The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California (2024)

Cos Angeles Stones May 31. 1980-Part II 5 Third Man Arrested in Alleged Plot to Beat Up Brothers in Escondido 35 try an isolated area where they were to 'bounce him off the ground, smash his face in a bit and then leave him to walk "They were further advised that he (Wohler) did not want broken bones on purpose, but if the individual resisted, 'it would be open The meeting between Faulkner and Wohler occurred May 12, the affidavit stated. On the same day, it added, Wohler met with officer Mosemak. On May 16, authorities maintained, Mosemak used the computer files of the Escondido Police Department to develop information on the Hernandez brothers. While that occurred, Wohler rented a Cadillac limousine from Hertz, met with Harroll and the two undercover Continued from First Page Faulkner at which time he told me he had been asked to look into security at The Tilt by Yale Kahn and that he had called officer Mosemak in regard to the matter.

"He further stated the matter had gone further than he expected. When asked if he had hired Jeffrey Wohler in regard to the Hernandez matter, Faulker refused to answer." The affidavit is the first time that San Diego businessman Yale Kahn's name has surfaced in the case, but when questioned later about Kahn's role, Rebelez said he knew nothing more than what was written. Yale Kahn has been identified by law enforcement sources as the father of Steven and David Kahn, who are co-owners of The Tilt. Other Tilt officers include John R. Frank, Escondido attorney Frank Gorman and a man named Scott Whipple.

Steven Kahn, according to the court affidavit, told the district attorney's office that Faulkner, also known as Andres Espinoza Figueroa, worked at The Tilt "monitoring and caring for vending machines" supplied by Bordy Music Co. Kahn reportedly told investigators that he had spoken with Faulkner and that Faulkner said he had "hired Wohler to take care of the Hernandez problem and had agreed to pay Wohler $400." As sketched out in court documents, the district attorney's office said that Wohler then telephoned Harroll. "Harroll advised he had been solicited by Wohler to assist a plan to take these brothers to an isolated area and persuade them by force, if necessary, to stop causing trouble," Rebelez wrote in his affidavit. "Wohler told Harroll his client (Faulkner) had previously used Wohler's services to recover his child after a child-stealing situation. Wohler advised the (undercover) officers he wished them to play the part of enforcers who would take an individual to be identified to A CLASSIC A 1912 Hispano- Suiza is admired by Richard Cormier, executive director of the Aerospace Museum, which will benefit from an exhibit of antique vehicle in Balboa Park Sunday.

Timet photo bj Barbara Martin CountyEmployeeAssn.Wins Pay Boosts of 6 to 15 By ED SYLVESTER Tim Staff Writer As Hernandez got out of the limousine, the "enforcers" displayed their badges and arrested Wohler. Mosemak was arrested the following day. The Tilt is located several blocks east of The Distillery East, another disco that earlier this year was denied a state alcoholic beverage license because it was termed a policing problem by the Escondido Police Department Neither nightclub currently is licensed to sell liquor. Earlier this year, the district attorney's office investigated charges that persons inside the Escondido Police Department were accepting bribes in return for dropping opposition to various license applications. The Police Department was cleared of any wrongdoing.

The Tilt has been the subject of some controversy recently. George Larrabee, owner of Electric, has charged in a lawsuit that Tilt owner John Frank threatened him with bodily harm after Larrabee complained about being owed $33,000 for services he performed when he helped transform an abandoned bowling alley into the roller disco. Larrabee claims he was offered a 30 share of the Tilt in return for his work, but he said he had only an oral agreement with John Frank. He quoted Frank as saying he (Larrabee) had better think twice about suing The Tilt because the "game people belong to the syndicate and you'll probably have your legs and arms busted up." Larrabee claims that after his confrontation with Frank the Police Department began investigating him as a suspect in the theft of electrical equipment from The Tilt. He alleged that Mosemak, who conducted the probe, went to a job site where Larrabee was doing work and told the supervisor that Larrabee was a thief.

