Carona allegedly steered deputy's widow to co-conspirator
Federal indictment against the Orange County sheriff alleges kickback from settlement.
By Paul
Pringle and Christine Hanley, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
November 2, 2007
Six years ago,
Brad Warner slipped into a coma after routine knee surgery for an old injury
that the twice-decorated Orange County sheriff's deputy suffered subduing a
suspect. Sheriff Michael S. Carona joined the family at the hospital in a vigil
that ended with Warner's shocking death at age 46.
Even as Rosie Warner's husband lay dying, and as tearful colleagues gathered at
the deputy's bedside, Carona urged her to hire Joseph Cavallo to file a
malpractice lawsuit, according to people who were there.
Graphic
Players in the Carona indictment
(Acrobat file)
|
Related Stories |
|
|
- |
|
|
- |
|
|
- |
|
|
|
|
During the
week of the funeral, he introduced Cavallo to her as "the sheriff's attorney,"
deputies who witnessed the encounter said.
Two deputies said Rosie Warner was disappointed with the $340,000 settlement
that Cavallo eventually obtained. They said the widow, an immigrant from the
Philippines who has since died of cancer, was "naive" about the U.S. legal
system and had felt compelled to take Carona's advice.
"She asked me, 'Why is Cavallo pushing me to try to settle this thing? I think
it's worth more,' " recalled one of the deputies, who requested anonymity
because he feared retribution. "She was sick by then, and tired from the
battle."
Now, a federal indictment suggests that Carona had a darker motivation -- money
-- in offering comfort and advice to Warner's wife and two children.
The sheriff is accused of steering employees and their relatives to Cavallo. A
portion of the $340,000, which some experts termed a relatively modest award,
was funneled to Carona's alleged co-conspirators, the indictment said. They
include Debra Hoffman, an attorney identified in court documents as his
mistress. She has been indicted along with the sheriff and his wife, Deborah
Carona.
The kickback allegation is one of dozens detailed in the case against Carona,
but it has sounded a particularly loud note of outrage among those who wore the
badge with Warner.
"There's just disgust," said a 20-year department veteran, who asked not to be
named because he feared retaliation. "I can't imagine a cop making money off a
dead cop. That's the lowest."
Prosecutors have not specified how the purported scheme came about, but sources
with knowledge of the events told The Times that it was hammered out in a
meeting at the sheriff's office. Attending were Carona, Hoffman, Cavallo and
then-assistant sheriffs Donald Haidl and George Jaramillo, the sources said.
Under what the indictment labeled a "referral agreement," Carona and the others
decided that Cavallo would kick back a share of any proceeds from cases the
sheriff referred to him. The share was 25%, according to the sources. It was not
immediately clear whether the percentage applied to Cavallo's share of a
settlement, or the entire award.
The indictment unsealed Tuesday accused Carona of engaging in a broad conspiracy
to sell access to his office for tens of thousands of dollars and gifts such as
a boat, ladies' Cartier watches, World Series tickets and ringside seats to a
Las Vegas boxing match.
Carona, once a rising Republican star who had been courted by former White House
political strategist Karl Rove, is also charged with witness tampering. That
allegation involves Haidl, who has turned against Carona and surreptitiously
recorded at least one of their conversations for investigators. Haidl, an Orange
County businessman, was the source of most of the illegal payments to Carona and
Hoffman, the indictment said.
The sheriff and his wife have denied all of the allegations. Hoffman and her
federal public defender have not commented. The defendants are free on bail and
could not be reached for comment Thursday. Carona's attorney did not return a
phone call.
Haidl, Jaramillo and Cavallo are named as co-conspirators in the indictment. All
have pleaded guilty to unrelated crimes -- Cavallo for paying bail agents to
send clients his way.
Before Warner became a deputy, he served 14 years in the Marines. He joined the
Sheriff's Department in 1987 and spent much of his career patrolling the San
Clemente area.
In 1995, he won the agency's Medal of Courage for protecting a colleague during
a gunfight with a suspect.
He earned the Medal of Life the same year for aiding a heart attack victim in a
restaurant.
It was around then that a suspect assaulted him during an arrest, injuring
Warner's knee, friends said. He had previous surgeries before opting for a knee
replacement at St. Joseph Hospital in Orange in May 2001.
The operation was on a Friday, and Warner died the following Monday.
More... related stories: Saga Of Orange County's Sheriff Michael S. Carona