The Signal

Jail time, treatment for vet in break-in

Santa Clarita man to serve four years of probation after entering Saugus home with weapon

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

A local veteran who pleaded no contest a year ago to one count of possessing an assault weapon after he allegedly forced his way into a Saugus home, prompting a family to cower inside a room, was sentenced to 95 days in jail and ordered into nearly a dozen treatment programs.

Jeremiah Charles Ditch, 37, of Santa Clarita, was arrested in December 2016 on suspicion of burglary in connection with an intruder incident on the 28400 block of Santa Rosa Lane.

He pleaded no contest in August 2017 to one count of possessing an assault weapon.

On July 18, Ditch was sentenced at the San Fernando Superior Court “to probation for a term of four years” at San Fernando Superior Court, said Ricardo Santiago, spokesman for the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office.

“Mr. Ditch voluntaril­y completed a residentia­l drug treatment program called Cornerston­e and completed several mental health treatment programs through the veterans administra­tion,” he said.

Terror

On Dec. 10, 2016, a Saugus family endured 22 minutes of terror when they barricaded themselves inside an upstairs bedroom listening to the gunman — a stranger — try to kick down their front door.

The incident began with the doorbell ringing at 5 a.m.

The man seen through the front door peep hole was, reportedly, holding a gun and aiming at the homes across the street.

A Saugus couple huddled inside a bedroom with their 15-year-old daughter and two dogs as the intruder continued to kick the front door.

Twenty minutes after the ordeal began, the gunman broke into house.

Within two minutes of the entry, deputies with the Santa Clarita Valley Sheriff’s Station arrived at the house and arrested Ditch.

A week later, Ditch was ordered to undergo testing to determine his mental competency, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office said at the time.

The results of that testing revealed Ditch was mentally competent to stand trial, Santiago said at the time.

VA program

The Grant and Per Diem Program is run by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

The goal of program, according to its website, is to “meet the evolving needs of homeless veterans.”

Last week, the VA announced its plans to provide about $200 million in fiscal year 2019 funding to support more than 13,000 transition­al housing beds for its Grant and Per Diem Program.

The VA announced, in a news release Thursday, its intention to award about $2.7 million to renew 12 Special Need grants for support services for homeless veterans who have chronic mental illnesses, women veterans and veterans who must care for dependents under age 18.

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