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Wellman Avoids Jail As News-Press Exodus Continues

Indy Photog Safe for Now, But Copy Editor’s Head Rolls at Daily


Friday, November 30, 2007
By Barney Brantingham (Contact)
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Paul Avoids Jail, Lara Splits, Cliff’s Fired: Thursday was quite a day, right out of The Front Page.

On the Beat

The Santa Barbara Independent’s photog Paul Wellman refused to turn over 344 unpublished photos in a murder case to Superior Court Judge Brian Hill. He was found in contempt of court, but not thrown in the hoosegow—yet.

Then News-Press interim copy desk chief Cliff Redding got fired, apparently over who posted that nastygram on Laura Schlessinger’s Sunday online column. The word is that it was an accident. (You know computers, right?)

In a rare shot of the photographer himself, Paul Wellman puts down his camera to lend a hand in creating The Indy's Summer Solstice float.
Click to enlarge photo

Robby Robbins

In a rare shot of the photographer himself, Paul Wellman puts down his camera to lend a hand in creating The Indy's Summer Solstice float.

No one that I talked to believes Cliff did the deed, just that the buck stopped at his cubicle. As best I can learn, copy editor Lara Milton was quitting and as is traditional, her mates made up a joke “page,” a replica of a real one, with fictional comments attributed to her.

Somehow the stuff got on Schlessinger’s column, of all places. Lara’s supposed remarks put down the News-Press and slammed the town as being ruined by the “filthy rich.” Lara, who denies having anything to do with it, has already decamped to the Pacific Northwest, where her dad, Bill, one of the great wits and talents of the copy desk in years past, is living.

Meanwhile, Cliff, who is highly respected and worked like a dog on the short-handed copy desk, is out of the job.

But Indy photographer Wellman (along with The Independent) — though found in contempt for not handing over the photos — is seemingly safe from jail at present, pending a ruling by the California appellate court in Ventura. And if The Indy loses there, by the state Supreme Court.

But if The Indy is rebuffed by the courts, it faces fines and possible jail for Wellman, who, after all, is only following a decision — and a principled one, I might add — by The Indy’s editors and owners.

Chief of Police Cam Sanchez (leaning on car) during street lineup
Click to enlarge photo

Paul Wellman

Chief of Police Cam Sanchez (leaning on car) during street lineup

Here’s the issue: The California Constitution shields journalists from legal fishing expeditions, which The Indy’s lawyers claim this is. County deputy public defender Karen Atkins has persuaded Judge Hill to order the weekly to turn over all unpublished photos, even though Wellman arrived about two hours after the fatal knifing of a teen boy on State Street.

Without having seen the photos, Atkins has claimed that they might help her defense. Judge Hill, who also has not seen the photos and made clear Thursday that he had no intention of viewing them, found that the defendant’s right to a fair trial trumped the shield law. But Indy lawyers argue that, by law, the court must make a showing to prove that the photos are vital to the defense. So far, there are only vaguely worded demands for them and no such showing has been made, lawyers say.

Hill previously said, “Those photographs might have material significance. Some of the photos may impeach the manner in which the case proceeded.” Might, may.

The danger here is that Hill’s ruling, if not challenged, would stand as a precedent. Any time a crime is committed, all photographers could be ordered to turn over all unpublished photos, regardless of whether they turned out to be relevant or not. What next? Reporters' desks ransacked for notes?

In court on Thursday, Judge Hill conceded that it could be a precedent, but preferred to deal with the case at hand. The Indy, which will be filing a writ with the appeals court next week, has the initial burden of convincing the court to hear the case. It’s not automatic. If The Indy is successful, it must then convince the judges to find in its favor. If not, the whole thing will likely move to the Supreme Court.

On Thursday, Judge Hill imposed a $1,000 fine on the newspaper (the ultimate fine, if imposed, could be much greater) but stayed his order pending outcome of the appeals. And he allowed Wellman to be free, for now.

