Clearlake Police make drug, gun arrests
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – A juvenile and a young Clearlake man were arrested late last week on gun charges.
Francisco Joseph Ochoa, 19, a student, and the 16-year-old male juvenile, whose name was not released because of his age, were arrested on Friday, Oct. 12, according to Clearlake Police Sgt. Tim Hobbs.
Hobbs said that at about 6:45 a.m. that day Clearlake Police officers were dispatched to a report of a theft of marijuana at a residence in the area of Highway 53 and Polk Avenue.
During the investigation Officer Mike Ray conducted a traffic stop on a vehicle nearby that location which was driven by Ochoa, Hobbs said.
Ochoa was found to have a loaded 9 millimeter semiautomatic handgun concealed in his waistband, Hobbs said.
He said Ochoa subsequently was arrested for possession of a concealed firearm, possession of a loaded firearm and possession of an unregistered concealed handgun.
Ochoa later transported to the Lake County Jail, where his bail was set at $15,000. Jail records indicated he has since been released.
There were two additional occupants in the vehicle, one being 34-year-old Clearlake resident Michael McGonigle, who Hobbs said was found to be on active probation.
Officers responded to McGonigle’s residence in the 3600 Block of Blue Gum Avenue to conduct a probation search, Hobbs said. Upon arriving at the residence officers found the 16-year-old male juvenile.
Hobbs said the juvenile was found to be in possession of a large quantity of marijuana, packaging, a scale, a stolen loaded 9 millimeter semiautomatic handgun, an AK-47 assault rifle and several 30 round AK-47 magazines.
The juvenile claimed ownership of all the items that were discovered inside his room and other photographic evidence that was located indicated that items were his, Hobbs said.
The juvenile was arrested and transported to the Lake County Juvenile Hall for possession of marijuana for sales, possession of a stolen handgun, unlawful possession of a assault weapon and unlawful possession of high capacity (over 10 round) magazines, Hobbs said.
Anyone with information regarding the unlawful possession of firearms or other criminal activity can contact the Clearlake Police Department at 707-994-8251. Callers may remain anonymous.
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Report on sheriff’s substations planned for Oct. 16 supervisors’ meeting
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Board of Supervisors will receive an update this week on the sheriff’s plans for substations in Middletown and Clearlake Oaks.
The meeting will begin at 9 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 16, in the board chambers on the first floor of the Lake County Courthouse, 255 N. Forbes St., Lakeport. It will be broadcast live on TV8.
At 9:15 a.m., the board will get an update on Sheriff Frank Rivero’s Middletown substation.
The County Space Committee also will update the board on alternative proposals for the establishment of a Clearlake Oaks substation.
The full agenda follows.
TIMED ITEMS
9 a.m.: Approval of consent agenda, which includes items that are expected to be routine and noncontroversial, and will be acted upon by the board at one time without discussion; presentation of animals available for adoption at Lake County Animal Care and Control; consideration of items not appearing on the posted agenda, and contract change orders for current construction projects.
9:05 a.m.: Citizen’s input. Any person may speak for three minutes about any subject of concern, provided that it is within the jurisdiction of the Board of Supervisors and is not already on the agenda. Prior to this time, speakers must fill out a slip giving name, address and subject (available in the clerk of the board’s office, first floor, courthouse).
9:10 a.m., A-5: (a) Consideration of request to waive the formal bidding process and make a determination that competitive bidding is not appropriate due to acquisition of equipment from a sole source vendor; and (b) consideration of request to approve purchase of 59 C-IV computer workstations; and (c) consideration of request to authorize the Social Services director/assistant purchasing agent to issue a purchase order to the county of San Bernardino, in the amount of $52,402, for 59 CIV
computer workstations.
9:15 a.m., A-6: (a) Update on establishment of sheriff’s substation in Middletown; and (b) presentation of alternatives from the Space Committee and consideration of options for the establishment of a Sheriff’s substation in Clearlake Oaks.
10 a.m., A-7: Consideration of the establishment of a pilot Agricultural Assistance Program for stationary agricultural diesel engines.
