News Scrapbook 1989

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Tuesday, June 20, 1989

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' 11a ura env1ro1 men an who once lived there during two se~ s10ns in July. The first sess10n will meet from 9 a.m. to noon July 10 through 14 for children in second through fourth grade. The second session will meet from 9 a.m. to noon e peop e 40 per session. The expeditions will be sponsored by the Friends of the Los Penaaquitos Canyon Pre- c serve. Call Elberta Fleming, 271- 6710, for more information 1 Try Japanese flower arranging, d experiment with patchwork quilting d of San Diego at La Jolla Village Square shopping center. Woodwork- ing, cooking and magic lessons also will be featured for school-age kids. Call 450-0768. v.

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; July 17 through 21 for children in ·SJaAO[ eueueq lq ui 1ua < fourth through sixth grade. The cost

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lJ or make a ceramic mural in classes L------------------ q offered by the Children•• Museum

Want to stay away from fun and games this summer and get involved • in something a little more serious~ "Science for Serious Students" will - i{i~der: Lucas guilty of 3 throat-slashing deaths Continued from A-1 "1-- q 'J layed because ·t wa t"ed · th Sh · · · 1 I

S;1n Diego , CA. (San Diego C~ .) S,m Diego Union (Cir . D. 217,089) (Cir . S. 341,840)

committed by one person. Yesterday, Deputy District Attor- ney Williams declined to comment either about the verdicts returned or about his penalty phase strategy be- cause further proceedings are sched- Defense attorneys Steven E. Feld- uled. comment for the same reason. Swanke's 1984 murder was the last in the series for which Lucas was charged. Her car, which had run out of gas, was found near the intersec- lion of Fletcher Parkway and Jack- Her nude body was found four days after her Nov. 20 disappearance in a remote industrial area of Spring Val- (ey, about two miles from Lucas' son Drive in La Mesa losophy professor, said he was con- vinced that Lucas was his daughte • tion presented its initial evidence in a 1985 preliminary hearing. "I am still standing in front of a television camera not because I am a good singer ... but because I am the father of a murder victim," Swanke He said he looks forward to the finality of sentencing so he could "go back to remembering the good things about (his daughter's) life instead of Staff Writer Lorie Hearn also con- tributed to this report. said. her tragic ending." home. Yesterday her fath USO h·- , er, a P 1

up _in roat. e said she later was driven to the Cowles Mountain area where The one victim who testified dur- ing the murder trial was Jodie Santi- ago _Robertson, 34, of Seattle, who survived severe throat-slashing inju- ries to testify against and identify he abducted her from an El Cajon restaurant bar and drove her to his Casa de Oro home, where she said she was choked into unconsciou, ess. Two early morning joggers found Robertson lying half-nude alongside a Mt. Helix roadside the morning of During the trial, Deputy District Attorney Daniel T. William de- scribed Lucas as a man "who carved the necks" of his victims "like a ngs ... were not ran- dom killings," Williams said at the the attack occurred. June 9, 1984. butcher.". "Th killi ese Lucas' attorneys sought to place the blame for the killings on others, while the prosecution argued the cir- cumstantial evidence in each of the crimes strongly pointed to LucaJ as The defense argued that L as was a victim of mistaken identity in the attack on Robertson, the only survivor of the series of throat slash- ,,. ings that the prosecution said was the perpetrator. They were not gunshot killings. 'they -===jl wer~ deliberate, ~rem,~ditated, dis- 1 guS t ing throat cuttings,;

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The jury also found true a special circumstance allegation that Lucas committed multiple murders - a finding that could lead to unposition of the death penalty t7 / Lucas' mother, Patricia Lucas, trembled as the verdicts were read. Afterward, her eyes red from crying, she told reporters: "My son is inno- cent." Jacobs' sister, who asked not to be named, attended eve day of the trial and expressed relief at the out- come. "I feel real secure that they have the right man," she said. "I felt the evidence was overwhelming. It's just unfortunate that it took so long to prosecute him." Despite the notoriety of the de- fendant, the case took more than four years to get to trial. Lucas was ar- rested Dec. 16, 1984. in his Spring Valley home. But the case was de-

len~thy and complicated pretrial

motions. .

. The trial began last January and included 56 d~ys of testimony. Yes- terday, Superior Court_ Judge Laura P._ Hammes, wh _presided over the trial, ord~red the Jury to return July !0 to begin the penalty phases, which IS expected to la tat l~ast one week. !he penalty ph~se 1s expected to ~rmg before the Jury, for the first tune_ev_1dence of ucas Aug.16, ~973, conv1ct1on of rape and assault with a deadly weap?n of a 21-y~~-ol~ undo- The woman te~tified that in a struggle for the knife, she was cut on the throat and fingers but managed to wrest the km!e from the then 18- year-old Lucas The !lctim testified Lucas ~ame up behind her as she sa~ outside a house and placed a kmfe to her . . · . . cumented ahen, who t sh~ was raped while Luc knife to her throat. . . t1f1ed m 1973 held a .

JUN 2 2 \989

Lucas as her assailant. She testified man and Alex Landon also declined

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od The murd were described by th distrid at rney's office as "the most vicious d cold-blooded mur- ders San Diego County has ever had to suffer." A Superior ourt jury of six men and six worn ended eight days of deliberation by also convicting Lucas of two lidnaping charges and a charge of attempted murder of a Se ttle woma who testified against him. The forme Casa de Oro carpet cleaner as a quitted in the death of real estate ag t Gayle Roberta Gar- cia, 29, found (kad Dec. 8, 1981, in a Spring Valley: home she was sched- uled to show pro pective buyer. The jury failed by one vote to con- vict Lucas of two more murders in the Oct. 23, 1984, deat s of a Lakeside woman, Rhoooa Strang, and the 3- year-old girl e was baby-sitting, Amber Fisher See Murder on Page A-13.