Mosemak has declined repeated requests for interviews. Mosemak has been suspended from the police force and the department has taken steps to fire him. Public Workers Voice Opposition to Proposition 9 Representatives of the recently formed Public Service Employees Council, comprised of 10 San Diego County public employee unions with memberships totaling about 6,000, took their first small step into the political arena Friday. They called a press conference to announce their opposition to Proposi-. tion 9, the state income tax-cutting measure, and to oppose any possible cutback in mail delivery.

They also endorsed Supervisor Jim Bates over his 41st Congressional District rival, state Sen. Bob Wilson (D-San Diego), because of what Kelly Irving, business manager of Probation Workers Local 2702, said has been Bates' interest in working people and his opposition to Proposition 9. Rolf Schulze, the umbrella council's secretary-treasurer, noted that Proposition 9 appears to be headed for defeat, but he said it would be "a terribly costly misadventure" if it won. The council's affiliates include the American Postal Workers Union, San Diego Area Local; National Association of Letter Carriers, Local 70; Probation Workers 2702; San Diego Bus Drivers Union, 1309; San Diego Firefighters, 145, and San Diego Federation of Teachers, 370. Court Refuses to Reverse Judicial Pay Case Ruling Some 7,700 members of the San Diego County Employees Assn.

would get pay increases ranging from 6 to 15 and improved benefits under terms of an agreement reached between county and association negotiators. According to Clifford Graves, county chief administrative officer, the total cost of the pay and benefit package still has not been calculated, "but it falls within the range we set aside for pay adjustments in the proposed budget" for 1980-81. Most workers will receive 5 increases. Graves said the county estimated $20 million to $24 million would be needed to cover all raises in the coming fiscal year, including increments due on two-year contracts. Several CEA units are on two-year pacts, but the current contract, covering 7,700, is for a year.

The agreement still must be voted on by the membership of CEA, the county's largest employee group with well over half of the work force enrolled. Most other employee groups still have a year left of two-year contracts, and only the 200-member County Management Assn. still is working on its coming year's agreement. A spokesman for the CEA said that although the 6 increase covers the majority of its job categories, all clerical employees the largest number of workers involved will get 7 boosts. Stenographers will get 9 If the individual resisted, it was to be 'open season "thugs" and they drove to the Escondido Police Department.

Harroll, wearing a sophisticated lis tening device under his clothes, met with Wohler and Mosemak in the police station and Mosemak allegedly provided them with license plates that were untraceable. Mosemak also reportedly drew a map pinpointing where the beatings could take place. Wohler gave the two undercover officers $50 each and said they would receive another $50 each once the job was over. Wohler, Harroll and the two (undercover) district attorney's investigators then drove to Gregory Hernandez' house, where Harroll talked Hernandez into getting into the rear seat of the limousine and talking to Wohler. Hernandez has said in a prior interview that Wohler wanted to give Hernandez some money in return for leaving The Tilt alone.

Chief Justice Rose Elizabeth Bird and Justice Mathew O. Tobriner did not participate. Both had refused pay increases and urged other judges to do the same when all state pay raises were stopped for a year passage of Proposition 13. In the March decision, Racanelli had joined the majority in a 6-1 ruling in which Newman dissented. The law at issue went into effect in January, 1977.

It placed a freeze on judicial salaries for 22 months and imposed a 5 limit on cost-of-living increases. Before that, judges had received automatic increases based on the consumer price index. A group of judges challenged the law as unconstitutional and, in its March 27 ruling, the court agreed in part The justices upheld salary limitations as applied terms beginning after the law took effect in January, 1977. But the court said that applying the limitations to terms beginning before that date would violate constitutional prohibitions against impairment of contract and against reducing salaries of elected officials during term of office. But one effect of its ruling was to create disparities among judges holding the same positions.

