Monday, 09 December 2024

News

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Safety and prevention will be highlighted when Fire Prevention Week is marked from Oct. 3 to 9.


Each year, nearly 3,000 people die in home fires in the U.S. Nearly three-quarters of all U.S. homes have at least one working smoke alarm, but there are still a significant number of homes without smoke alarms or without working smoke alarms.


This group accounts for more than one-third of reported home fires and nearly half of all the reported home fire deaths.


According to Cal Fire, these are preventable deaths.


As startling as the figures are, they give powerful meaning to this year’s theme for Fire Prevention Week 2010, “Smoke Alarms: A sound you can live with.”


Cal Fire is stressing the importance of having smoke alarms and encourage everyone to take the necessary steps required to update and maintain their home smoke alarm protection.


Smoke alarms are one of the best and least expensive safety devices you can buy and install to protect yourself, your family and your home.


Cal Fire knows that in the event of a home fire, properly installed and maintained smoke alarms could save your own life and those of your loved ones by providing time to escape.


“Far too many homes have no smoke alarms, not enough smoke alarms, alarms that are too old or alarms that are not working,” said Cal Fire Director Del Walters. “We want residents to understand that working smoke alarms can increase your family’s chances of surviving a home fire by 50 percent. They are needed in every home, on every level, including the basement, outside each sleeping area and inside each bedroom. If a smoke alarm is 10 years old or older, it needs to be replaced.”


Cal Fire offered a few important fire safety and prevention tips:


  • Install smoke alarms on every level of the home (including the basement), outside each sleeping area and inside each bedroom. Never remove or disable smoke alarms.

  • Check your smoke alarm batteries every month.

  • Change smoke alarm batteries twice a year when changing clocks for daylight savings.

  • Plan and practice your family home emergency escape plan together several times a year.

  • Make sure everyone knows when and how to call emergency telephone numbers.

  • Cooking is the No. 1 cause of home fires and injuries.

  • Smoking is the leading cause of fire deaths.

  • Obtain and learn how to use a fire extinguisher.

  • Install carbon monoxide detectors.

  • Consider installing residential fire sprinklers in your home.


For more fire safety tips visit the CAL FIRE web site at www.fire.ca.gov.


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

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James Walter Nightingale, 30, of Kelseyville, Calif., is being held on charges including hit-and-run after allegedly leaving the scene of a fatal crash on Friday, September 24, 2010, that took the life of local restaurateur Zino Mezoui. Lake County Jail photo.





KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – A suspect in a fatal hit-and-run that took the life of a popular local restaurateur was arrested late Wednesday afternoon.


James Walter Nightingale, 30, of Kelseyville, turned himself in to authorities and was arrested at about 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, according to California Highway Patrol Officer Dallas Richey.


The CHP had been searching for Nightingale since last Friday, when he is alleged to have hit and killed Zino Mezoui, 57, owner of Zino's Ristorante in Kelseyville.


On Sept. 24 Mezoui, out for a long-awaited ride on his motorcycle, was traveling southbound along Highway 29 when Nightingale, driving a Chevrolet Suburban, allegedly failed to yield while pulling out onto the highway from Siegler Canyon Road, according to the CHP report.


Mezoui and his motorcycle collided with the driver's side door of the Suburban, the CHP reported.


Witnesses said Nightingale flipped a U-turn and then headed back up Siegler Canyon Road, according to Richey.


Mezoui was flown by REACH air ambulance to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead shortly after his arrival, the CHP reported.


Richey said the blue 1993 Chevrolet Suburban Nightingale was alleged to have driven during the collision was found the same day as the crash. It was located on a property off of Siegler Canyon Road, not far from the fatal crash scene. Broken glass and tire marks were found on the road nearby.


What followed were several days of intense investigative work, in which the CHP, other local law enforcement agencies and the public worked together, said Richey.


Richey credited that teamwork for resulting in an arrest. “Everybody really played a part in this.”


Close to half of the Clear Lake office's 23 officers were assigned to the case at any one time, from responding to the scene to helping secure it late into the night, according to Richey.


He said the community responded with an enormous amount of tips, which gave investigators new places to look.


“Zino was well loved,” Richey said.


The CHP didn't leave any stone unturned. “A countless number of doors got knocked on,” he added.


Richey said that on Wednesday the CHP put out a “be on the lookout” for Nightingale in Mendocino, Lake, Sonoma and Napa counties. Richey then began preparing an all points bulletin to release to the media that contained Nightingale's name.


