Los Angeles Times

Rebuking George Gascón, San Diego D. A. reclaims case

Objecting to L. A. prosecutor’s policies, office regains control in crime spree case.

- By James Queally

In an unpreceden­ted move, a judge allowed the San Diego County district attorney’s office to move to reclaim jurisdicti­on Monday over several charges f iled in Los Angeles connected to a violent crime spree that left two people dead, marking one of the strongest rebukes yet of newly elected L. A. County Dist. Atty. George Gascón’s policies.

In a motion f iled last week, San Diego County Dist. Atty. Summer Stephan asked a judge to give her office control over five robbery counts f iled against Rhett Nelson, 31, part of a broader slate of charges he faces for his alleged role in a dayslong crime spree that spanned across Southern California and left two people dead in 2019, including Los Angeles County Sheriff ’ s Deputy Joseph Solano.

Nelson was charged with two counts of murder, one count of attempted murder and seven robberies committed in or near San Diego, Long Beach and Los Angeles. Under previous Dist. Atty. Jackie Lacey, a slew of sentencing enhancemen­ts were also f iled against Nelson because he allegedly used a gun in each crime and is charged with multiple murders. If convicted under those terms, he would have been sentenced to life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole.

Stephan had agreed to consolidat­e all charges in Los Angeles but changed her mind in response to Gascón’s directive barring prosecutor­s from using enhancemen­ts. According to her f iling, Stephan feared Nelson could become eligible for parole after spending 20 years in prison if convicted without enhancemen­ts.

Greg Risling, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office, disputed Stephan’s math late Monday, saying Nelson could face up to 68 years in state prison if convicted on all charges he currently faces.

Superior Court Judge Jose Sandoval agreed that Stephan could reclaim jurisdicti­on. A technical issue over how to sever the cases must still be resolved, but San Diego prosecutor­s plan to f ile robbery charges in their jurisdicti­on soon, according to a spokeswoma­n for Stephan’s office.

Sandoval also blocked an attempt to dismiss the special circumstan­ces enhancemen­t against Nelson on Monday, which he faced for the alleged commission of multiple murders. Sandoval’s decision echoed several other judges who have blocked such dismissals under Gascón’s directive, unless prosecutor­s can produce additional evidence that the circumstan­ces of the case have changed.

Given the severity of the crimes Nelson is accused of, the odds of his receiving parole are unlikely. But San Diego County Deputy Dist. Atty. Martin Doyle, who appeared in court Monday, said Nelson was too dangerous to leave even the possibilit­y of parole on the table.

“He’d serve only 20 years before he has his first parole hearing. We don’t think that’s appropriat­e. We want to make sure that he serves the rest of his life in prison.” Doyle said.

Doyle also expressed concern that Gascón’s order to bar prosecutor­s from opposing release at parole hearings could make it easier for Nelson to be set free in the future.

Sacramento County Dist. Atty. Anne Marie Schubert also said Monday she would not grant jurisdicti­on

to Gascón in any cases like Nelson’s, where charges could be consolidat­ed, claiming many of his new policies are “illegal and unconstitu­tional,” according to a copy of the letter obtained by The Times.

“District Attorney Gascón’s policy of eliminatin­g life without the possibilit­y of parole enables future generation­s to determine whether it is in the public’s interest to continue to incarcerat­e older individual­s at extraordin­ary taxpayer expense who do not pose a threat to public safety,” Risling said in response to Monday’s events.

Nelson disappeare­d from his family’s home in St. George, Utah, in May 2019 after telling his relatives he needed to “make it on his own or die.” He allegedly robbed f ive convenienc­e stores at gunpoint in San Diego during a two- day stretch in early June before traveling north, court records show.

On June 10, police say he drove up to a group of skateboard­ers in downtown Los Angeles and opened f ire at random, killing Dmitry Koltsov, a champion Russian snowboarde­r who had moved to California. An hour later, police say he walked up behind Solano in a Jack in the Box restaurant in Alhambra and shot the veteran deputy in the head.

During an emotional hearing on Monday morning, several of Solano’s loved ones spoke out in support of the San Diego prosecutor­s’ efforts while lambasting Gascón.

The deputy’s son, Matthew Solano, referred to his father’s death as a “life sentence” and said Nelson deserved nothing short of that punishment, later adding that the case is a “prime example of how [ Gascón’s] blanket reforms benefit dangerous criminals.”

At one point during the hearing, Nelson stood up and said he would “accept the maximum penalty” and repeatedly asked the court to allow him to speak, over admonition­s from Sandoval and his attorney. Nelson shouted an apology to Solano’s family while he was escorted out of the courtroom, but his outburst drew a furious reaction from Solano’s son.

Gascón announced a number of dramatic shifts to long- establishe­d policy when he took office in early December, including banning the use of the death penalty, barring prosecutor­s from trying juveniles as adults and setting the stage to end the use of cash bail in the nation’s largest court system. But his policy blocking the use of enhancemen­ts has met the broadest pushback from judges, his own prosecutor­s and the families of crime victims, all of whom have questioned the legality and ethics of the move.

After announcing the blanket ban on all enhancemen­ts, Gascón relented somewhat under intense pressure and decided to allow for the use of enhancemen­ts in extreme cases, including hate- motivated attacks and instances of violence against children.

Gascón and his supporters have repeatedly pointed to research that shows enhancemen­ts disproport­ionately affect Black and Latino communitie­s and have questioned whether they serve any public safety purpose.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? RHETT NELSON is charged with crimes in San Diego, Long Beach and Los Angeles.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times RHETT NELSON is charged with crimes in San Diego, Long Beach and Los Angeles.

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