Some municipal judges, for example, would be paid more than other municipal judges, depending on whether their terms began before the law took effect By PHILIP HAGER Tlnrn Staff Wrlttr SAN FRANCISCO The state Supreme Court, rejecting a plea by Gov. Ty Brown, refused Friday to reverse a decision it made in March striking down parts of a law that had reduced judicial salary increases. The March ruling benefited most of the judges in the state including some of the justices themselves. Brown, in a rare action, asked the court to review its decision, saying the justices had "personally carved out for themselves and their colleagues a privileged economic status embarassingly more advantageous than that enjoyed by any other state worker." The governor contended that the decision would cost $6 million in back pay alone, would create inequitable and unmanageable pay and pension disparities among judicial peers, and would unfairly make judges exempt from economy measures imposed on all other public employes. But in an order issued Friday, the court, by a vote of 5 to 2, refused to review the ruling.

Justices Wiley W. Manuel, Stanley Mosk, William P. Clark, Frank K. Richardson and Appellate Justice George A. Brown, sitting by appointment, opposed review.

Justice Frank C. Newman and Appellate Justice John T. Racanelli, sitting by appointment, voted for a rehearing. As in the court's March decision. POLITICAL NOTEBOOK Tiny ABug' Touches Off a Roller Skaters Restricted by New Park Rules Continued from First Page Police Chief William Kolender and San Diego Charger Jerome Davis will attend the fund-raiser.

Admission is $1 a person or $2.50 a family. On Sunday, a different type of wheels will compete with skaters as the new Aerospace Historical Center in Balboa Park is surrounded by an exhibit of over 250 antique automobiles and motorcycles. The show, said to be the most varied display of antique vehicles to be offered in San Diego, will run from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and feature Model T's, Packards, classic Rolls-Royces and Cadillacs and Corvettes.

Proceeds will go to the Aerospace Museum and the International Aerospace Hall of Fame. On Sunday, Mira Costa College in Oceanside will host "SunDay," its annual community fair featuring six-story hot-air balloons, square dancers and jazz bands, beginning at 8 a.m. with a liftoff of the balloons from the center of the campus. Mission San Antonio de Pala will hold a daylong Corpus Christi Fiesta Sunday from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., featuring a procession through the village of Pala, the Aztlan Indian dancers and Irish dancing.

At noon, there will be Mass in the Mission Chapel. Today and Sunday, the American Begonia Society will host a flower show from 1 to 5 p.m. at the Majorca Room in Balboa Park's Casa del Prado. Admission is free. The San Diego Padres will play the Cincinnati Reds at 7 p.m.

today and at 1 p.m. Sunday at San Diego Stadium. Big Brouhaha running for congress in the 43rd District. Metzger, a Republican last year and an American Independent Party member before then, already has been disavowed by most state party leaders, including state committee chairman Richard O'Neill. Hier said the "time for silence is long past" in the 43rd District race.

On the endorsem*nt scene: Maureen Reagan, daughter of Ronald Reagan, has endorsed Lowery for Congress; the local chapter of the National Women's Political Caucus is endorsing several candidates and issues, including Bates for Congress, incumbent Democratic 78th District Assemblyman Larry Kapiloff, incumbent Supervisor Lucille Moore, "yes" on city Proposition and "no" on state Proposition 9. Those endorsing Rick Augustine, a La Mesa city councilman running for the Democratic nomination in the 77th Assembly District, include the county Building and Construction Trades Council and the California State Fireman's Assn. SAIL BAY Continued from First Page Those sued for refusing to agree to remove their encroachments were: the Crescent Beach Development Leon R. and Dorothy S. Brandt John J.

Elmore, William and Jane De-Leeuw, George M. and Violet F. Stanley, Lula Sykes, Susan E. Sheldon, the Sanderling Villa Vacanze a Missione Mare Apartments, the Ryson Corp. and Baycliffs Condominium.

Named as defendants in the suit for failing to pay for removal of the piers were: the Crescent Beach Development Floyd and Mary Andrews, Nancy M. McLaughlin, Deborah, Don and Paul Cameron, William and Jane DeLeeuw, Florence Baker, Judith J. Farwell, Lee Rensberger, the Ryson Villa Vacanze a Missione Mare Apartments, the Sanderling the Mission Bay-Parker Place Condominium Homeowners the Riviera Terrace Condominium Homeowners Assn. and the Sail Bay Shores Condominium Homeowners Assn. I I I The county originally had offered 6 increases to clerical employees.