In what Richey believes may have been a coincidence in timing, about 10 to 15 minutes later after the be on the lookout went out he received a phone call from an attorney who Nightingale had been in touch with, who said that Nightingale “knew that we were looking for him and that he wanted to turn himself in.”


Richey said he and the attorney agreed to have Nightingale meet an officer at a location in Clearlake. Nightingale was then taken to the CHP's Clear Lake office in Kelseyville; from there, Officer Kevin Domby transported Nightingale to the Lake County Jail.


Nightingale was booked into the Lake County Jail on felony counts of vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence and hit-and-run resulting in death, along with a misdemeanor warrant from an outside agency, his booking record showed.

 

Bail was set at $50,000 for Nightingale, who was listed as a general contractor on his booking sheet. Richey said a bail hearing on the matter was held Wednesday night.


Once Nightingale was in custody, Richey said the CHP called to let Mezoui's wife, Jan, know they had made an arrest.


“She was the first person we called,” Richey said.


Nightingale, who remained in jail overnight, is scheduled to be in court on Friday, according to jail documents.


Mezoui's family has scheduled a memorial service for him at 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 9, at his beloved restaurant, located at 6330 Soda Bay Road.


For full details see Oct. 9 memorial planned for Mezoui.

     

E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – Local law enforcement and education officials issued warnings Wednesday regarding a suspicious vehicle whose owner allegedly was contacting school-age children in the Middletown area.


The Lake County Sheriff's Office issued an alert seeking the driver of a black 2000 Volvo with a Minnesota license plate, No. 933AHB, which was last seen in the Middletown area.


Middletown Unified also reportedly issued an automated call to parents warning of the incident.


Officials said the driver is wanted for questioning regarding an allegation that he tried to get three young girls into his car at Middletown High School on Wednesday by asking them for directions.


The man wanted for questioning was described as a white male adult, approximately 25 years of age, with curly blonde hair. No further descriptive information was available by the end of business Wednesday.


While the man is only wanted for questioning, officials said community members should not attempt to contact the man if they see him.


If anyone knows the immediate location of this person or vehicle, or has seen the man or his car and can provide a current location, call the Lake County Sheriff’s Department Dispatch center at 707-263-2690.


Information as to the whereabouts of this person or vehicle also can be directed to Det. Mike Curran at 707-262-4232.


This is the second time this month suspicious activity has been reported near a school in the Middletown area.


The sheriff's office previously issued a report seeking the public's assistance in identifying a full-sized white “cargo type” van with no side windows or business markings but with expanded steel caging in the back windows.


The van been seen by students in the area of the bus stop on the corner of Stonegate and Greenridge Roads in Hidden Valley Lake on two separate occasions during the first two weeks of September, as Lake County News has reported.


The sole male occupant of the van has reportedly been seen parked near the stop with the window down and on one occasion, the driver reportedly looked at some children as they left the bus stop and then followed them for a short distance up Stonegate Road before turning around and leaving.


The driver in that case was described as a white male adult with “medium” skin tone, a shaved head, and possibly having blue eyes, officials reported.


Coyote Valley Elementary issued a subsequent notice to parents that the sheriff's office had followed up on another white van that wasn't the suspect vehicle, but which belonged to a local man.


“It is important that we not make quick judgments or unjustified accusations with neighbors and community members that may coincidentally own a white van,” the notice said.


The school also urged parents to take the opportunity to talk to their children about safety around strangers, “but please remind them not to make unfounded accusations or spread rumors that may provoke unwarranted panic.”


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

ROUND VALLEY, Calif. – Mendocino County Sheriff's officials, assisted by state and federal agencies, made several more arrests in the third day of eradicating illegal marijuana grows and sales in Round Valley on Thursday.


On Tuesday 17 people were arrested, and another 20 were arrested on Wednesday, officials reported. Among the Wednesday arrestees was 20-year-old Ethan Smith of Kelseyville, charged with cultivation and sales.


The approximate totals for the three-day operation into the illegal profiteering of the cultivation and sales of marijuana included 42 physical arrests, nine criminal citations, 19,158 marijuana plants were seized, 19 firearms were confiscated and $44,641 in cash was seized as evidence, according to Capt. Kurt Smallcomb.


The Mendocino County Sheriff's Office along with both the Campaign Against Marijuana Planting (CAMP) and County of Mendocino Marijuana Eradication Team (COMMET) assisted state and federal law enforcement agencies in the service of five search warrants and several “open field marijuana eradication locations,” Smallcomb said.


