UPDATED: Former 49er, MH resident, denies rape charges
Former San Francisco 49er defensive tackle Dana Stubblefield denied charges that he raped a developmentally disabled woman at his Morgan Hill home in April 2015.The Santa Clara County District Attorneyās Office announced May 2, 2016 that it charged Stubblefield, 45, with five felony counts related to the alleged rape. He is accused of assaulting the woman, 31 at the time, on April 9, 2015. Stubblefield asked the woman to come to his home to interview for a babysitter job, according to authorities.Stubblefield said in a press conference May 3, a day after he made bail and was released from jail, that his āencounterā with the woman was consensual. He denied all the charges filed against him.āIām here to state without any reservations that I am completely innocent of these allegations,ā Stubblefield said in the recorded press conference.The former NFL Defensive Player of the Year said he has done charity work throughout the Bay Area over the last several years, and has tried to ābe part of the Bay Area community.āāThis is an issue thatās very close to me. One of my primary charities is Special Olympics, something thatās true and dear to my heart. This is why these allegations hurt me so badly,ā Stubblefield said. He said he will defend himself against the criminal charges āwith all my strength.āMorgan Hill police arrested Stubblefield May 2, according to Deputy DA Tim McInerny. Stubblefield initially contacted the alleged victim through the website sittercity.com and asked her to visit his home the next day for a job interview.After a brief interview, the woman left, according to authorities. But Stubblefield called her back and offered her to pay for her time. When she returned, he carried the woman to a room, raped her, forced her to perform oral sex and then gave her $80, according to police reports.The woman drove straight to the Morgan Hill Police station from Stubblefieldās home to report the incident, authorities said. In the course of the year-long investigation, police say they matched DNA evidence from a rape kit to Stubblefield.āThis was a crime of violence against a vulnerable victim,ā McInerny said. āShe was looking for a job and she was unconscionably assaulted.āStubblefield is charged with one count each of rape by force, violence, duress, menace or fear; rape of a victim incapable of giving consent; oral copulation by force, violence, duress, menace or fear; oral copulation with a person incapable of giving legal consent; and false imprisonment.His attorney, Ken Rosenfeld, said May 2 that the alleged victim has prior violent criminal convictions for an assault and resisting arrest. Stubblefieldās attorneys added in a May 3 press conference that the woman is not developmentally disabled, and thus was capable of giving consent to the 2015 sexual encounter.āDana Stubblefield is being unfairly targeted due to his celebrity and wealth by someone with full motivation to lie,ā Rosenfeld said. āMr. Stubblefield passed a lie detector test with flying colors and will present a full, vigorous defense against these false allegations.āAttorneys added that Stubblefield knew nothing of the investigation against him until February.ā(The alleged victim) is a sophisticated party who has had multiple contacts with the criminal and civil justice system including criminal convictions in San Benito County. The clear motivation here is money. Mr. Stubblefield is being targeted by this person for his success,ā Rosenfeld added.Stubblefield was drafted by the San Francisco 49ers in the first round of the 1993 draft, and played for the team until the end of the 1997 season. He then played for the Washington Redskins, then returned to the 49ers for the 2001 and 2002 seasons. He then played for the Oakland Raiders in 2003.Reporter Jennifer Wadsworth contributed to this report.
From Nigeria to Nordstrom
As part of a fellowship and cultural exchange between the Rotary Club of Morgan Hill and Rotary Club of Ilorin, seven Nigerian diplomats took an April 27 tour of Nordstrom Elementary School to witness firsthand how technology is utilized in the classrooms.
Former 49er, Morgan Hill resident, arrested on suspicion of rape
Former San Francisco 49er defensive tackle Dana Stubblefield allegedly raped a disabled woman in Morgan Hill about a year ago, according to a statement from the Santa Clara County District Attorneyās Office.Stubblefield, 45, was charged by the DAās office May 2, according to a press release.He is accused of assaulting the developmentally disabled victim in April 2015 at his Morgan Hill residence, authorities said. Stubblefield had asked the woman to come to his home to interview for a babysitter job.Stubblefield is charged with five felony counts related to the assault, according to the DAās office.He was arrested by Morgan Hill police the morning of May 2, 2016. As of 3:50 p.m., he remained in custody at Santa Clara County Jail in lieu of $250,000 bail, according to Deputy DA Tim McInerny. If he does not make bail, Stubblefield will be arraigned at South County Courthouse in Morgan Hill within 24 hours.āThis was a crime of violence against a vulnerable victim,ā McInerny said. āShe was looking for a job and she was unconscionably assaulted.āOn the afternoon of April 9, 2015, the victimāage 31 at the timeātraveled to Stubblefieldās home after he contacted her through a babysitter website, the press release said.After the assault, the victim immediately traveled to the Morgan Hill Police Department to report the crime, authorities said.When asked why it took a year for authorities to file charges against Stubblefield, McInerny replied, āIt was a thorough and complete investigation. We felt it was important to get it right.āStubblefield was drafted by the San Francisco 49ers in the first round of the 1993 draft, and played for the team until the end of the 1997 season. He then played for the Washington Redskins, and returned to the 49ers for the 2001 and 2002 seasons. He then played for the Oakland Raiders in 2003.