1:30 p.m., A-8: Assessment appeal hearings: (a) Ellen Cortright and John Hanlon - Application No. 290-2010 - 84 Lafferty Road, Lakeport, CA (APN 029-281-390-000); (b) Betty Irwin - Application No. 286-2010 - 1795 Quail Ridge Road, Lakeport, CA (APN 005-027-920-000); (c) William Irwin - Application Nos. 282-2010, 283-2010, 284-2010 and 285-2010 - 1750 & 1775 Quail Ridge Road, Lakeport, 4325 & 8335 Reclamation Road, Upper Lake, CA (APNs 005-027-930-000, 005-027-910-000, 004-014-130-000 and 004-013-190-000); (d) Victorian Village Investments, Inc. - Application No. 287-2010 – 10 Queen Ann Way, Lakeport, CA (APN 005-038-340-000); (e) Carol Wooster - Application Nos. 100-2010 and 101-2010 - 9308 Konocti Bay Road and 4880 Arrow Way, Kelseyville, CA (APNs 009-015-250-000 and 009-015-260-000).
NONTIMED ITEMS
A-9: Supervisors’ weekly calendar, travel and reports.
CLOSED SESSION
A-10: 1.Conference with Labor Negotiator: (a) County Negotiators: A. Grant, L. Guintivano, M. Perry, J. Hammond and A. Flora; and (b) Lake County Deputy District Attorney’s Association, Lake County Correctional Officer’s Association and Lake County Employees Association.
CONSENT AGENDA
C-1: Approve minutes of the Board of Supervisors meeting held on Oct. 9, 2012.
C-2: Adopt resolution setting rate of pay for election officers for the Nov. 6, 2012, Consolidated General Election pursuant to Section 12310 of the Elections Code.
C-3: Adopt resolution approving the application and certification statement for the State Department of Health Services, CMS Branch’s Child Health and Disability Prevention Program (CHDP) and Health Care Program for Children in Foster Care (HCPCFP) Renewal Grant for FY 2012-13 and authorize the board chair to sign said certification statement.
C-4: Adopt resolution approving a request from the Lake County Health Services Department to submit an application for Medical Reserve Corps Capacity Building funds through the National Association of County and City Health Officials and authorizing the director of Health Services to sign said application.
C-5: Approve fourth amendment to agreement agreement authorizing North Coast Emergency Medical Services as the “Local EMS Agency” and authorization of powers pursuant thereto (correcting typographical errors), and authorize the chair to sign.
C-6: Approve permit to conduct aeronautical activities at Lampson Field Airport (Lake Aero Styling & Repair), and authorize the chair to sign.
C-7: Approve agreement between the county of Lake and Archaeological Services Inc., for archaeological studies for three HBP bridge replacement projects: Clayton Creek Bridge at Clayton Creek Road (14C-0031), Cooper Creek Bridge at Witter Springs Road (14C-0119) and Clover Creek Bridge at First Street (14C-0015) and a pedestrian/bicycle bridge project - Bridge Arbor Bikeway in Lake County, CA, for a total amount of $13,900, and authorize the chair to sign.
C-8: Approve out of state travel for Detective Frank Walsh to attend the 2012 Clan Lab Certification Training School No. 281 in Quantico, Virginia, from Oct. 22-26, 2012.
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101612 Lake County Board of Supervisors - Sheriff's Substations Report
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A decade later, solution to LaForge murder case eludes police, haunts loved ones

LAKEPORT, Calif. – Ten years after a Kelseyville woman was murdered in her downtown Lakeport business, the case remains one of the county’s most well-known, and troubling, cold cases.
Barbara LaForge was 43 years old when she was murdered on Tuesday, October 8, 2002.
On the morning of her murder, LaForge had been alone – save for her small dog, Carmen – in her Wildwood Frame Shop, which shared space with Inspirations Gallery at 165 N. Main St.
It’s believed she was shot sometime between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m., not long after she had arrived that morning. Clues at the scene led police to believe her morning routine upon entering the shop – including taking her dog off the leash – had been interrupted by her killer.
She was found by a customer and a neighboring business owner a few hours later after she hadn’t opened the shop.
She had been wounded four times at close range with a .22-caliber weapon, and was struck through the heart. The weapon has never been found, despite a search for it in Clear Lake and along the Hopland Grade.