Arrested on cultivation and sales charges were Elizabeth Hollon, 22, of Eckton, Mass.; Benjamine Meyeers, 25, of Berlin, Germany; Matt Dymond, 32, of Willits; Noel Benson, 34, of New York; Jamey Breinberg, 42, of Covelo; and H. Multani, 31, of Covelo.


Smallcomb said officers and deputies served a search warrant at Mile Marker No. 17 on Mina Road where they eradicated 228 marijuana plants and seized approximately 50 pounds of processed marijuana. Hollon and Meyeers were arrested at that location.


A search warrant was then served at 33670 Mendocino Pass Road. There officials found and eradicated 80 marijuana plants, confiscated 2 pounds of processed marijuana and one rifle, and arrested Dymond and Benson, Smallcomb said.


Officers also served a search warrant at 36650 Mendocino Pass Road where they found 57 marijuana plants were eradicated, approximately 20 pounds of processed marijuana was seized, and three rifles and one handgun were confiscated, according to Smallcomb. Breinberg and Multani were arrested at that location


A search warrant was served at 51110 Highway 162, where Smallcomb said a total of 387 marijuana plants were eradicated, and Smallcomb said a total of three guns were confiscated.


The final search warrant of the day was served at 24700 Fairbanks Road, where Smallcomb said approximately 80 marijuana plants were eradicated.


Some of these investigations will continue in regards to property ownerships, financial gain and possible criminal culpability, Smallcomb said.


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

LAKEPORT, Calif. – This Saturday, Oct. 2, downtown Lakeport promises to be chock full of all things German – beer, bratwurst, pretzels, Lederhosen and racing dachshunds – as part of its second annual Oktoberfest celebration.


The event, sponsored by the Lake County Chamber of Commerce, will take place from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.


The chamber encourages everyone to wear authentic Bavarian attire, such as dirndls, felt jackets, Bundhosen and Lederhosen.


A full day of entertainment, vendors, family-style contests and fun is being provided by members of the chamber.


One of the day's main events will be the action-packed, first-ever Lake County Dachshund Derby, sponsored by Mediacom.


Chamber Chief Executive Officer Melissa Fulton said that, as far as they know, no one has ever hosted such a race for the spirited little canines here in Lake County.


The races begin at 3:45 p.m. in Museum Park. As of late Wednesday there were 27 dachshunds entered, she said.


Fulton said the response has been overwhelming.


“It's amazing, they're calling, they're faxing,” she said of dachshund owners, who are letting their wiener dogs rest up for the big race.


The final day to enter your dachshund is 5 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 30 at the chamber office, 875 Lakeport Blvd., Lakeport.


Applications are available online at www.lakecochamber.com or www.oktoberfest-lakeport.com.


Other fun events plans for Saturday include a beer stein contest at the Kitchen Gallery, located at Third and Main Streets. The public is invited to enter their favorite beer steins, with prizes offered for those whose steins are chosen as favorites by Oktoberfest visitors.


Plan to enter a pretzel making contest and maybe the pretzel eating contest. Many other contests are being planned throughout the day by Oktoberfest Master of Ceremonies Tony Barthel of the Featherbed Railroad Bed & Breakfast.


Entertainment takes place all day on the Oktoberfest stage at Third and Main, provided by sponsors Bottle Rock Power, Calpine Corp. and Westgate Petroleum.


Barthel said visitors in Lakeport will be able to tune in to Oktoberfest on their radios at 88.7 FM.


The Kelseyville Jazz Band, strolling accordion players and the 2010 Commemorative Oktoberfest Beer Steins are sponsored by Gossett Alarms and North Shore Business Association, with additional sponsorship for the beer and wine garden by Lake Event Design. Close to a dozen microbrews will be on hand for the beer garden.


The steins will be available all day at Oktoberfest when purchased with either a glass of beer or microbrew. They also are available for $20 and unlimited microbrew tastings between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m.


Barthel said the event is getting a much bigger response than expected, and they're in need of volunteers to help with setup in the morning and breakdown in the evening.


To volunteer or for more information about the event or any of the contests, contact the Lake County Chamber at 707-263-5092, or visit www.oktoberfest-lakeport.com/ or www.facebook.com/#!/oktoberfest.lakeport?ref=ts.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The weather still feels like summer, but the colors are those of fall.


Local photographer Ron Keas captured this unique Lake County landscape with fall colors becoming evident.


Keas captured the shot in Lucerne on Tuesday.


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

LAKEPORT, Calif. – A local man accused of embezzling funds from the Lucerne Alpine Senior Center will stand trial on the charges, a judge ruled Thursday.


