Voltaire — To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize
Monday, February 27, 2012
Hispanic crime: New questions have emerged over the Los Angeles County district attorney's office's handling of a substitute teacher wanted for sex crimes
The teacher, George Hernandez, was arrested by Huntington Park police in September 2010 for exposing himself to a girl outside a middle school. Detectives who searched his Inglewood apartment discovered a videotape showing Hernandez molesting a second-grader in a classroom. He was released on bail and fled the country. Court records show that prosecutors chose not to seek the extradition of Hernandez even when they learned of his whereabouts in Mexico. The records contradict statements made by a deputy district attorney, who said that the teacher would be extradited as soon as authorities could locate him. An investigator working for a bail bonds company found Hernandez early in 2011, and Jalisco, Mexico, state police briefly detained him on January 19, 2011. In a letter faxed nine days later, the company informed the district attorney that it was continuing to track Hernandez and could help apprehend him. But on March 15, 2011 Deputy Dist. Atty. Ann Huntsman responded saying that prosecutors did not want to bring him back to Los Angeles. "We have evaluated the case and have determined that we will not seek the defendant's international extradition from Mexico on this case at this time," Huntsman wrote. "The case will remain open and the defendant is still subject to prosecution in this case." The revelation comes in a case that has focused attention on how schools can fail to weed out dangerous teachers. Before his arrest, Hernandez had been investigated three times at three L.A. Unified School District elementary schools for sexual misconduct. He was never charged and apparently never reported to the state commission on teacher credentialing. Sandi Gibbons, a spokeswoman for the district attorney, said that the decision came after consultation with U.S. Justice Department officials, who said success was far from guaranteed. Prosecutors also considered the fact that Hernandez, now 45, had no criminal record and that the charges they had filed against him — possession of child pornography and indecent exposure — fell short of child molestation, Gibbons said.
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