Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

Games

Arcade
Sudoku
Murray: Hopkins' letter on Dinius case unconvincing PDF Print E-mail
Written by Connel Murray   
Monday, 20 July 2009

Saturday's unconvincing attempt by District Attorney Jon Hopkins (the DA's perspective on the Dinius case) shows clearly why Lake County is in serious need of changes in both our law enforcement and prosecution offices. Mr. Hopkins opens his piece with a veiled accusation that sailboater Dinius was "on the lake with running lights off." He then attempts to use head counts to determine whether or not the sailboat had its running lights on – a risky approach considering that in the immediate aftermath of the accident the investigators did not even know the difference between its on-off switch and the circuit breakers.


But all this begs the issue. It makes absolutely no difference whether or not the sailboat's running lights were on or off. If the powerboat had plowed into an unlighted pier would it have been the pier's fault? If it had run down a swimmer in the dark would the swimmer have been at fault?


Since this was a maritime incident, it seems logical that both the sheriff's office and the DA should have assigned personnel familiar with maritime law to investigate. The fact that they failed to do so is, at best, dereliction of duty, and at worst a deliberate attempt at a coverup.


As a result nowhere in these proceedings, as far as I can tell, has the subject of maritime law been addressed. These laws state clearly that (1) Any power boat must give way to any vessel under sail. (2) Any overtaking vessel – that is a boat approaching from the rear – is the "burdened" vessel, meaning it has the responsibility for avoiding a collision. (3) Any vessel operating at night must maintain speed at a level permitting a full stop if necessary to avoid an obstruction. The powerboat operator failed to observe all three of these rules with tragic consequences.


Mr. Hopkins states he "cannot prove the speed of the motorboat." Here again, this has no bearing on the case. It was obviously going too fast to avoid the obstruction – the sailboat.


Compounding the tragedy was the failure of Deputy Perdock to acknowledge his responsibility for the accident, and even worse his attempt to shift responsibility to a blameless victim. It was not Bismark Dinius who recklessly plowed his boat into a vessel probably making no more than four or five knots.


Mr. Hopkins has already cost the taxpayers of Lake County probably hundreds of thousands of dollars in his futile attempt at prosecution of this case, and now, of course, has been forced to drop the manslaughter provisions. He says he continues with other aspects of the case "to get to the truth." If this were the case, then why is Deputy Perdock not also in the dock along with Dinius?


Mr. Hopkins' grudging mea culpa comes far too late, and with far too little acknowledgment of the negative role he and his department has played in the affair. They have managed to turn an unfortunate accident into a crime scene, only this time the crime may be laid at the feet of the law, with many of us convinced that the selective prosecution of Bismark Dinius is the law's best effort to simply protect one of its own, and we can only pray that it is unsuccessful.


Connel Murray lives in Kelseyville. He has a 40-year background in owning and piloting small boats in both inland waters – including Clear Lake and the Delta – and saltwater, from Puget Sound to Alaska.

Trackback(0)
Comments (8)Add Comment
To the bureaucrats of Lake County.
written by James, July 20, 2009
For you that are the bureaucrats of this county government, a reminder. I have said that you cannot abuse the citizens with your arrogance, lie and cover the lies up, have no oversight and be the arbitrators of complaints were you protest those among you. With rights denied to us that complain. I stood outside your building every Tuesday for five years to protest. I have complained for over eight years. I made charges and to this date all you have done is shine me on.

The public is seeing you for what you are. All the years you have delayed my rights was not to protect this government but yourself. So I point a finger and call you liars Investigate my charges and as I've always said If I be the liar charge me with perjury.
Grand Jury Anyone?
written by Chris Thompson, July 20, 2009
I believe it is now the time for a Grand Jury investigation into this obstruction of justice by the local prosecutor's office. How does one go about nominating this to the Grand Jury? What is the legal process for removing a corrupt, obstructionist prosecutor from office? Where is the oversight of this prosecutor?

Who is really in charge in Lake County? The voters or the vested money interests?
Who is in charge?
written by thekattb4u, July 20, 2009
Chris, In a capitalistic society such as ours, it is the vested money interests that are in charge. And as you are finding out, these interests are in charge even in a socialized system such as law enforcement.

If you want the people to be in charge, you need to change to a socialist or communist system where the people (not corporations) control the country's resources and wealth (this might come as a surprize to those who bought the WWII and Cold War propaganda).

The U.S. hasn't been a democracy (government by and for the people) for years (if ever). What we have is a corporate dictatorship where the only candidates on the ballot are those put forth and funded by wealthy corporations. A popular candidate may occasionally sneak through the door, but will most likely fail due to insufficient funds. We will continue to have this form of dictatorship until money is removed from the entire political process (no paid campaign adds, no fees for regestering as a candidate, no paid lobbying, and no riders on bills).
Grand Jury
written by BG__Locke, July 20, 2009
Hey Chris,

While you'd think the Grand Jury would be the perfect option to review the recent actions of the DA, you'd be mistaken. As the foreperson the last two years I can assure you that the Grand Jury cannot review this in any way. The reason is that the DA acts as a representative of the State with regards to prosecution and therefore is outside of the Grand Jury's perview. The only viable option to review the DA is the Attorney General's Office. There are links to contact the AG at this website: http://ag.ca.gov/consumers/general.php
yes,
written by tom, July 20, 2009
let's live in a socialist/communist society, where the "people" are in charge. maybe in your wildest dreams. no soc./communist society in the real world is or has ever been run by anyone but the most corrupt, venal bureaucrat. if I'm wrong, give me an example. Cuba, N. Vietnam, China, N.Korea, the old USSR?. I think not.
get real.
Socialist?
written by thekattb4u, July 20, 2009
Hey Tom,

None of the societies you listed were either socialist or communist (though our military-industrial complex tried to say they were). They were as inept at being socialist and communist as we are enept at being democratic. In reality, no culture can be all communist, all socialist, or all capitalist. For a culture to survive and prosper (the people not the corporations) there needs to be a mix of all three of these economic forms. Essential goods and services (food, water, fuel, healthcare, safety, etc.) should be provided by a governmental system run by the people (socialism). Manfactured goods should be bought and sold privately between people (capitalism). We already have both in this country, but during the past 30+ years, more and more of our basic needs have been turned over to profit-seeking corporations and taken out of the hands of the people (e.g. healthcare, military, food, fuel, etc.).

I am real, and have been studying all forms of economics, cultures and political systems for close to 40 years.
Bg Locke.
written by James, July 21, 2009
Tell the people what else this grand jury can't do. It has no teeth to bite. In truth very little oversight other to waste time telling all what is already known. The people are well meaning and sure they wish to do good. But the fact remains it has little power to oversee for its suggestions. For you that might not know Mr.Brown the attorney general of California dropped this like a hot potato. So the reality is we have the lowlife until we can toss his buns out of office. So much for justice.
Final Arbiter
written by Dante, July 21, 2009
You can be sure the greater sailing community is aghast over this legal abuse by an ignorant land lubber. These are the type of people you want to attract as tourists and event sponsors. Where does the district attorney think the money comes from to run his dog and pony show? So now we have just one more group who not only feel unwanted here but realize they are risking a tour through hell by making Lake County their vacation destination. Until we replace the entire legal and administrative goon squad, the Chambers of Commerce might as well just put a "closed until further notice" sign on their doors and go home.

Write comment
You must be logged in to post a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 
< Prev   Next >
Powered By Page_Cache by Ircmaxell
Generated in 0.045467138290405 Seconds