Judge Andrew Blum made the decision after hearing about two and a half days of testimony in the case of Rowland James Mosser, 66.


Mosser, who served as the center's executive director from 2002 to 2005, is alleged to have taken an unspecified amount of funds from the center between Jan. 1, 2005, and Aug. 12, 2005. He's charged with two felony counts of embezzlement and two felony grand theft counts.


Blum, noting the burden of evidence for a preliminary hearing is not the same as trial, said he found there was strong suspicion to hold Mosser for trial on the charges.


Day three of the preliminary hearing featured two witnesses – Aura Thomas, who had been a bookkeeper for the center from early 2004 until September 2005, and Diane Plante, a certified public accountant who was called in by the center in September 2005 to help understand its finances and who later was hired by the District Attorney's Office to do a forensic examination of the center's books.


Thomas, who had been a volunteer at the center and had some initial financial training from Yuba College, took over from Brenda Pier, who left at the end of 2004 after seven years as the center's bookkeeper. Thomas recounted calling Pier frequently – and even once driving to her home – for advice and guidance, and needing her help for the center's reports to nonprofit regulatory agencies.


Shortly before she left she had to turn over the center's QuickBooks password to a board member, which she said neither she nor Pier agreed with doing.


When Deputy District Attorney Gary Luck asked Thomas about her relationship to Mosser, she said, “Rowland is my friend,” and added that she wasn't happy to have to give testimony in the case.


“I don't believe that Rowland took any money from the center,” she said.


Thomas said the center's accounts required two signatures on each check. One of their food vendors, Sysco, received a judgment against the center and levied its accounts, taking much of a large check that had been deposited into a center bank account.


“At that time it became very clear that it was not safe to leave large amounts of money in the senior center bank account,” and that's when the center's accounting went to a cash basis, she said.


She noted later in her testimony about the Sysco action on the bank account, “I remember that being a really big blow to the center,” with a lot of juggling going on.


With the work becoming more “chaotic,” Thomas said she got behind in her bookkeeping entries.


She explained that reimbursement checks written to Jayne Mosser, Rowland Mosser's wife, were a way of tracking funds the center spent. Jayne Mosser would be given center funds to buy things and then would receive a check for the purchases after presenting Thomas with receipts.


Thomas said Pier said they needed to do something to fix the center's bank accounts, and that she felt they should go back to how it had been before going to a cash basis because “it placed us at a great liability.”


Eventually, Thomas said the books became “cloudy” because of all the checks that had been printed for accounts payable but hadn't cleared the bank account and weren't reflected in the center's financial reconciliations. At one point, she and Pier voided all of the checks and reprinted them to try and make the books more accurate.


When Thomas left around Labor Day of 2005, she offered to help sort through the mess. She said the center didn't express an interest in having her help and she really wasn't interested “because it was a political nightmare at the center.”


Plante, who works both with her father, John Tomkins, at his Lucerne office, as well as having worked with John Robertson in Lakeport to audit school districts and nonprofits, has a QuickBooks certification and also teaches a QuickBooks course at Yuba College.


She said she was asked to come in and help the center understand its books in September 2005, but did a limited amount of actual bookkeeping. Plante later was retained by the District Attorney's Office, for which she provided analysis on the center's books.


As she was going through QuickBooks, Plante said she would make adjustments and then put her initials on them.


She estimated that she spent between 50 and 75 hours working on the center's books, spending half a day a week at the center while trying to match the paper trail with the accounting transactions, a process which she said took time.


Plante said she found about 200 transactions that weren't accounted for; in those cases, QuickBooks showed that a transaction happened, but the bank showed it didn't clear.


Luck presented an exhibit which Plante had generated, a profit and loss statement that showed the center had a net profit of $26,000 from Jan. 1 to Aug. 15, 2005. An accrual document for the same period showed a net income of $76,000 for the same period.


Plante said she was approached by the District Attorney's Office in 2009 and asked to do a detailed forensic review of the senior center books. She said she took the QuickBooks information and “tried to align it as best as we could with what really happened.”


She said she did a line by line detail, trying to understand the different transactions for 2005, and did the same for the years 2003, 2004 and 2005. An analysis of revenues for 2003 and 2004 showed fewer inconsistencies than in 2005, she said.


She said she believed that most of the checks written to Jayne Mosser for tracking purposes actually were cashed.


In 2004, very few checks had not cleared the center's accounts, while in 2005 many checks hadn't cleared. In 2005 there was an increase in vendors not receiving money, she said.


Plante also created a graph for January through August in the years 2004 and 2005 to compare cash income. She said 2004 had a consistently higher level of income than in 2005.


