Advertisement

Baugh! Humbug! County GOP Gets Coal in Its Stocking

Share

I had every intention of interviewing Santa Claus for this column, determined to pin the Fat Man down on just how he makes those reindeer fly. But the Rohrabacher-Baugh Flying Circus was back in town over the weekend, and by any account, those two are more entertaining than any group of eight reindeer.

“Believe me,” Congressman Dana Rohrabacher said Saturday morning before the press conference he’d called formally began, “I’d much rather be celebrating Chris Cox’s magnificent victory [in overriding a presidential veto Friday] than be complaining about the D.A. sending armed men into the home of honest citizens.”

Rohrabacher also lamented the absence of good surfing conditions but then warmed to the task of lathering Dist. Atty. Michael R. Capizzi up one side and down the other for the 7 a.m. “invasion” Friday at the home of Assemblyman Scott Baugh, a Rohrabacher protege and subject of investigation into possible irregularities in his Nov. 28 election victory.

Advertisement

Rohrabacher was joined Saturday by two state Republican Party leaders and a surprise guest--Baugh--who had remained inside his home Friday while others conducted a Capizzi-bashing press conference on his doorstep.

This may be a good point to interject that what was described variously Saturday as a “dawn raid” or “invasion by seven armed men” was, in fact, the execution of a search warrant requested by Capizzi’s office and authorized by a judge.

Since we all know law-and-order Republicans generally don’t oppose legally obtained search warrants, I wondered why this one upset them so.

The answer is at least twofold, said state GOP official Michael Schroeder, who, like Rohrabacher, was actively involved in the Allen recall. First, Capizzi is retaliating for criticism he’s taken from Baugh’s friends over the ongoing investigation. Second, Schroeder said, Capizzi is “grandstanding” in an effort to divert attention from his failure to uncover the Orange County bankruptcy.

Capizzi “doesn’t send seven investigators to invade a crack house, but he sends seven into Scott Baugh’s house,” Schroeder said. “He’s become a rogue D.A.” He then went on to describe Capizzi as a “desperate, cornered man.”

That’s enough grist for three Oliver Stone movies.

The operative phrase from the Rohrabacher-Baugh camp is that Capizzi is “making a mountain out of a molehill.” At worst, Rohrabacher said, Baugh committed some paperwork mistakes that don’t approach the level of criminality.

Advertisement

“This tactic of sending armed men in at daybreak . . . is the most outrageous act of intimidation I have ever seen in this county,” Rohrabacher said. “If it were done in China, we’d be having official protests for violations of human rights. We call them civil liberties here.”

The man who knows the most about what happened--Baugh--spoke the least. He distributed photos he took during the “invasion” that, had they been captioned, would have read, “Pictures of Some Guys in My House.” Not exactly a Kodak moment. Actually, the photos revealed nothing other than the fact that D.A.’s investigators were in his house.

One man, presumably an investigator, was photographed with a yellow piece of paper held to his face to conceal his identity. It was a mocking gesture, I assumed, but the Rohrabacher-Baugh camp sees nothing funny in any of this.

Baugh, not expecting a search warrant as a stocking stuffer, said he was taking a shower when “all of a sudden, three days before Christmas, my home gets invaded.” He said he began photographing the men, because “I wanted to have a record of who was in my home, three days before Christmas.”

Rohrabacher said the investigators “roughed him [Baugh] up,” and then lied about it. The district attorney’s office disputes that, but Baugh says two neighborhood witnesses corroborate his version.

I know, I know. You’re having trouble sifting through the rhetoric and conspiracy theories that suddenly abound. Me too.

Advertisement

The only thing I picked up Saturday is that the conservative wing of the state GOP, never known for subtlety, wants Capizzi to stay out of the Baugh matter.

Why? Do they really consider a 7 a.m. search warrant tantamount to a “dawn raid”? Do they really think Capizzi is investigating Scott Baugh, a virtual unknown three months ago, because he can make political hay from him?

After blaming Capizzi for blowing the matter out of proportion, suddenly the other side is associating Capizzi with Gestapo tactics. Not what I would call defusing the matter.

Now, it must be played out. This Republican vs. Republican skirmish has suddenly become a lot more intriguing.

Yes, there’s a smoke screen forming. Yes, someone is trying to divert our attention. Yes, someone might have abused the system.

There’s nothing to do now but wait and see who it is.

Dana Parsons’ columns appears Wednesday, Friday and Sunday. Readers may reach Parsons by writing to him at the Times Orange County Edition, 1375 Sunflower Ave., Costa Mesa, CA 92626, or calling (714) 966-7821.

Advertisement
Advertisement