Major pay hikes were agreed to this year for nurses, who will get 10 to 15 increases and for other employees in high-turnover jobs the county has had difficulty filling. District attorney investigators will get pay increases of 12.5. Major benefits granted include expanded health care benefits through a health maintenance organization (HMO), and an increase in life insurance premium payments by the county. In a move the CEA said would solve a major problem for courthouse workers, the county also agreed to pay $10 a month toward parking downtown and will pay the cost of bus saver passes, soon to cost $26 a month. The improvements in health and life insurance benefits also have been offered to groups in the middle of two-year contracts, although they must wait until next year to negotiate new pay scales.

Those groups include sheriffs deputies, deputy district attorneys, probation officers and social workers. County negotiators said the benefit package would add $1.5 million to the cost of county benefits, an increase of only 0.6, bringing the total cost of such benefits to $250 million. The Board of Supervisors already has approved the new contract, which will go into effect June 27 if ratified by the membership. challenger in the 41st District Bates was joined by representatives of several teachers' associations to decry a campaign letter issued by "Teachers for Sen. Bob Wilson for Congress" in which Wilson is described as having "the best (pro-teacher) voting" in the state Senate, in the view of the California Teachers Assn.

"Nothing could be further from the truth," Bates said Friday, adding that he was demanding "an immediate retraction" from Wilson for another statement in the letter that Bates opposed using post-Proposition 13 bailout money for local school districts. Wilson said later that the California Teachers Assn. did, in fact say he had "the best voting record the best voting record of any of the (three) state Senators in San Diego County." Wilson did not explain why the words "in San Diego County" were left out of the letter. Bates also claimed that one of the signers of the Wilson letter, a San Diego teacher named Bill Bandes, now believes he signed a letter containing inaccurate statements. Wilson says Bandes has been "threatened by Bates" into pulling back from his Wilson endorsem*nt Meanwhile, Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies at Yeshive University in Los Angeles, has sent requests to President Carter, Kennedy, and state and national Democratic leaders asking them to condemn the Democratic candidacy of Tom Metzger, a Ku Klux Klan official (luQpolDgJtA iiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiDiiiiiiiiiiiiDiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiu NEW FROM PRENTICE-HALL ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT BOOKS EVER PUBLISHED ON MOTIVATION PSYCHOFEEDBACK ISTHE KEY TO THE LOCK ON YOUR POTENTIAL Written by Paul G.

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And there are even some pleasant things being said about candidates as Tuesday's primary creeps ever closer. Dan McKinnon, Republican contender in the 41st Congressional District race, this week accused fellow front-runner City Councilman Bill Lowery of letting his campaign put out flyers imprinted with a bogus printers' "bug," the tiny insignia used to let people know the material was handled by union workers. Lowery campaign aides did not deny the "bug" which appears at the corner of a colorful Lowery flyer is a phony, but gave this explanation: The flyer was designed by an artist, who was told the material would be printed at a union shop. The artist then penned in a "bug" which he thought would be replaced by a real stamp once the work got to the print shop. There was a change of plans, aides said, and the work went instead to a "speedier and cheaper" nonunion shop.

But someone forgot to erase the artist's rendering of the phony "bug." As soon as the error was discovered, Lowery aides said, the flyers were recalled. Only 2,000 flyers of some 10,000 printed were distributed to voters. "I find it hard to believe a man of the caliber of City Councilman Bill Lowery would allow his campaign operatives to use phony advertising, which is what that bug was," McKinnon countered. The deceptive letters incident arose Friday at a press conference held by Superviser Jim Bates, Democratic quire the uae of electro-mechanical device! for Ita Implementation Psycho-feedback doee not. Psychofeedback la a mindbrain mechanism which at last recognizes the overwhelming Importance of the subjective Imagination to our everyday activities.

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