During cross-examination by defense attorney Jacob Zamora, Plante said when center officials first asked her to come and look at the books, “The word fraud was being used and at that time I declined to do an audit.” She said then-center Board Chair Jim Swatts was suggesting fraud took place.


Later, with witness testimony past, Luck sought to enter several evidentiary items, including a copy of Jayne Mosser's bank statements, where he said Rowland Mosser was depositing his checks. Zamora objected, accusing Luck of bootstrapping her into the case.


“It's his paycheck, he can do anything he wants with it,” said Zamora, contending it wasn't relevant to the case.


Blum said he found the information relevant for a couple of reasons, one being that it showed motive. The evidence showed that the account was closed in early 2005 and the family was broke. “That's a motive to steal,” he said, accepting the item into evidence over Zamora's objection.


Luck also wanted to enter several other pieces of evidence, including a reimbursement to Jayne Mosser for purchasing t-shirts for a rubber duck race that had actually been purchased by Bill Ellis, the center's former treasurer. Another exhibit showed that Jayne Mosser had received reimbursement for power and other utilities to her home.


Zamora said Luck had never come to him to ask about entering those exhibits, so the defense hadn't been able to prepare. Blum agreed not to receive several of the exhibits.


During closing arguments, Zamora told the judge, “We have no evidence that a crime was committed in this case,” adding that Plante had stated that she didn't see evidence of a crime.


He suggested Mosser was trying in vain to keep the center going.


If fraud had in fact been involved, Zamora suggested the Plante should not have gone in and started making changes in QuickBooks, which he said was “the crime scene” if there was a crime committed.


He cited evidence from previous witnesses who maintained the center always had struggled.


Zamora said there was no indication that Mosser took money. “I think they've established a lot of bad accounting.”


Luck, who accused Zamora of misinterpreting testimony, said Aug. 12, 2005, was the last day an entry was made in QuickBooks – before Plante's arrival – and that was the same day that Mosser resigned.


“Mr. Mosser had motive to steal, he had opportunity to steal,” Luck said.


Luck said the Mosser family was solvent in 2002, 2003 and 2004, but when their funds started disappearing in late 2004 and early 2005, that's when he alleged the senior center's daily financial operations changed.


“He had the opportunity because all cash, all financial transactions flowed through his fingers directly,” he said of Mosser.


Luck accused Rowland Mosser of fraud, which Luck said Mosser created through the center's environment.


“The evidence also shows that vendors were not being paid,” said Luck. “What happened to all that money? I submit to you that it ended up with Mr. Mosser.”


Zamora said there was more speculation than evidence, and the law was clear – speculation can't be used for a holding order for a trial.


There was nothing to substantiate that Rowland Mosser had an extravagant lifestyle, Zamora said.


He said there was no evidence of a crime, and that all the hearing had proved is that the center is a great place for seniors and that Mosser was trying to keep going.


Blum said the standard for a preliminary hearing is “strong suspicion.”


He continued, “Several things are very clear, that late in 2004 and through 2005, the center was struggling financially.”


It had always struggled, but not as bad as it did during that time, he said.


In January 2004, its bills were all paid, Blum said. Later that year, bills started to skyrocket. By August of 2005 the center owed in excess of $80,000.


“That's a startling fact,” he said.


At the same time, the center changed its accounting practices. Blum said he didn't think Plante had caused any problems by making change in QuickBooks, as she had initialed them.


“Clearly there's a motive,” said Blum, noting the Mossers were going through financial difficulties, although he said that isn't proof.


Blum also found that it was a “very bizarre” accounting technique to write Jayne Mosser checks she wasn't entitled to receive.


He continued that he had a strong suspicious that Mosser, in his capacity of trust as the center's director, misappropriated funds, and ordered Mosser held to answer to the charge.


Mosser waived the right to be arraigned within 15 court days because of his attorney's calendar. The matter is set for arraignment at 8:15 a.m. Nov. 8 in Department 2.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

LOWER LAKE – A Tuesday afternoon crash sent two local men to an area hospital with injuries.


The crash occurred at 4:43 p.m. on Highway 29 north of Spruce Grove Road North, according to a report from California Highway Patrol Officer Steve Tanguay.


Timothy Pilger, 33, of Clearlake was driving his 2000 Ford F-350 northbound on Highway 29 north of Spruce Grove Road North, with Vincent Jaking, 27, of Middletown traveling northbound in his 2006 Honda Civic behind Pilger, according to the report.


