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Car-Bomb Suspect Is Accused of Plot Against Daughter

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Times Staff Writer

An Orange County private school owner--charged with hiring mercenaries to firebomb the cars of former teachers--was accused Thursday of plotting the possible murder or kidnaping of her own daughter to keep her from testifying.

Charlotte Ruth Wyckoff, 51, of Dana Point was charged by a federal grand jury in Los Angeles with attempting to make initial arrangements to prevent the testimony of her 28-year-old daughter, Shirley Wright, also of Dana Point.

The plot was reportedly hatched at the Sybil Brand Institute, the Los Angeles County women’s jail, where Wyckoff is being held.

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Charges Against Pair

Wyckoff was charged in the latest case with conspiracy, witness tampering and obstruction of justice, as was Elizabeth Leta Hamilton, 39, also of Dana Point. Both are owners of the Pacific Coast Preparatory Schools, a chain of five preschool and elementary schools.

The two women, being held without bail on the firebombing charges, were accused of approaching another inmate at Sybil Brand and soliciting the services of her boyfriend to prevent Wright from testifying at their upcoming trial. Assistant U.S. Attys. Charles J. Stevens and David W. Wiechert, who are prosecuting the firebombing case, allege that the jailed school owners discussed “various methods of precluding Wright’s testimony, including kidnaping or killing her.”

The prosecutors claim that the two women approached Sybil Brand inmate Joann Russo in early June with a proposal that she persuade her boyfriend, Larry Corliss, to either intimidate or use physical force against Wright.

Drug Plot Alleged

One plan discussed, in addition to the possible kidnaping or murder of Wyckoff’s daughter, according to the grand jury indictment, was “placing drugs in Shirley Wright’s drink at a bar Wright frequented.”

The prosecutors said Russo’s boyfriend was not involved in the discussions and is not accused of any wrongdoing. However, a special agent of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, William L. Queen, pretended to be Corliss during a telephone conversation with Wyckoff on June 23.

The indictment said that during the phone conversation, Wyckoff asked the undercover agent to “ensure that Shirley Wright did not make it to court.”

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Wyckoff and Hamilton were arrested May 20 at their Spanish-style, four-story Dana Point home on charges of hiring Franklin Camper, operator of an Alabama mercenary-training school, and three of his associates to assault and intimidate former teachers at their schools, formerly called the California Learning Centers.

Arrests in Alabama

Also arrested the same day in Hueytown, Ala., near Birmingham, were Camper, who owns the Mercenary Assn., located at a place called the Bunker, and two of his associates, James Larosa Cuneo, 22, and Paul Hamilton, 42. Another associate, William Dean Hedgecorth, 23, was later apprehended and brought to Los Angeles from Rhode Island.

The six defendants were charged on 10 counts of racketeering, use of explosives and arson in the firebombings of cars belonging to Robyn and Michael Rishoff of Etiwanda and Harriet and Richard Russo of Ontario in August, 1985.

The government claims that Wyckoff and Elizabeth Hamilton spent thousands of dollars to hire Camper and his three-member team to intimidate and assault former teachers who once worked for the two women.

Both of the Rishoffs had worked as teachers at one of the private schools and had lodged formal complaints against their former bosses after they were fired by Wyckoff. Russo (not related to the Sybil Brand inmate) also had been fired and subsequently accused Wyckoff and Hamilton of slandering her; she threatened an injunction against the school owners.

Wright, who testified on behalf of the government in bail hearings against her mother and Hamilton, said her mother had guards posted in a tree outside her home in Dana Point last August about the time of the bombings.

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Claimed Concealed Arms

She also said that Wyckoff and Hamilton told her that they were carrying concealed firearms in their purses and ammunition in their bras during the same time.

Wright testified at the bail hearings that she might flee if her mother and Hamilton were released on bail, and prosecutors later cited her testimony as a factor in U.S. Magistrate Volney V. Brown’s decision to order them held without bail.

In a plea bargain with federal prosecutors, one of the accused mercenaries, Cuneo, pleaded guilty and agreed to testify for the government. The other defendants, including Wyckoff and Hamilton, have pleaded not guilty.

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