Los Angeles Times

Plea deal in child-murder case is latest battle over D.A.’s policies

- By James Queally

A convicted child rapist who sexually abused and murdered two young boys in Southern California in the 1980s will spend life in prison under a plea deal reached in a Pomona courtroom Monday, ending a case that had become the latest battlegrou­nd over Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. George Gascón’s reformist policies.

Kenneth Rasmuson, 59, pleaded no contest in the murders of Miguel Antero and Jeffrey Vargo. Jeffrey, 6, was kidnapped in Anaheim Hills and found dead at a Pomona constructi­on site the next day in 1981. Five years later, Miguel was abducted and stabbed to death after stepping off his school bus near Agoura Hills.

Rasmuson was linked to the slayings by DNA in 2015 and had been awaiting trial for years. The case drew renewed attention in recent weeks as a result of sweeping reforms enacted by Gascón, including edicts barring prosecutor­s in L.A. County from seeking the death penalty or filing sentencing enhancemen­ts that can lead to life imprisonme­nt for some defendants.

Fearful that Rasmuson could one day be granted parole if enhancemen­ts in the case were dismissed, Orange County Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer announced his intentions to lay claim to the case last week, filing murder with special circumstan­ces charges against Rasmuson in Jeffrey’s slaying. Spitzer had argued that the case could be tried in Orange County because the victim was first kidnapped there.

But under the deal offered by L.A. County Chief Deputy Dist. Atty. Joseph Iniguez, Rasmuson is expected to be sentenced to life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole at a hearing in late April. Spitzer said Monday that he would dismiss the case he filed once sentencing is complete.

Spitzer’s move was the latest sign of a growing fracture between elected progressiv­e prosecutor­s and more traditiona­l district attorneys in California. Prosecutor­s in San Diego and Sacramento have also sought to claim jurisdicti­on over cases filed in Los Angeles and San Francisco due, in part, to what they see as policies that are too lenient toward defendants.

In an interview Monday, Iniguez accused Spitzer of political grandstand­ing. Days before Spitzer filed charges in the Rasmuson case, an L.A. County Superior Court judge ruled that some of Gascón’s reforms, including his edict ordering prosecutor­s to dismiss nearly all sentencing enhancemen­ts and special circumstan­ces, were unlawful.

Under California law, a defendant convicted of murder with special circumstan­ces can only be sentenced to life without the possibilit­y of parole or death. Gov. Gavin Newsom placed a moratorium on executions in California in 2019, and Iniguez said the motion to dismiss the special circumstan­ces allegation­s against Rasmuson had been withdrawn before Spitzer got involved in the matter, making the Orange County prosecutor’s move hollow.

Spitzer said Monday that he believed Gascón’s office entered into the plea deal because of the pressure brought by his filing.

Speaking outside the courthouse, Spitzer said he hoped Monday’s outcome highlighte­d the problemati­c nature of Gascón’s policies, which he said are overly broad.

“I really do hope this is the hallmark case … to prove once and for all that those special directives are seriously misguided,” Spitzer said of Gascón’s policies. “They do not take into considerat­ion the background of the defendant, the age of the victim, how the crimes were perpetrate­d, the number of victims. It is a cookiecutt­er approach to justice.”

Rasmuson had served 17 years in prison for kidnapping and sodomizing a 3year-old boy from downtown Los Angeles. He was last released from prison in 2007 and had been living at his family’s residence in Idaho before his arrest in 2015.

Jeffrey’s mother, Connie Vargo, said she feared Rasmuson might have been released early if not for Spitzer’s involvemen­t.

“I’m afraid that the outcome might have been that they dismissed the special circumstan­ces … which means he could have possibly gotten out in 14 or 15 years,” she said.

But records show California’s parole board has one of the lowest release rates in the nation, granting parole in just 16% of the nearly 7,700 hearings that were scheduled in 2020.

While Spitzer and others questioned Gascón’s commitment to crime victims Monday, Gascón said it was actually Spitzer who risked causing the families of Rasmuson’s victims additional pain by seeking to extend the case for no practical purpose.

“The defendant was always facing life in prison, making the rhetoric from tough-on-crime voices incredibly dangerous and entirely removed from reality. Splitting this case up or seeking the death penalty in a state with a moratorium would have dragged the victims through decades of legal proceeding­s for an execution that is exceedingl­y unlikely to be imposed,” he said in a statement.

 ?? Bonner County (Idaho) Sheriff’s Office ?? KENNETH Rasmuson, 59, is scheduled to get life in prison without parole.
Bonner County (Idaho) Sheriff’s Office KENNETH Rasmuson, 59, is scheduled to get life in prison without parole.

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