Courts

Attorneys want teen’s court hearings closed

SALT LAKE CITY — A coalition of Salt Lake City media organizations is fighting to keep court hearings open in the case of the 17-year-old charged in the death of a Utah soccer referee.

The teenager was charged last week with homicide by assault, a count issued when an attack unintentionally causes death. Prosecutors want to try him as an adult.

The referee, Ricardo Portillo, 46, died May 4 after a weeklong coma. Police said the teen punched him once in the head after Portillo called on a foul on him in a recreational league soccer game.

Judge slaps Utah with injunction on police powers

SALT LAKE CITY — A judge slapped an injunction Monday on a Utah law that sought to limit the police powers of the U.S. Forest Service and other federal land-management agencies.

Ex-OPD officer heads to jail for trying to bribe trooper

OGDEN — The second of two former police officers busted for bribery has been sentenced to jail.

Matt Jones, 35, this week was sentenced to a five-year prison term, suspended in favor of three years’ probation and 90 days in jail, plus a $603 fine.

Just like Jones, Daniel Kotter, 35, was sentenced to a five-year prison term last month, suspended in favor of three years’ probation and 90 days in jail, plus the $603 fine.

Eddie Escobedo poses outside the courtroom before his mental health court hearing at the 2nd District Courthouse in Ogden on Monday. (BRIAN NICHOLSON/Special to the Standard-Examiner)

Specialized court aims to treat mentally ill, rather than imprison them

OGDEN — Eddie Escobedo sat on his porch, the breeze of a warm spring evening rustling the trees in his yard, while Boots, a tan cattle dog, sniffed around his feet. After a while, Escobedo, 44, who has paranoid schizophrenia and is a former drug addict with exactly 411 days of sobriety, retired to his dining room.

He spoke of how he came to be there, surrounded by yellow-painted walls and the smell of home-cooked food, rather than the bars of a prison cell.

Easing into a seat at the wooden table cluttered with books, Escobedo explained that he is one of several people in the Top of Utah whose lives have been changed by mental health courts, which offer an alternative to traditional criminal justice for mentally ill people charged with a crime.

Ogden School District lawsuit settled for $99,000

OGDEN — The state has paid a woman $99,000 to settle a lawsuit against Ogden School District over the death of her 7-year-old son in 2010 from a congenital heart condition.

Assistant Utah Attorney General Philip S. Lott, who represented the school district, confirmed Monday that settlement funds have been provided to Maria Flores.

The settlement does not mean the Ogden School District is acknowledging fault in the death of Flores’ son, Jose Edwardo Flores Bedolla, who was a first-grader at Horace Mann Elementary School, Lott said.

Gary Herbert

Vacancy in Ogden to make 31st judge Gov. Herbert will appoint

OGDEN — So far only four attorneys have applied to fill the vacancy that will be left with Judge Michael Lyon’s coming retirement from 2nd District Court in Ogden.

And in an odd confluence of retirements, Gov. Gary Herbert is well on his way to becoming the governor who will have appointed almost a third of the state’s judiciary.

Lyon’s replacement will be the 31st state judge Herbert has appointed since he took office in August 2009, according to officials with the state Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice, which oversees the appointment process for the judges.

FILE -This undated file photo provided by the Davis County Jail, shows Jeremy Johnson, a Utah businessman accused of running a $350 million fraud scheme through his company is planning changing his plea Friday Jan. 11, 2013. Federal prosecutors have charged Johnson with one count of mail fraud in U.S. District Court in Salt Lake City, and if convicted he faces up to 20 years in prison. (AP Photo/ Davis County Jail, File)

FTC case against Utah businessman halted

SALT LAKE CITY -- A federal judge has put a Federal Trade Commission complaint on hold against Utah businessman Jeremy Johnson.

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Doug Lovell

Judge to consider suppressing Lovell's confession in new trial

OGDEN — A judge has taken under advisement a defense motion to suppress former death row inmate Doug Lovell’s sworn testimony as to how and why he killed a South Ogden woman in 1985.

Lovell was sentenced to die at his 1993 sentencing hearing after he detailed strangling Joyce Yost. Now his case is set for trial in February 2014, since a Utah Supreme Court ruling allowed him to withdraw his guilty plea to the killing. In July 2010 the high court ruled that Lovell was not explicitly told out loud in open court when he pleaded guilty in 1993 that he had a right to a public trial before an impartial jury.

After brief oral arguments on the suppression bid Friday morning, Ogden 2nd District Judge Michael Lyon said he would issue a written decision at a future date.

Jamie Waite

Swim coach's attorney: Juror was threatened

OGDEN — A juror in the Jamie Waite trial who may have been threatened in the parking lot of the courthouse is the centerpiece of a motion for a new trial for Waite.

The former Ben Lomond High School swim coach was sentenced last week to 210 days in Weber County Jail. Waite, 37, was convicted at trial in March of four counts of forcible sexual abuse for a sexual relationship with one of her 17-year-old charges on the boy’s swim team.

Gavel in court

Utah Supreme Court sets hearing on Ogden's Trece injunction

SALT LAKE CITY — The Utah Supreme Court has scheduled oral arguments on the Ogden Trece Injunction.

FILE - Joseph Nance, 28, seen here in 2nd District Court in Farmington in late March, is charged with first-degree felony murder in the shooting death of his father. (Standard-Examiner file photo)

Davis County man pleads guilty to shooting father

FARMINGTON — Joseph Allen Nance pleaded guilty to charges admitting he shot his father.

ACLU Utah logo

ACLU says Utah has too few public defenders

SALT LAKE CITY — Utah could be vulnerable to a lawsuit for falling short on its role to provide legal defense for poor people, according to two legal watchdog groups.
Utah is one of only two states that does not fund or provide oversight for its system to supply defense attorneys to those who can’t afford them.

Acting police chief, Anita Schwemmer, announces that West Valley City Police Department is requesting an independent investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation during a news conference at police headquarters in West Valley City, Utah, Wednesday April 3, 2013. The investigation will look into corruption within the department's narcotics unit and a possible cover-up involving the Danielle Willard officer involved shooting. (AP Photo/The Salt Lake Tribune, Steve Griffin)

Utah district atty expects more dropped drug cases in W. Valley

SALT LAKE CITY -- A Utah prosecutor who recently dismissed nearly 20 drug cases due to a lack of evidence said Friday he expects more to be dropped as he reviews of hundreds of cases from the West Valley City Police Department, which is grappling with allegations of corruption and civil rights violations linked to its now-disbanded drug unit.

Matthew David Stewart arrives for the second day of his preliminary hearing in Ogden in 2012. (Standard-Examiner file photo)

Judge rejects Stewart defense claim that death penalty is unconstitutional

OGDEN — A judge has rejected a defense motion calling for the death penalty to be declared unconstitutional.

Filed as part of the run-up to Matthew David Stewart’s trial in a police shooting, it is the first of several constitutional challenges expected in any death penalty case.

Stewart is charged with capital homicide in the Jan. 4, 2012, police pot raid gone bad that left officer Jared Francom dead and five other officers and Stewart injured.

Brady

Driver found guilty of negligent homicide in Roy accident

OGDEN — A jury opted for the lesser offense of negligent homicide instead of manslaughter in the trial of a Roy man in the crash of his car that killed his girlfriend.

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