The Mercury News Weekend

Police make star-damage arrest

Beverly Hills resident arrested says he’s had enough of Trump

- By Brittny Mejia

James Otis said he planned to turn himself in for damaging Donald Trump’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

But before doing that, he told media early Thursday, he would hold a news conference at the scene of the crime — where a replacemen­t star had been installed.

L.A. police were having none of that. Hours before the planned event, officers from the Los Angeles Police Department’s Hollywood station arrested Otis on suspicion of smashing up the star.

Otis, a Beverly Hills resident, said he took a sledgehamm­er and pick to Trump’s star the day before, causing damage that police estimated at $2,500. The offense would be considered felony vandalism, police said.

In a phone interview with a Los Angeles Times reporter Wednesday, Otis spoke of his disdain for the Republican presidenti­al candidate, business mogul and reality TV star.

“I just sort of had enough with Mr. Trump’s aggressive language toward women and his behavior, his sexual violence with women and against women,” Otis said of recent accusation­s against the GOP presidenti­al nominee, accusation­s that Trump has called false. “I’ve had personally in my own family four people who have been assaulted or have had sexual violence happen to them. It all became very personal.”

Otis, who identified himself as the culprit in a report published by Deadline, said he spent weeks planning his “nonviolent action,” even going as far as spending a couple of nights in Hollywood to scope out the area to pick a time when he could do it “safely, carefully and successful­ly.”

He called the action a “form of freedom of expression.”

The damage to the sidewalk monument ended up removing its TV emblem, some of the letters of Trump’s name and a little piece of the star, which Otis said he plans to auction off on Election Day to raise money for the women who have accused Trump of sexual assault, as well as for a college campus organizati­on that is working to stop sexual violence.

Otis said he would “gladly pay the damages to the site.”

Otis said he remodels homes, teaches nonviolent direct action and has the largest Dr. Seuss collection in the country.

A 2000 L.A. Times article reported on Otis’ collection of mostly small works created by Theodor “Dr. Seuss” Geisel between the 1920s and early 1990s.

Otis is no stranger to controvers­y. In 2009, a Times article detailed India’s efforts to halt an auction of Mohandas Gandhi items owned by Otis.

Otis bought the items, which included Gandhi’s 1910 Zenith pocket watch, his steel-rimmed eyeglasses and a brass bowl and plate, from the Gandhi family or at auctions, he told The Times.

The article, which identified Otis as a Los Angelesbas­ed pacifist and documentar­y filmmaker, said Otis chose to sell the items because he hoped publicity surroundin­g the sale would inspire the Obama administra­tion and others to pursue nonviolenc­e.

He pledged to give most of the proceeds to groups espousing nonviolenc­e. Gandhi’s items ultimately sold for $1.8 million.

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