Since then, the case – Lakeport’s only unsolved homicide – has taken police and the people who knew and loved LaForge on a journey filled with strange twists.
Her cremains, along with some of her remaining possessions, were found by police in early 2008 in a mini storage locker that went up for auction after police said her husband, Dan Hamblin, abandoned it.
Police have retested evidence and brought in outside experts. There have been two Lakeport chiefs of police and two district attorneys since the murder, and the Lakeport City Council even devoted additional funds to hiring a part-time detective to work the case.
Hamblin and his girlfriend, Linda Mafrice, remain the top persons of interest in the case, according to Lakeport Police Chief Brad Rasmussen.
As police continue to work the case, there have been the continuing questions of family, friends and community members, baffled by the likable businesswoman’s murder.
“She was absolutely the last person that this ever should have happened to,” said her niece, Stasha Wratislaw of Lakeport.
“She was the best kind of human being,” said Wratislaw.
Gail Salituri, who owned Inspirations Gallery and was close friends with LaForge, said the past decade has brought few answers – and no justice – for her friend.
“Today, 10 years later, I still feel the residual pain of her tragic death,” said Salituri, who is troubled that the case hasn’t yet been solved.
Rasmussen said his agency is still dedicating time and effort to bring the case to a close, which includes an arrest.
“As far as we’re concerned, we still want to solve it and bring it to a conclusion,” he said.
He’s getting help with that goal from District Attorney Don Anderson, who took office in January 2011 and has a keen interest in seeing LaForge’s murder solved.
“The case is not over,” Anderson said.
He added, “Between Lakeport Police and our office, we do have a game plan, and we’re following through with it.”
Also still in place is a $50,000 reward for information leading to an arrest or conviction in the case, offered by the Governor’s Office.
A decade of questions
Wratislaw was just an eighth grader when her aunt was shot to death.
“My aunt and I were inseparable,” Wratislaw remembered, adding that LaForge was like a mother to her.
Wratislaw’s mother, Leilani Prueitt, and LaForge were sisters. Prueitt had issues with drugs and alcohol.
“My mom was in a bad place,” said Wratislaw. “I really rebelled against that.”
Wratislaw said she practically lived with LaForge. She found out just weeks after her aunt’s death that LaForge was exploring the possibility of taking legal guardianship of the girl.
The weekend before the shooting, the young teen and LaForge had traveled to Sacramento to a dog show, something they often did on weekends.
“She was really getting into the dog shows after she got Carmen,” Wratislaw said of the small purebred whippet that LaForge owned.
LaForge had told her niece after they got back that she would see her that Tuesday. That turned out to be the day LaForge died.
A customer and a next-door business owner found LaForge shot inside her frame shop at around 11 a.m. Oct. 8, 2002. She hadn’t opened the shop, the front door remained locked and the customer could see LaForge’s dog, Carmen, cowering in one of the shop’s front windows, her leash still on her collar.
She was transported by Lakeport Fire paramedics to Sutter Lakeside Hospital, where she was pronounced dead that afternoon.
Then-Lakeport Police Chief Tom Engstrom – now a Lakeport City Council member – received assistance from the California Department of Justice in processing the crime scene, which officials have admitted was contaminated due to the comings and goings of emergency responders.
Engstrom told Lake County News in a 2007 interview that the crime scene testing and processing ended up yielding no significant evidence – not even a fingerprint – on which to base a criminal case.
“I was so comfortable with getting the state crime lab people up here, I just couldn’t believe we didn’t get anything out of that,” Engstrom said at the time.
After the murder, Wratislaw said she dropped out of the eighth grade and missed a year of school.
“It’s something you would never, ever in a million years imagine,” she said of the murder.
Wratislaw said she didn’t talk about the murder for years afterward.
“I was seriously formed by these events,” she said.
Persons of interest
Since the case’s first days, Lakeport Police investigators have received little or no cooperation from Hamblin or Mafrice, who were romantically involved before LaForge’s murder.
The day after LaForge’s murder, the Lake County District Attorney’s Office filed 90 charges against Mafrice, most of them for forgery as well as for grand theft, for stealing more than $100,000 from the Royale Shores Homeowners Association. Two months earlier, Mafrice had been charged with defrauding an elderly neighbor of thousands of dollars.
