Antelope Valley Press

Janitor acquitted of child sexual abuse

-

JOSHUA TREE, Calif. (AP) — A jury has acquitted a former Southern California elementary school janitor who spent years in jail after being accused of sexually abusing students, his attorneys announced Tuesday.

Pedro Martinez, of Hesperia, who’s been jailed since January 2019, was found not guilty on Monday on all 10 counts against him. An 11th charge was dismissed during his 3½-month-long trial, according to a statement from his attorneys.

He has been released. “We are thrilled that Pedro Martinez has been found not guilty of any of the terrible crimes that he was accused of, and he is home again with his family,” defense attorney Ian Wallach said in the statement.

Martinez’s attorneys alleged there wasn’t any legitimate evidence in the case and accused the San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office and the Sheriff’s Department of bungling and misconduct. They didn’t immediatel­y indicate whether Martinez might sue but said he is considerin­g his options.

“Although the outcome was not what we were seeking, we want to thank the members of the jury for their time and considerat­ion,” the DA’s office said in an email.

An email seeking comment from the Sheriff’s Department­s wasn’t immediatel­y returned.

Martinez was arrested after a woman who was a friend of one student’s family claimed that for months he had been molesting 6-yearold boys at Maple Elementary School in Hesperia, his attorneys said.

Prosecutor­s alleged Martinez took boys into a classroom during school lunch periods and abused them. They charged him with multiple counts related to sexual abuse of a child.

A sheriff’s deputy who lacked special training in interviewi­ng children spoke with three boys who denied any wrongdoing and then “seemingly prompted and coerced one of them to agree that some abuse happened,” Martinez’s attorneys said. “That is the extent of the evidence.”

Further investigat­ion, including DNA testing and interviews with school employees, failed to connect Martinez to any crimes on campus, but he was arrested anyway, his lawyers said.

“Accusation­s of child molestatio­n are extremely serious and we expect law enforcemen­t to respond swiftly and to act with integrity and profession­alism at every step,” defense co-counsel Katherine McBroom said in the statement. “In this case, law enforcemen­t seemed to endorse this witch hunt and got carried away with panic, pride, and self-preservati­on.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States