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trial. "They were not poisonings. murderer from the time the prose!u~

r t, Dav All n Luc w convict- ed y tcrd y of thr first-de ec murders i the thro t• lashtn deaths of a orm I Hci hts wo n and h r on, and of a University of San D1 go tudent. Out 1d rt, John Swanke, father of murd red U tudent Anne therme S an e, 22, aid· 'That ls th only verdict they could hav com up with . . ty daughter will n ver come back, but at least (Lucas) won't murd r anyone e e" Lucas, 34, ho d little emotion as th court cl rk read the first verdict convicting him of first-degree mur- der in the May 4, 1979, layin of Suzann Camille Jacobs, 31, and her on, Colin Michael, 3. Luc w on trial for the murd rs of four women and two children, cnm that panned a five-year peri-

The San Diego Union/Michael Franklin David Lucas, right, confers with his attorney, Alex Landon, while the verdict was being read in Superior Court yester?ay. The jury deliberated eight days before returnl,ng three first- degree murder convictions. Penalty phase beg, s July 10.

- f PacBell: Funds aid minorities Cc ntinued from D-fJ-:-15) $669,000

to produce training pro- grams for officials and workers of its member agencies. Robert Feraru, public adviser for the commission, said other grants will be made each year until the funds run out. With interest, the com- mission expects to pay out $22 to $23 million over a five-year period. Grants totaling $5 milion were dis- tributed yesterday to groups throughout California with emphasis on education. Grants were also given groups that target senior citizens,

migrant farmworkers, family coun- seling centers, and elected officials in area with low income and minori- ty populations. The Calilfornia Rural Legal Assistance Program will dis- tribute pamphlets on phone use and pricing in English and Spanish. Advice will be given on how to se- lect a phone service, how to get the best deal. when disc~ssing prices, what services are desired and their value to the customer as well as the commission rules that govern all ser- vices from any communications firm.

pu lie interest law lfrm• tliat helped in' estigators for the state commis- sion in uncovering the deceptive sell- ing practices. The largest grant of $838,000 went to the highly-regarded Consumer Ac- tion organization in San Francisco headed by Ken McEldowney. It is t~ be spent developing educational ma- terials for use by other recipients. The next largest went to the Cali- fornia-Nevada Community Action Association, which will spend

San Diego, CA. (San Diego C~.) San Diego Union (Cir. D . 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) JUN 2 2 1989

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Sate use PacBell pe alty funds to educate minorities Hy c~ 7 , . i_, , latr Wrller its customer service representatives, said Tom McNaghten, PacBell spokesman.

of Pan Asian Communities jointly received $535,000 to provide communications issue and consumer training to leaders of Spanish, Vietnamese, Hmong, Lao and Khmer com- munity groups. • The USO Cfil1tfil:, for Public Interest Law and UCAN, the Utility Consumer Action Network, jointly received $176,300 to edu- cate residential phone users on the effects of deregulation of the industry and the impact of the change in ownership of phone wiring inside private homes. ·• The San Diego State University Foun- dation was given $132,000 to develop a com- puter program on telecommunications skills to assist in pilot program testing and teacher training. • The San Diego County Office of Educa- tion received $65,000 to develop a telecom- munications program to feed into a teachers' computer network. "(The penalty is) a very creative and posi-

as call-waiting, speed-calling, call-forward- ing and conference calling, whlch doubled and tripled the usual much-smaller basic fee. Several top PacBell executives were forced to resign and the state ordered a com- plete revision of the company's operating and sales practices as well as mandating that every California customer for the first time be sent an itemized bill each month in order to understand what they were paying for. The PacBell customer reps, operating under instructions to maximize profits, also refused to allow the poor to order the cheap- er, half-price lif~line telephone service, and required upfront cash deposits from the poor despite state criteria that none was required. The unique penalty-education plan arose from a suggestion by Bob Gnaizda, head of a See PacBell on 7!_e D-2

tive outgrowth of an unfortunate incident,'' said Mitch Wilk, president of the state Public Utilities Commission, which ordered the spending as well as the earlier penalties. "This is the perfect solution to something that was disappointing to us in regards to how our business was conducted," said Terry Churchill, PacBell vice president. He char- acterized the overpricing as a period when the company fell short of its ethical stand- ards. For almost two years, PacBell customer service representatives - following compa- ny-prepared word-for-word scripts - con- vinced prospective customers they had to buy many new services as part of a package, all in violation of state rules, Many custom- ers had unwanted services put on their bills without talking to PacBell operators, who had to fill sales quotas while competing for prizes. Services added to bills included such items "/

The company al o paid $16.5 million to the tate as a penalty, which was calculated on the baSI of a multiple of the salaries of the managerial personnel who supervised the cu tomer rep - bringing the total impact n PacBell to $93 5 m1llion. It is this penalty that the tate began distributing yesterday. The money goes to 32 non-profit organiza- tion - including six from San Diego - and will be u ed to explain American telephone and telecommunications practices and pric- in to the Chinese, black, Korean, Viet- namese, Cambodian, Hispanic, Hmong, Lao- tian, and Khmer communities, as well as any group unsophisticated in communications in- dustry business practices. San Diego organi1.ations receiving funds, include. • The Chicano Federation and the Union

Ye terday, th tate used ome of those funds to help educate tho mo t ea ily vic- Um1z d the poor, foreign-born and under- ducat d with a nat onally innovative u e of mon tary pen )ti . t of th bett r educated, soph1Sticated PacBell c tom already have ~n given tate-ord r funds of about $95 each, h1 b cost th company $62 million. PacBell pent another $15 million advertising how the refund ould be obtained and retraining

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