A neighbor of Mafrice’s at Royale Shores told Lake County News in a 2010 interview that Mafrice had purchased Hamblin a motorcycle before her arrest.
On the day of LaForge’s funeral, Mafrice had been seen at the Kelseyville home LaForge and Hamblin shared, packing LaForge’s belongings into black garbage bags. Mafrice moved in with Hamblin a short time later.
In the spring of 2008, Lakeport Police purchased the contents of a storage locker in Kelseyville that police said had been abandoned by Hamblin.
When they opened it, they found many of LaForge’s possessions. They also found LaForge’s cremated remains.
Later that year, police returned the cremains to LaForge’s adopted family in Florida. The Jones family, who had taken in LaForge during her youth, held a ceremony in which they scattered the remains – accompanied by a wreath – in Goodby’s Creek in Jacksonville.
Also in 2008, Det. Lou Riccardi and Det. Destry Henderson were assigned to the LaForge case. The men reinterviewed people, handed out fliers and worked on having evidence retested.
One person who they interviewed for the first time was Wratislaw.
“I was never questioned initially,” she said. Despite the fact that she and LaForge were so close, “No one ever talked to me.”
That was, until Riccardi and Henderson pulled her from work for an interview. She said during the interview they assured her the case was their No. 1 priority.
In December 2010, years after she had been required to make full restitution in the Royale Shores case yet had failed to do so, Mafrice was sentenced to state prison by Judge Andrew Blum, as Lake County News has reported.
Blum sentenced Mafrice to completing her restitution payments and to serving four years and eight months in state prison. She was only expected to serve about two years due to credits. Rasmussen could not say if she had been released from prison yet.
“She’s still a person of interest in the case,” said Rasmussen. “That hasn’t changed.”
He added that Hamblin also is a person of interest in his wife’s murder.
“At this point, there are no other suspects that are still currently being investigated,” Rasmussen said.
Wratislaw said she doesn’t believe Hamblin killed her aunt. “I don’t necessarily think he was involved. I don’t believe that.”
She said she still sees and calls him occasionally and considers him “my only tie” to LaForge.
Wratislaw said she’s never been able to bring herself to ask Hamblin about why he hasn’t worked with police on the case, but believes she will someday.
Continuing efforts on the investigation
Rasmussen, a sergeant with Lakeport Police at the time of the murder, has since been appointed chief. Engstrom retired in 2005 and was succeeded by Kevin Burke, who left in 2010 to take the chief of police position in Healdsburg. Each of the chiefs has worked to keep the case active.
“We’re going to just keep working everything we can until there’s nothing else that can be done,” said Rasmussen.
He said there are still things that can be done on the case to generate more information and evidence.
“That’s why we’re working with the DA’s Office to have them look at it and see what might be needed,” Rasmussen said.
Anderson, who had met LaForge a few times but didn’t know her well, acknowledged that he and his staff have been working closely with the Lakeport Police Department on the LaForge murder. He said it’s the only cold case they’re actively investigating.
Both Anderson and Rasmussen said reevaluating and retesting evidence is part of their current efforts. Rasmussen said he couldn’t divulge the precise details of what items are being retested.
There have been a lot of new improvements and methods in DNA and forensic analysis that Anderson believes could help the case move forward, and so his office will ask the California Department of Justice to retest important evidence.
“We’re going to be trying everything we can to come up with more information,” Anderson said.
He added, “We haven’t given up, and we’re still going at it strong.”
Rasmussen recognized that community interest in the case continues to run high.
“The community still has an interest in seeing the case come to a conclusion,” he said. “It’s still something that’s on peoples’ minds, even after all this time.”
Remembering Barbara
Earlier this year, after having run her gallery and the frame shop together since LaForge’s death, Salituri closed the doors of the shop where the murder had occurred.
“By having kept the business open for nine and a half years after the fact, I endured a barrage of criticism, questions, speculations, theories and outright untruths,” Salituri said.
“I had enough, and knew it was beyond time to move on,” she said.
Salituri recalled, “When I closed those doors, I looked into the empty windows, took a moment to say goodbye once again to Barbara and remembered Carmen, the eyewitness to the crime who cowered in that exact window years prior.”
