Dirty John and Other True Stories of Outlaws and Outsiders by Christopher Goffard

Dirty John and Other True Stories of Outlaws and Outsiders by Christopher Goffard

Author:Christopher Goffard
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Simon & Schuster


PART FOUR: THE PROSECUTOR

The Orange County DA’s Special Prosecutions unit dealt with crimes of particular sensitivity—high-profile cases involving doctors and cops, lawyers and politicians.

Christopher Duff, a career prosecutor in his early forties, joined the team in the spring of 2012. Among the files that landed on his desk was a bizarre caper involving a pair of married Irvine attorneys suspected of planting drugs in a neighbor’s car.

Duff was struck by how thoroughly the Irvine police had investigated a crime in which the victim had suffered no physical harm. They had put twenty detectives on the case against Kent and Jill Easter at one time or another, and the lead investigator had spent six months on it exclusively.

Duff considered the possibilities. In so many places, he thought, it would have gone differently. If the attempted frame-up had happened in one of the gang neighborhoods of Los Angeles where he used to prosecute shootings, rather than in a rich, placid city in Orange County . . . if the cop who found the stash of drugs in Kelli Peters’s car had been a rookie, rather than a sharp-eyed veteran . . . if she had been slightly less believable . . .

It was easy to picture. Peters, the PTA president at her daughter’s elementary school, would have left the campus in the back of a patrol car, a piercing sight for the teachers who loved her and relied on her, for the parents who had entrusted their kids to her for years. It would have stolen not just her freedom but her name.

When Duff met Peters, she seemed raw-nerved and brittle, the kind of person who would be traumatized by a trip through jail. “It would have broken Kelli Peters,” he said. “I just know it.”

He also knew jurors would find Peters sympathetic. She was never far from tears when she talked about the Easters’ plot to destroy her, and the ways it had shaken her sense of security.

Duff was inheriting a case that had languished for more than a year, to the vocal frustration of Irvine cops. Duff’s office had battled in court for access to the Easters’ smartphones, whose contents were shielded by attorney privileges. What seemed to fuel the Easters’ sense of superiority—their status as lawyers—was now protecting them from the consequences of their crime, Duff thought.

Looking over the evidence, the prosecutor decided he had enough. He had their DNA on the pot pipe and painkillers planted in their victim’s car. He had motive and opportunity. He had incriminating smartphone pings. He had convicted killers on less.

The Easters expected a warning.

If charges were ever filed, their lawyers told them, the DA’s office had assured them of advance notice.

This would allow the Easters to surrender at an appointed time, with bail already arranged, and they could be in and out of booking quickly. They would avoid the pinch of handcuffs, a luxury available to people with money and good lawyers.

But Irvine police showed little inclination to minimize the Easters’ discomfort, and Duff said he was unaware of any surrender agreement.



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