Driving southbound in his 1997 Mazda pickup was Christopher Hedge, 20, of Pope Valley. When Hedge was north of Spruce Grove Road North he allegedly allowed his vehicle to veer to the left and enter the northbound lane of traffic directly in front of Pilger, according to involved parties and witnesses.


Pilger saw the Mazda entering his lane of traffic and veered to the right in an attempt to avoid a collision, Tanguay said.


The left side of Hedge's pickup struck the left side of Pilger's pickup. The Mazda pickup then continued southbound in the northbound lane and struck head-on the Honda Civic that was being driven by Jaking, Tanguay said.


Both Hedge and Jaking were transported to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital by REACH helicopter, according to Tanguay, who said the collision is still under investigation by Officer Mark Crutcher.


Tanguay said neither alcohol nor drugs are suspected as contributing factors in the collision.


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The preliminary hearing for a local man accused of embezzling funds from the Lucerne Alpine Senior Center got under way on Tuesday morning.


Rowland James Mosser, 66, who was the center's director from July 2002 to August 2005, was in Judge Andrew Blum's Department 3 courtroom Tuesday for the proceedings.


Mosser is charged with two felony counts of embezzlement and two felony grand theft counts for allegedly taking funds from the center between Jan. 1, 2005, and Aug. 12, 2005.


Deputy District Attorney Gary Luck said in a previous interview that he doesn't have a firm amount for the money allegedly taken from the center during that period of time.


Luck took the case to preliminary hearing early in 2009 but later asked for the charges to be dismissed while a forensic examination of the center's financial records was conducted, as Lake County News has reported. He refiled the case in September 2009.


He estimated the hearing should take two and a half days.


Luck told the court Tuesday that the chief investigator on the case, Ron Larsen, a retired Clearlake Police Department captain who in recent years has worked as a part-time investigator for the District Attorney's Office, is ill and was unable to appear for the hearing. Luck asked to be able to submit a copy of the preliminary hearing transcript from early 2009, which included Larsen's testimony.


Jacob Zamora, Mosser's defense attorney, agreed to allow the transcript in, but only for the preliminary hearing, not for any trial that might result. Blum received the transcript later in the day and planned to start going through it.


During brief opening statements, Luck alleged that Mosser and his wife, Jayne – was was previously charged with a county of felony grand theft that later was dropped – received a financial windfall of about $160,000 in mid-2003.


He said the evidence would show that the Mossers had spent all of the money by 2005, when their bank account was closed with penalty fees.


At the end of 2004 and throughout the rest of Rowland Mosser's tenure at the senior center in 2005, Luck alleged that the tracking of donations coming into the center disappeared.


He alleged that payment of vendors also ceased at the end of 2004, with financial judgments from vendors being lodged against the center at that time. Taxes being withheld from employees' paychecks weren't paid to the state and federal government, Luck said.


Zamora briefly countered, “There was simply no money to steal.”


Over the rest of the morning and into the afternoon, Luck called six witnesses who had worked at the center in various volunteer capacities.


Donna Christopher, who lives just a few doors down from the center, recalled regularly attending events at the center with her family, and making donations of time, money and items, such as durable medical equipment.


Bill Ellis, 92, a longtime board member and the center's former treasurer, recalled how in 2005 the center's checks began bouncing, and how he paid for several energy bills, each totaling more than $2,000.


Jim Swatts of Clearlake Oaks, the center's former board chair, testified to being appointed to the position in July of 2005. Beforehand, he had no affiliation with the center other than attending events and breakfasts there.


After his appointment, he said he found out about the center's financial situation, which wasn't good.


Swatts said Mosser asked him in August 2005 if he could give the senior center board a financial report in closed session. Swatts said he told Mosser no, that he needed to give the report in open session.


“I said it would be given in an open meeting, he said he would not do it,” Swatts said.


Swatts said he then asked the board for a closed session to have a personnel discussion. “I wanted to know when the last time Mr. Mosser was graded on performance,” Swatts said.


Mosser later entered that closed session, went ahead and handed out the financial report against Swatts' direction and also gave the board a piece of paper that said he was resigning in two weeks. After Mosser left the room, the board voted to accept the resignation, Swatts testified.


Immediately afterward, Swatts gave Mosser a letter approved by the board putting him on administrative leave for two weeks. Swatts then collected Mosser's keys and Mosser left.


Swatts recounted having to knock the hinges off a small combination safe in Mosser's office, in which Swatts and several other center board members and volunteers found an envelope marked “bingo” with $500 inside, and other envelope containing less than $98.