She said she’s still shaking her head in utter disbelief that the crime has not been solved, and she’s moved on.
“Today, I say hope is sometimes a paralyzing factor in an unsolved murder and Karma has no deadline. Yet hope and good detective work is all we have,” Salituri said.
Wratislaw became emotional as she remembered her aunt, who she called “the most amazing person.” She said LaForge had a great sense of humor, was loving and very faithful to her beliefs as a Jehovah’s Witness.
“I don’t know anybody that didn’t like her,” she said.
Wratislaw, who in the past decade has married and now has a small child of her own, said there’s a void in her heart and soul that will never be filled.
As for the investigation, for there to be a resolution she believes that it’s going to take someone’s conscience finally breaking and, in turn, causing them to come forward.
But Wratislaw can’t be certain that conscience will lead to a solution, pointing out that, whether it’s one or 20 people who were involved, they’ve been able to live with committing the murder for a decade.
“At this point, I’m just assured that someday there will be justice, in this life or the next,” she said.
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Officials lift heightened security measures at courthouse
LAKEPORT, Calif. – After nearly a week of heightened security measures due to a bomb threat, officials on Tuesday decided to return to normal safety procedures at the Lake County Courthouse.
The building, located at 255 N. Forbes St. in Lakeport, was the focus of a threat – made via telephone to a local reporter and then relayed to the sheriff’s office – on Wednesday, Sept. 26.
That threat initially caused an evacuation of the building while law enforcement searched for an explosive device. None was found, and court and county staffers were allowed to go back to work that same afternoon.
Then, late last week, law enforcement and county administrative officials decided to close the courthouse for the weekend in order to conduct another precautionary security sweep before staff returned to work on Monday, as Lake County News has reported.
Most members of the public must pass through a screening checkpoint at the building’s main entrance.
Courthouse staff, who usually are allowed to pass through side doors with access cards, were temporarily required to go through the building’s main entrance as well, according to interim County Administrative Officer Matt Perry.
On Tuesday afternoon, following the Board of Supervisors meeting, Perry met with Capt. Chris Macedo of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office, Board of Supervisors Chair Rob Brown and Lake County Superior Court Executive Officer Mary Smith.
He told Lake County News that they decided to resume normal entrance practices on Wednesday morning, including allowing employees with access cards to once again enter through side doors rather than the busier main entrance.
Perry said an email was sent to county employees Tuesday afternoon advising them of the return to normal procedures, and reminding them of certain safety practices regarding entering and exiting the courthouse.
He said those practices include requiring that employees and others who are exiting the building through side doors not allow people to enter and circumvent security screening.
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Officials heighten courthouse security, conduct additional investigation following Sept. 26 bomb scare
LAKEPORT, Calif. – Following a bomb threat against the Lake County Courthouse last week, local officials have heightened security precautions and conducted another sweep of the building.
The threat against the building, located at 255 N. Forbes St. in Lakeport, occurred last Wednesday afternoon, as Lake County News has reported.
An anonymous male subject phoned a local newspaper reporter to make the threat. Undersheriff Pat Turturici told Lake County News that the subject made the threat in connection to the sheriff’s office’s ongoing marijuana eradications around the county.
While nothing was found during an initial sweep, concerns about the building’s safety have continued.
County Administrative Officer Matt Perry told Lake County News that, based on discussions with law enforcement, the decision was made to close the four-story courthouse completely at the end of the work day on Friday.
The building, which houses both court and county employees, remained secure over the weekend in advance of another precautionary security sweep, Perry said.
On Monday the courthouse reopened for business, but with county officials taking extra precautions, the details of which they have not released.
In order for the public to enter the courthouse, they must go through the main entrance on N. Forbes Street and pass through a security checkpoint. Courthouse employees with badges generally are not required to be screened.
Perry said county employees were reminded of existing security procedures, including directing all persons to enter the building through the main entrance and therefore pass through the security screening.
He said those security procedures prohibit anyone exiting through a side door from allowing entry through that door.
Perry said he was planning to meet on Tuesday with sheriff’s officials, Lake County Superior Court Executive Officer Mary Smith and Board of Supervisors Chair Rob Brown to discuss how long to continue the special security measures that have been in place following the threat.
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