Malibu Surfside News - News Alert

Monday, February 25, 2008

PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY CLOSURE SCHEDULED

The California Department of Transportation will close the number two lane of northbound (westbound) Pacific Coast Highway between Corral Canyon and Latigo Canyon beginning Monday, Feb. 25, for approximately four weeks (possibly through March 24).
Caltrans has implemented the closure to facilitate emergency rock removal attributable to the landslide that has repeatedly troubled that section of PCH. Slide activity in this area resulted in several near misses with passing vehicles when washing-machine-size boulders crashed down onto the road on Jan 27.
The City of Malibu has requested that work be performed around the clock (24 hours a day) in order to expedite the project. Motorists are advised to exercise caution when driving past the work area, especially late at night.
-Anne Soble

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Mel Gibson Appears in Court for Final Session

• Remains on Probation for DUI for 18 Months •

By Hans Laetz



Malibu resident Mel Gibson has paid nearly all of his debt to society but needs to avoid driving drunk or other slipups for the remaining 18 months of his probation, a judge ruled Wednesday.
“No, thank you,” the Australian-born movie director and actor told a reporter from the Malibu Surfside News when asked if he had anything to say after the hearing.
“You're on your own now with the self-help groups, so this is the most difficult time for you,” Judge Lawrence Mira told Gibson during the 22-minute-long hearing. “Good luck to you as you continue on your rehabilitation.”
“Thank you, your honor,'' said Gibson, who had uttered only one other word during the hearing, when he replied, “Yes,” to a question from the judge.
Prosecutor Gina Satriano said Gibson has paid about $1600 in penalties, attended nightly Alcoholics Anonymous meetings for a month, gone to follow-up sessions, and volunteered to tape an anti drunken-driving television announcement.
Gibson, his attorney and a phalanx of uniformed sheriff’s deputies avoided a gaggle of paparazzi and TV cameras in front of the Malibu courthouse by slipping in through the back security entrance. Judge Mira refused requests from local broadcasters and celebrity Websites to allow photography inside the courtroom.
In a July, 2006 incident that had tabloids and the Web hyperventilating around the world, Gibson was arrested after leaving a local restaurant and weaving down Pacific Coast Highway late on a Friday night.
The incident exploded when someone leaked original arrest reports from Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Deputy James Gee, which documented a verbal tirade from Gibson that included sexist and anti-Semitic remarks. The drunken actor also tried to intimidate deputies by saying he “owned Malibu,” a line that amused some local residents to the point where a sign was posted at the city limits sign that read, “Welcome to Melibu.”
Gibson apologized for his actions and pleaded guilty to the drunken driving charge.
Deputy Mee was relegated to desk duty by the LASD for disciplinary reasons that reportedly had to do with unspecified actions he took after the Gibson arrest, but not related to the arrest itself. Mee is reportedly back on street patrol.
Subsequent investigation into the entire matter found that the Lost Hills Sheriff’s Station violated several department policies by giving Gibson favorable treatment, including giving him a lift from the jail in Calabasas back to Malibu to pick up his impounded car.
During Wednesday’s hearing, whether or not to allow photography in the courtroom took up most of the 22-minutes, with his attorney, Blair Berk, prosecutor Satriano and the judge engaged in a sidebar conference beyond the ears of the public.
Afterwards, Mira said he would deny the news media requests because of unnamed persons who have reportedly been stalking Gibson and against whom the actor has obtained restraining orders.
“Unfortunately, Mister Gibson is the subject of what may be alleged criminality,” the judge said. “People who are the subject of the restraining order are being encouraged [in their acts] by the view of the subject.
“An educational event should not necessarily be encouraged when it encourages people within the event to be exposed to criminal activity,” the judge said.
California law gives judges complete discretion whether to allow cameras in the courtroom, but several media experts said a ruling along those exact lines was unusual.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

MEASURE R PASSES

By Anne Soble


According to the latest Los Angeles County
Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk tally from the Feb. 5 election, the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District parcel tax, Measure R, passed handily by 22,309 to 8446. In percentage terms, it received 72.54 percent to 27.46 percent. The measure needed two-thirds approval of the votes cast to pass.

The number of voters who cast ballots on the measure was 30,755, or 43 percent of the district’s total registration of 70,107. The vote count was completed for the 71 precincts in the district at 3:57 a.m. on Wednesday.