The Reporter (Vacaville)

Prelim reset for ex-Vaca attorney

- By Richard Bammer rbammer@thereporte­r.com

A Solano County Superior Court Judge again has reschedule­d a preliminar­y hearing date in the felony child sex assault case against former Vacaville attorney James Glenn Haskell.

Judge John B. Ellis previously scheduled Haskell, 41, for the hearing last month in Department 23, but a court-records search Friday showed the defendant, who was last in court Feb. 17, instead will return at 10 a.m. March 15 to the Justice Center in Fairfield.

The new court date follows a mid-September revelation that the case grew more complex not only with a motion to increase bail but also with Deputy District Attorney Shelly Moore filing several new serious felony charges.

Haskell — a former associate attorney with the Reynolds Law firm in Vacaville,

reportedly unemployed and living in Southern California — has sold his home in north Vacaville and remains out of custody after posting $240,000 bail in May. He is represente­d by Fairfield criminal defense attorney Thomas Maas.

Moore filed an amended criminal complaint Sept. 15, adding five more counts: four felony charges alleging sexual abuse; and one misdemeano­r charge alleging physical abuse of a young victim and three of the victim's siblings.

The new charges, based on an interview with one of the children, adds to the original 13 counts, 10 felonies and three misdemeano­rs.

The initial felony allegation­s span sexual penetratio­n by a foreign object while the minor victim was unconsciou­s to corporal injury to a child to assault, including strangulat­ion, likely to produce great bodily injury.

The five new charges include four counts of a lewd act on a child and one count of cruelty to a child by inflicting injury, crimes that allegedly occurred between October 2018 and October 2019, according to the amended complaint.

Moore's revised complaint also indicated the children were “particular­ly vulnerable” and alleged that the manner in which the crime was carried out “indicates planning, sophistica­tion, or profession­alism”: Haskell “took advantage of a position of trust or confidence to commit the offense”; and the allegation­s “constitute additional aggravatin­g factors.”

In court Sept. 15, Haskell again pleaded not guilty to the new charges. If convicted at trial, he faces two life sentences, Moore told The Reporter after the morning proceeding.

Court records show that Haskell was arrested by Solano County Sheriff's deputies on a warrant issued May 3.

He posted $170,000 bail May 4, but court records also show that he appeared to be arrested again the next day, when he posted additional bail of $70,000, bringing the total to $240,000.

On May 4, Haskell also was subject to a criminal protective order, prohibitin­g him from having any contact with four youths listed in the order.

The Solano County District Attorney's Office filed its complaint May 3 and, the following day at arraignmen­t, Haskell pleaded not guilty to all counts, denied all enhancemen­ts and the allegation­s, court documents indicate.

 ?? ?? Haskell
Haskell

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States