Powerful gay men. Vulnerable teen-age boys. Murder.
For years, some prominent local men who led secret lives were
rumored to be protected. Whispers surrounding another
important man's death prompt the question: Is there really a
conspiracy?
By ROBERT PRICE, Californian
staff writer e-mail: rprice@bakersfield.com
Monday January 20, 2003, 03:40:00
PM
Felix Adamo / The
Californian
District Attorney Ed Jagels watches
the arraignment of Chris Hillis, accused of
murdering Stephen M. Tauzer, who was Jagels' top
assistant. Some have questioned whether Jagels
should have reined in Tauzer from his involvement
in the legal proceedings of Lance Hillis, Chris
Hillis' son and a sometime housemate of
Tauzer's.
If
it's true that Stephen Tauzer's relationship with a young drug
addict led to his own brutal murder last September, uncomfortable
questions could be asked of Kern County's district attorney.
By all accounts, Tauzer went to bat in an unprecedented way for
Lance Hillis, giving him money, cars and lodging, and writing
letters to judges on Lance's behalf.
Standing watch through it all was Tauzer's boss and longtime
friend, Ed Jagels.
How much Jagels knew of Tauzer's relationship with, and efforts
on behalf of, Lance Hillis may be of great interest when the murder
trial of Lance's father, Chris Hillis, gets under way sometime this
year -- perhaps in August, perhaps even later.
That Jagels might sanction such leniency is at direct odds with
the image he has carefully cultivated over the years -- a
tough-on-crime lawman who gives even petty criminals no quarter.
During his tenure as district attorney, Kern County has had the
highest per-capita prison commitment rate of any major California
county, a fact Jagels --former president and director of the
California District Attorney's Association -- notes on his
department's Web site.
Jagels' department has successfully obtained a significant number
of "three-strikes" sentences as well: 372 since the
frequent-offender law was enacted in 1994, according to D.A.'s data
through 2001. That is the largest per-capita rate of any of the
state's 15 most populous counties.
But the D.A.'s office has also taken its public-relations lumps,
none more brutal than those delivered in Edward Humes' controversial
1999 book, "Mean Justice," which alleges a longstanding pattern of
overzealous prosecution in Kern.
The expose by Humes, who won a 1989 Pulitzer Prize for his
reporting on military affairs, focused on the 1992 arrest and trial
of Patrick Dunn, a retired high school principal accused of
murdering his wife. Humes suggests prosecutors withheld evidence,
among other misdeeds, leading to a wrongful conviction.
And the Dunn case, Humes alleges, is just one of several
questionable prosecutions by the District Attorney's office. Most
notable among those dubious cases, according to Humes, are the
high-profile Bakersfield child molestation convictions of the 1980s,
most of which have been overturned.
Those cases, Humes claims, stand in stark contrast to the Tommy
Tarver and Ed Buck murder cases of 1978 and 1981. (The Tarver case
was prosecuted under then-D.A. Al Leddy.) Specifically, Humes
questions the office's apparent lack of interest in pursuing an
investigation against several prominent gay men exposed in trial
testimony as possibly having had sex with a minor.