Tax Judge Finds Elder Abuse, Fraud
Using lies, deceit and abuse, a caretaker bilked an elderly Gilroy man out of nearly $1 million over two years and forced him to live in filth while she enjoyed a lavish lifestyle, then filed fraudulent income tax returns, a U.S. Tax Court judge ruled.In an understated but scathing decision April 21, Judge Mark Holmes opined that Angelina Alhadi, a nursing assistant at Saint Louise Regional Hospital in Gilroy and a private caregiver, used undue influence and elder abuse to inveigle $451,891 in 2007 and $474,983 in 2008 from Arthur Marsh, who died in February 2009 at the age of 93.The victim, a retired optometrist and award-winning oil painter at the time, suffered from dementia and a host of physical ailments. He became so emotionally dependent on Alhadi that he paid her nearly twice the going rate for her services and wrote her numerous large checks, typically at her insistence, according to the 37-page decision.Among other things, there was money paid for a $100,000 down payment on a Gilroy home, a $60,000 pool and a $25,000 cruise for her family. Marsh was forced to go on the foreign cruise but was often neglected while Alhadi and her family partied, according to the court filing.The decision was rendered under Rule 155 of the tax code. That means Alhadi and the Internal Revenue Service, which brought the case to tax court, must now meet and reach a settlement of the unpaid tax debt.They have until June 21 to submit computations and positions for Holmesā consideration and final decision.After Marshās death, the Santa Clara County District Attorney investigated Alhadiās involvement in his life but no charges were filed.County and state guardians and senior welfare agencies also investigated and gave testimony to the IRS.The IRS acted on the tax aspects of the case, alleging the woman failed to report income and filed false tax returns.Itās unclear if Judge Holmesā findings of elder abuse will trigger another probe into Alhadiās conduct and the circumstances of Marshās death.Alhadi claimed in her defense that the money represented non-taxable loans or gifts, but the IRS argued it was taxable income, and she should pay a penalty for committing fraud because the funds were taken while Marsh was under āundue influenceā and subjected to elder abuse, according to the court findings.In deciding the case, Holmes noted Marsh came from humble beginnings and grew up during the Great Depression. After a successful optometry practice that served three generations, Marsh, who had never married and was known as Art to his friends at Saint Mary Church and Gilroy Rotary, retired to his 800-square-foot, second-story apartment on Carmel Street.Holmes observed that Marsh ā...rented his little apartment for $175 a month and got by largely on Social Security. But Dr. Marsh had been a good businessman, saving over $1 million before he retired in the ā80s and investing it prudently well into retirement until it reached nearly $3 million.āAnd when he became ill and infirm and his mental faculties began to fail, he became a prime target for the kinds of people who prey on the elderly, said James Simoni, the Gilroy attorney specializing in senior law who handled Marshās affairs and tried unsuccessfully to stop Alhadi.In 2000, Marsh had a fall that broke his hip and required hospitalization. While he was in the hospital, doctors noticed his decline, which then worsened.Judge Holmes wrote, āIn 2007, when he was 91, things grew still worse. He couldnāt drive a car, he couldnāt go to the doctor, and he could no longer even prepare his own food. He suffered from incontinence, atrial fibrillation, congestive heart failure, hypertension, chronic back pain, arthritis, hearing loss in both ears, and deteriorating vision; then he suffered a stroke in the right frontal lobe of his brain.āHis physician, Dr. George Green, diagnosed him with dementia and cognitive decline. These neurological problems showed themselves in Dr. Marshās poor short-term memory, diminished long-term memory, inability to perform simple arithmetic, and persistent deficiencies in visuospatial analysis. These problems also made him vulnerableā¦āBy that time, Marsh had hired Alhadi and soon was paying her almost double the normal rates for her caregiver services even though, according to the court decision, she ignored his most basic care and pressured him to pay her more and give her large checks for personal things.The court document describes his tiny apartment as messy and filthy, and relates Alhadiās deliberate and successful measures to isolate Marsh from his nearest relative, by cutting off all phone contact with the niece, and her attempt to wrest from him legal control of his assets.The Holmes decision relates testimony from the niece, Sheila Person, about the scene during her uncleās funeral at Saint Mary Church in Gilroy: āAlhadi, dressed in full hijab and carrying a single red rose, tried āto crawl in the coffin or get inside there and she was screaming.āāāThis was the last contact Ms. Alhadi had with Dr. Marsh,ā Holmes wrote.Simoni said he became aware of a possible problem when his client asked him to authorize several very large checks for Alhadi including, three months before his death, a huge advance payment to care for him for the rest of his life.He brought his concerns to Marshās financial fund managers who refused to release the money, he said Monday.Judge Holmes wrote: āMs. Alhadi made a last lunge for Dr. Marshās money. She took him to see an estate attorney, James Simoni, in November 2008 to have Dr. Marsh grant her a power of attorney. Mr. Simoni, whom we also find a credible witness, testified that he learned about the blocked Vanguard accounts and supposed promise by Dr. Marsh to Ms. Alhadi to pay her approximately $300,000 in exchange for taking care of him for the rest of his life. We find that this trip to his office was a ploy by Ms. Alhadi to get those accounts unblocked and to get her hands on the last few $100,000 checks that Dr. Marsh had written. Dr. Marsh later told Mr. Simoni that Ms. Alhadi was pressuring him to get named in his will, and that he needed to create a separate trust for her so that his family members wouldnāt be able to interfere. Mr. Simoni refused to be part of this, and even tried to convince Ms. Alhadi to return the money she had already received. She told him: āWhy should I, he gave it to me.āā The tax court decision can be read online here: http://1.usa.gov/1SewClv.
Hatch fills his CCS sheet
Jarod Hatch has a full sheet thanks to his performance against Piedmont Hills on April 22 to close out the season.
Getting peek at Cordevalle
Cordevalleās conditions Monday probably wonāt match the July 4-10 conditions, but Na Yeon Choi still got a good look at the course sheāll play at the US Womenās Open.
Mariachi music goes forward
When they finish performing, even if it was only a rehearsal, children come bounding toward their parents, beaming broadly, with a sparkle in their eyes. āDid you hear me? Did you hear that song we just played?ā