Swatts said the Internal Revenue Service informed him that the center owed the government back tax money. During one conversation they told Swatts that they planned to shut the center down within 24 hours if some action wasn't taken.


Swatts and then-Lakeport Senior Center Executive Director Marilyn Johnson worked together to try to get the center on track, he said. J.J. Jackson later was hired as the Lucerne senior center's executive director.


Lillian Sherry, 83, the center's former treasurer and thrift shop volunteer, took over as treasurer for Ellis in April 2005 after Ellis had heart surgery. Like Swatts, she recounted opening the safe in Mosser's former office, with her account matching his regarding what was found in the safe.


Luck also called to the stand Lauralei Smith, who testified about volunteering at the center and taking cash at events, which she turned over to Mosser.


Former senior center board member Eva Mooney, who had been involved in running the center's rose garden and thrift shop, recalled having to reduce her commitments to the center in order to care for her 100-year-old mother in the spring of 2005, with her mother dying that summer.


Mooney said she didn't recall being present at the meeting where Mosser resigned. Her term had ended in July 2005.


“I was just glad it ended,” she said, explaining that she was increasingly getting upset having to deal with the center.


After Mosser left, she said people at the center were cold and rude. “I think they were just not caring.”


Mooney recalled never seeing any money from a duck race event in 2005, and said the family of a woman who died donated a large number of items to the center for the thrift shop, but the items never appeared in the shop. She say Jayne Mosser told her they could get more for the items on eBay


When she handed money from the thrift shop over to Mosser, Mooney recalled that he usually just put it in his pocket, not verifying the amount.


While a board member at the center, Mooney didn't recall Mosser reporting that tax levies or judgments had been placed against the center.


The preliminary hearing is scheduled to continue at 9 a.m. Wednesday.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

SACRAMENTO – The California Highway Patrol reported this week on its efforts to save lives by emphasizing enforcement of seat belt laws.


The CHP reported that California has one of the highest seat belt compliance rates in the nation – 95.3 percent.


The CHP has spent the past year focusing on the remaining population with a seat belt safety campaign aimed at encouraging Californians to properly secure themselves and their children inside their vehicle.


“I am proud that California has one of the highest seat belt compliance rates. The CHP and the law enforcement community applaud California motorists for their use of seat belts and child passenger safety seats,” said CHP Commissioner Joe Farrow.


“We thank you for making your drives safe for yourself and your passengers,” Farrow said. “However, we still have approximately 4.7 percent of the population, which is equivalent to more than 1.7 million people, who are not buckling up.”


The California Occupant Restraint Campaign (CORC) enabled the CHP to strengthen its enforcement and education efforts statewide through a combination of seat belt and safety seat usage surveys and child passenger safety presentations.


Throughout the past year, the grant assisted the CHP with educating more than 100,000 parents, guardians and caregivers. The grant also funded training to certify CHP personnel, as well as employees from allied agencies, to become child passenger safety technicians to inspect and issue car seats.


“The message we want to share is that motor vehicle collisions continue to be the leading cause of death and injury for vehicle occupants of all age groups, regardless of gender or ethnicity,” said Commissioner Farrow. “Seat belts and safety seats help increase your odds of surviving a collision.”


In addition to conducting community outreach and enforcement activities to increase seat belt and child restraint usage, the grant’s goals were to reduce the number of fatalities and injuries in collisions. Final collision figures from the grant-period will not be available until next year.


“We hope those who haven’t developed the habit of wearing the seat belt would understand their importance, just like the majority of Californians have,” added Commissioner Farrow. “Protect yourself and your passengers, please buckle up.”


The CORC was funded by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.


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This car was damaged and its driver injured when it hit the back of a semi on Wednesday, September 29, 2010, near Upper Lake, Calif. Photo by Gary McAuley.

 


UPPER LAKE, Calif. – A Wednesday morning crash near Upper Lake resulted in minor injuries.


The crash occurred shortly before 8 a.m. on Highway 29 just south of Highway 20, according to the California Highway Patrol.


The CHP said the roadway was blocked as a result of the crash, which involved a female driver rear-ending a semi-truck, according to reports from the scene. The woman's head hit the windshield, giving her a minor head injury.


More specifics weren't immediately available from the CHP on Wednesday.

 

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The scene of a crash on Highway 29 south of Highway 20 near Upper Lake, Calif., on Wednesday, September 29, 2010. Photo by Gary McAuley.
 

Wartime demands for personnel, and record retention rates due in part to a dismal job market, have left the services with an older, more experienced force – and a surprise $1-billion-a-year pop in retirement costs.


