Deputy's Gun Is Latest Twist in Ferrari Crash (CA CCW related)

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Kharn

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Original article
Deputy's Gun Is Latest Twist in Ferrari Crash
The weapon of an O.C. reserve officer is found in a raid at the home of the car's alleged driver.
By Richard Winton and Christine Hanley, Times Staff Writers
April 26, 2006


Detectives are trying to figure out why a handgun belonging to a reserve deputy for the Orange County Sheriff's Department was found at the Bel-Air mansion of the former European video game executive accused of crashing a rare Ferrari Enzo in Malibu in February.

Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies confiscated the gun during a raid at the home of Bo Stefan Eriksson, who faces grand theft, embezzlement and DUI charges related to the accident.

L.A. County Sheriff's Department spokesman Steve Whitmore confirmed Wednesday that the .357 magnum Smith & Wesson was registered to Roger A. Davis, a Newport Beach businessman and deputy with the Orange County sheriff's professional services division. Davis also serves on Orange County Sheriff Michael S. Carona's Advisory Committee.

Davis was issued a permit to carry a concealed weapon by the Orange County Sheriff's Department in August 2002 for self-protection, according to public records.

The disclosure adds yet another twist to the Ferrari crash saga.

But it also comes as Carona has come under criticism for his large expansion of the reserve deputy program, in which he has given badges — and in some cases concealed-weapon permits — to volunteers with no police training.


Last summer, a reserve deputy who is Carona's martial arts instructor was arrested and charged with flashing a badge and gun at a group of golfers who he thought were playing too slowly. That case is pending in court.

In another incident, a reserve deputy who owns an upscale Newport Beach restaurant resigned during an internal investigation into allegations that he flashed his badge during a parking dispute on the Fourth of July.

The professional services reserves are made up mostly of business executives who have no police powers but carry badges and sheriff's identification cards. They offer technical advice to the sheriff.

The group, which was created after Carona took office, includes many political donors and top business executives in Orange County. There are about 330 professional services reserve officers.

Davis did not return numerous calls seeking comment during the last week. A woman at his Newport Beach home declined to comment.

Whitmore said detectives were still trying to sort out Davis' connection to Eriksson.

But county records show that Davis is the owner of Roger Davis Estates, an upscale real estate agency that operates in the same Beverly Hills building as Gizmondo, the video game firm at which Eriksson once was an executive.

Sandi Gibbons, a spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County district attorney's office, said the gun was a key piece of evidence. Prosecutors have charged Eriksson with a weapons violation because, as a convicted felon, he is not allowed to possess a firearm.

"There is a dispute over how he got the gun. Eriksson is telling one story and the owner is telling another story," she said. But all that matters is [Eriksson] possessed the weapon."

Gibbons would not elaborate.

The Orange County Sheriff's Department declined to comment, citing an ongoing policy of not talking to The Times outside of arrests and other breaking news.

Prosecutors accused Eriksson of embezzlement and grand theft for allegedly bringing the Enzo and the rest of his $3.8-million car collection to the United States, even though he had only leased them from British financial institutions. The lease contract, authorities said, prohibited him from taking the vehicles out of England.

Eriksson has pleaded not guilty, and his attorney said last week that his client did nothing wrong.

Although no one was seriously injured in the crash, the investigation has generated significant attention because of the strange circumstances surrounding it and the fact that it destroyed one of only 400 Enzos ever built.

Authorities believe the car was going 162 mph when it smashed into a power pole. Eriksson told deputies he was deputy commissioner of the police department of a tiny transit agency in the San Gabriel Valley.

A few minutes after the crash, two men arrived, identified themselves as Homeland Security officers and spoke to Eriksson at length before leaving.
I remember some talk (that came about during Jim March's digging) about corruption and some sheriffs handing out reserve deputy status to campaign donors.

Kharn
 
No kidding. When I read the first story about the crash I never thought it would turn into something like this. Hell, something really juicy might come out of all this. :evil:


Ten bucks says there's a movie within 5 years.
 
While OC is better than many urban counties, it is certainly not shall issue.
The state restrictions don't let anywhere be shall issue, and OC goes a little farther.
 
I thought Orange County was practically shall-issue with its current Sheriff.

As best as I can tell, it's "Almost shall-issue if you go through a lot of hassle". You have to show some need. Being an avid shooter counts, so you would want a letter from your shooting range where you are a member, that kind of thing. It's something any of us could get, but it's not shall issue. Also they have a whole bunch of steps in the application process, etc.

Bill Hunt has pledged to make the process smoother and get OC close to being shall-issue.

CCW in California is inevitable! It is on its way.

Nothing is as powerful as an idea whose time has come.
 
Reminds me of FL in teh bad old days of the may issue permits. Lot of people made donations and somehow ended up as reserve deputies lol handcuffs and a gun.

I think it is near a tipping point in CA with all the publicity CCW keeps getting because of other states going shall issue and all the abuses going on within CA as people jump through all the corrupt hoops of the may-issue system. It is becoming an annoying political mosquito, so they will deal with it sooner or later.

My bet:
They will end up making it cost 500-1000 bucks for 5 years and shall issue. Shall issue to make the gunnies happy but expensive to keep the troublesome minorities disarmed. I also predict that it will be troublesome enough to make it feel like they are granting you a privelige. Oh and there will be expensive police-academy intensity training requirements.

-OR-

CA gunnies will elect issuing sheriffs and then take their permits with them as they leave their home counties. Eventually a good chunk of CA gunnies will have permits despite the crappy may-issue system, and the state will eventually just go shall issue because it stops being a big deal. This route might end up taking a lot longer because it would defuse the crisis without bringing about any real change.
 
I hope that California goes shall issue. It would be really nice to hear some positive gun-laws coming out of California. I think that California would be a great place to live if it was more gun friendly. I would definately move out there.
 
The financial situation is also a big suck in CA. They could fix the gun situation and I would still stay away because of the tax and real estate situation. But quasi-sane gun laws would be a huge draw for me.

Every year it gets harder and harder for me to move back to CA. Since leaving, I have acquired:
-a habit of carrying, illegal in CA
-keltec, not on handgun safety list
-AK, completely and utterly banned
-suppressor for AK, banned
-saiga-12, banned
-large magazines for other guns, banned
-miata with custom non CARB turbo setup and no catalytic converter, illegal/huge fine/confiscation

Thinking about building an AR next just for fun, that also is illegal.
 
It certainly looks like Carona has been using rich LA cronies as a campaign finance cash cow by issuing them "reserve deputy CCW".

Carona refuses to release the names of these reservist permitholders, illegally. So I can't confirm what's going on, but the sheer number of rich LA county permitholder/reservists turning up and Carona's stonewalling on their names leaves few other possibilities.
 
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