably remains of two people.
“But it has now been determined that the bones belonged only to
Jamey Trotter and the other results occurred because of contamination
while handling the evidence,” Mitchell explained. That delayed the
trial by more than a year, he said.
Crummel is now in Riverside County jail awaiting trial. He has
pleaded not guilty to the alleged crime.
A PARENT’S BIGGEST FEAR
Justine Howard, a Newport Crest resident who was behind Savoji in
her crusade, said she is relieved to know that Crummel is still
behind bars.
“The biggest fear any parent has, the worst nightmare is that your
child will get kidnapped, raped and killed,” she said. “We were happy
to see him out of our neighborhood, happy to see him arrested. I’d
like to see him put away forever.”
Trotter’s older brother, John Trotter, who lives in Orange County
and his mother, Barbara Brogli, could not be reached for comment.
Brogli, who lived in Colorado at the time of Crummel’s arrest,
vowed to move to California and attend every day of the trial. She
has said she wants to confront him face to face.
John Trotter said right after Crummel’s arrest that he was “happy
as hell.”
“I’m happy for my family, I’m happy for all the families [Crummel]
has hurt,” he said. “If my brother’s death and all this coming to
light saves one kid from being abused, that means the world to me.”
* 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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