The Department of Defense’s Board of Actuaries in late July overhauled the assumptions used to calculate what the services must budget for annually to cover future retirement obligations to the current force.


It acted on analyses from the DoD Office of the Actuary which, for the first time, weighed the effects on retirement costs of Post-9/11 developments including nine years of sustained operations, a deep economic recession and growth in military entitlements of retirees and survivors.


The result is an $800 million jump in accrual retirement costs the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps have to pay starting 2012 because more service members are staying until retirement.


Some of that cost too is a projected 40 percent increase in disability retirements, the result of a crackdown on the low-balling of disability awards by service through stricter compliance with rating practices of the Department of Veterans Affairs.


Another $200 million in added yearly retirement costs is attributed to retirees living longer. Death rates are falling – and sharply.


“The improvement that military retirees are seeing in their own mortality is just phenomenal,” said Peter Rossi, one of DoD actuaries that worked on revising projected retirement costs.


Retiree deaths are “decreasing at such a rapid rate – faster than the American public, faster than anyone else – we are seeing a 2-plus percent a year change for active, reserve. It’s everybody.”


Deaths for non-disabled retirees in 2008-09 were 8 percent lower than found for non-disabled retirees in 2004-2005. For retired reservists, data showed a 4 percent drop.


No cause has been identified, Rossi added. “Maybe military folks are just in better shape.”


The changes in actuarial assumptions reportedly surprised Under Secretary of Defense Robert Hale, the DoD comptroller, who already was under considerable pressure to curb the services’ soaring personnel costs.


“The comptroller was not pleased,” said one official. “He now had to go out and find [$1 billion] when Defense Secretary [Robert] Gates is telling him he needs to save money. That was a contentious issue for a while.”


The retention rate of careerist is so high that in the 2012 budget to be delivered to Congress next February, the services will assume that 19 percent of all new entrants serve for 20 years, long enough to qualify for retirement. That’s a “huge” change from the 17 percent previously assumed, said Rossi.


Specifically, the probability of newly commissioned officers reaching retirement will climb to 49 percent from 47. For new enlistees, the assumed retirement rate will be raised to 17 percent from 15.


It forces the services overall to set aside $20 billion in their 2012 budgets to cover active duty retirement costs, an unplanned for 5 percent jump. Another $2.8 billion will have to be set aside for Guard and Reserve retirement but that’s unchanged. Rossi said the Office of the Actuary has not reconsidered assumptions for Guard and Reserve retirement but it soon will.


Another way to look at the effect of the new assumptions on retirement costs is by individual member costs. For fiscal 2011 the services will set aside $32.70 for future retired pay for every $100 paid in basic pay. That proportion will climb to $34.30 for every $100 in basis pay in fiscal 2012. So if a service member draws $50,000 in basic pay, his or her service will have to pony up $17,150 that year for future retired pay, or $800 more than was needed a year earlier.


For many years, the military ignored future retirement obligations, budgeting only to cover payments due each year to current retirees and survivors. That pay-as-you-go method created a huge unfunded liability. Critics also said the services had no incentive to control retirement costs.


In 1984 Congress ordered DoD to switch to “accrual accounting” for retirement accounts. The Treasury Department was given responsibility for the unfunded liability and established a military retirement trust fund. The services began to pay into that fund whatever amount was needed to cover retirement costs for the current active, Guard and Reserve forces.


So retirement obligations today are paid from two pots. Treasury pays roughly $50 billion a year to cover annuities of current retirees and survivors. The services pay more than $20 billion a year in accrual payments.


Once again, no COLA


The board of actuaries assumed at its July meeting that military retirees, social security recipients, federal civilian retirees, disabled veterans and survivors will have to wait until at least January 2012 before they see their next cost-of-living adjustment or COLA.


That prediction looks even more solid now, to the regret of retirees.


No COLA was paid last year because there was no inflation. The cost of goods and services, in fact, fell by 2.1 percent from the third quarter of 2008 through the third quarter of 2009, the periods used to track CPI.


To trigger a COLA for next January, inflation as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI-U) for July through September this year would have to climb by more than 2.1 percent above the third-quarter base period of 2008. For that to happen, prices would have to surge 2 percent in September alone. There are no signs that is happening.


No COLA last year eased the unfunded liability of the military retirement system by $22.3 billion. But it gave no relief to service budgets because Treasury’s pays COLAs of current retirees. Rossi said that over time retirees can expect COLAs to deliver an annual average boost of 3 percent.


To comment, send e-mail to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or write to Military Update, P.O. Box 231111, Centreville, VA, 20120-1111.


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