Turnover at the San Ysidro: Ty Warner’s San Ysidro Ranch is looking wonderful these days, after a $150 million makeover, but what’s with the turnover in general managers? Duncan Graham left earlier this year after overseeing the major renovation and is now GM at the five-star Rosewood Mansion on Turtle Creek in Dallas. Marco Perry arrived last May but is now gone, replaced by Seamus McManus (what a great name, eh?). He arrives via the St. Regis at Monarch Beach, Orange County, and comes with a top reputation. Why is Ty, always demanding, having trouble keeping top-flight GMs?

Home Prices UP? It seems counterintuitive due to all the talk of market doldrums, but the California Association of Realtors claims that Santa Barbara median sales prices were up a whopping 24.4 percent in October. But Santa Maria home prices were down 19 percent. CAR listed the Santa Barbara median sales price for October as $1.275 million, compared with $1.025 a year ago. The Santa Maria figures: $359.5 for October compared with $444.5 last year. Do I hear challenges?

Cat Cora’s Restaurant? Food Network “Iron Chef” cuisine queen Cat Cora, now that she’s a Santa Barbaran, may be planning to open a restaurant here, according to rumors circulating among our town’s restaurateurs.

Pep Boys Out of Pep: For months, persistent rumors had the Santa Barbara outlet for Manny, Moe, and Jack closing. Denials were just as persistent. But in the face of red ink, this week Pep Boys announced closure of 31 stores, including Santa Barbara and Santa Maria.

NP Freebies: “Evidently the News-Press isn't so sure their daily paper is worth 50 cents,” reports a Montecitan. “A friend writes me that each morning a stack of free papers are placed on the vending machines out in front of Pierre Lafond, comp to anyone who wants them. It is suggested this is one desperate way the News-Press can keep their readership up.” (But it can’t be reported as paid circulation, of course.)

Barney Brantingham can be reached at barney@independent.com or 805-965-5205. He writes online columns on Tuesdays and Fridays and a print column on Thursdays.

Related Links

  • Wellman held in contempt
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Comments

Discussion Guidelines

Free News-Press? Ha! It's worth almost twice that price!

Noletaman (anonymous profile)
November 30, 2007 at 5:48 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Maybe the freebie News-Lesses there in Montecito are the ones that are not filling up the news racks and distribution boxes scattered around the periphery of Santa Barbara?

Plenty of their boxes are empty of their newspapers at nine in the morning, indicating they never were filled or only had one or two copies.

That newspaper also is so thin and lightweight that it really does not fly too well any more when it is bagged and thrown by the carriers to the few home subscribers left.

The oldest newspaper in California, aptly called the Bakersfield Californian, once was a paid subscription daily, but now it is a daily freebie. At least that newspaper still has news.

FirstDistrictStreetfighter (anonymous profile)
November 30, 2007 at 10:02 p.m. (Suggest removal)

The really good one is about the NP vendor recently installing the daily News Press pile in NP vending box outside Java Joes on State Street (700 block), and then going inside and taking the whole pile of Daily Sounds away. The girl behind the counter said, "I thought that was pretty weird." Apparently the free Daily Sound, which has more news in it than the Newsless Press is a threat to the 50-cent number you have to pay for, for no news.

HiAll (anonymous profile)
December 4, 2007 at 8:55 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Regarding home sales:
The median sale price can be somewhat misleading, since it all depends on how many homes sold. If sales are slow and only high end properties are moving (which I suspect is the case) then the median will of course be high.
This is kind of like Bush saying the average (or mean) tax cut would be over $1000 back when he was selling his plan to kill the government be defunding it. The reality is that the median tax cut, meaning the one most people got, was more like two to three hundred dollars because the bulk of tax payers are relatively poor. But we're largely stupid so we bought it...

tegrat (anonymous profile)
December 4, 2007 at 1:23 p.m. (Suggest removal)

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