Los Angeles Times

Courts: Warrantles­s search damages case against accused Sandra Bullock stalker.

Warrantles­s search could result in felony charges being tossed.

- By Richard Winton richard.winton @latimes.com

Within days of arresting a man who broke into Sandra Bullock’s home, forcing her to call 911 from a bedroom closet, prosecutor­s charged the accused stalker with illegal possession of machine guns and other weapons he had stockpiled in his home.

Now, two years after his arrest, much of the case against Joshua James Corbett appears to be falling apart because of a warrantles­s search of his home by Los Angeles Police Department detectives.

Last week, a Los Angeles County Superior Court judge ruled the cache of high-powered weapons that the LAPD’s Threat Management Unit recovered from Corbett’s home cannot be used as evidence against him. The decision could now result in 24 of 26 felony charges against Corbett being tossed out unless prosecutor­s can overturn the decision on appeal. If the weapons charges are dismissed, Corbett will face only burglary and stalking charges.

“We are disappoint­ed with this decision,” LAPD Capt. Andrew Neiman said. “They obtained verbal consent from the suspect before conducting the search.”

L.A. County Superior Court Judge Edmund W. Clarke Jr. chose to exclude the evidence after deciding that the LAPD violated Corbett’s constituti­onal rights in custody. The judge ruled that Corbett was forced to give detectives permission to search his Montrose home without a search warrant. Corbett also provided investigat­ors with the combinatio­n to a safe that contained more than 30 weapons, after spending several hours in custody and repeatedly requesting a lawyer.

Detectives had known, through records, that Corbett was a onetime hunter and had a gun permit from another state. They suspected he kept weapons and questioned him repeatedly about it while in custody.

Det. Jeffrey Dunn told Corbett that he would find the guns one way or another and that if Corbett did not tell him where the guns were, he would be forced to go to Corbett’s parents’ home also, according to a transcript of the recording. “You want me to go there with a pry bar and battering ram and disrupt your mother and father’s life to get your guns?” the detective asked.

Police arrested Corbett on June 8, 2014, after Bullock was awakened by a knocking sound coming from her third-floor workout room. She peeked out of her bedroom door and saw a man clad in black sneaking down the second-floor corridor.

Fearing for her safety, she retreated to her bedroom, hid in the closet and called 911. “I am in my closet. I have a safe door,” Bullock said during the call. “I’m locked in my closet right now.”

Corbett was arrested at the scene by LAPD officers. They found photos of the actress in his pockets, a letter portraying himself as her husband and a concealedw­eapon permit from Utah.

After Corbett’s arrest, detectives told him they needed to obtain his weapons to comply with an emergency protection order.

Corbett was not carrying a weapon when he climbed over a chain-link fence topped with barbed wire and onto Bullock’s property about 5 a.m. on a Sunday.

Corbett’s attorney, Steve Sitkoff, had filed motions challengin­g the evidence and said that star-struck detectives tossed aside his client’s rights, including his right to remain silent.

Jane Robison, a Los Angeles County district attorney’s spokeswoma­n, said the office is reviewing the ruling and deciding whether to challenge it. Prosecutor­s had argued that detectives would have discovered the weapons during further investigat­ion, but the judge rejected that argument.

Sitkoff said his client needs mental health treatment, not incarcerat­ion, and that is why his legal team is fighting so hard to remove the gun charges.

Unless the prosecutio­n successful­ly appeals, the case will be mostly gutted, Sitkoff said.

In court testimony, Corbett recalled his interview with Dunn. “He just kept telling me, ‘I want them guns.’ ” He said he told the detective, “I don’t want to talk to you.” Corbett testified that he cooperated with investigat­ors out of fear.

Sitkoff said that once the other charges have been dismissed, defense attorneys will seek a reduction in Corbett’s $2-million bail. He has been held in county jail since his 2014 arrest.

When Corbett was arrested, he was holding a notebook with a love letter to Bullock. In it, he wrote, “you are my wife by law, the law of God and belong to me.” Security video showed that Corbett had been to the home three nights in a row before his arrest.

In a transcript of Corbett’s interview with Dunn, he said he knew he had done wrong and told him why he went to Bullock’s home.

“I did not go there to hurt her,” he said. “I don’t think people protect her well enough.”

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? THE PRESENCE of an intruder in her home forced Sandra Bullock to call 911 from a bedroom closet.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times THE PRESENCE of an intruder in her home forced Sandra Bullock to call 911 from a bedroom closet.

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