The Carmel Pine Cone November 8, 2013

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The Carmel Pine Cone November 8, 2013 VolumeThe 99 No. 45 CarmelOn the Internet: www.carmelpinecone.com Pine ConeNovember 8-14, 2013 TRUSTED BY LOCALS AND LOVED BY VISITORS SINCE 1915 Hikers trash Big Sur hot spring, volunteers clean it up Little controversy in By CHRIS COUNTS good, as volunteers of the nonprofit Ventana Wilderness Alliance know only too well. Livingston emails LONG OVERUSED, Sykes Camp in Big Sur is being Two weeks ago, three volunteer “backcountry rangers” loved to death. hauled out about 50 pounds of trash for 12 miles along the By MARY SCHLEY Famous for its hot springs, the campground is so well Pine Ridge Trail, leaving an estimated 350 pounds of garbage known it has its own Yelp page on the Internet. But the noto- behind. On their visit to Sykes Camp, they discovered 4 ille- HE CONTENTS of dozens of emails which the City of riety isn’t doing the popular backpacking destination much T gal campfires, 38 camp stove violations, 19 “inappropriate” Carmel fought to hide — but which were released to The fire rings and a burned toilet. Pine Cone Tuesday after the attorney who heavily redacted They also found a 15-foot- earlier versions was taken off the job — revealed the con- by-15-foot structure con- cerns of a woman heavily involved in the operation and structed out of small red- preservation of her city, but little else. woods trees and limbs hid- The correspondence between former councilwoman and den downstream from the Carmel Residents Association President Barbara Livingston camp. and city administrator Jason Stilwell, as well as with Mayor The volunteers were dis- Jason Burnett, focused on code enforcement, planning mayed by the mess — and issues, recommendations of candidates to serve on city the blatant disregard for fire boards, and some of the chatter around town regarding recent restrictions. hires and investigations into longtime employees, leaving “Many campers had ille- wonder about why they had been hidden in the first place. gal campfires and almost Livingston, who at first also refused to let The Pine Cone everyone was using a stove see her emails, changed her mind at the same time the city even though we are in fire did. restrictions where no flame “I am in agreement that the City of Carmel, in consulta- of any type is allowed,” vol- tion with the city attorney and myself, will release the emails unteer Steve Benoit posted exchanged between me and city officials,” Livingston said in on the VWA’s Internet an email to The Pine Cone this week. “Newspaper editors forum. “There is more toilet and readers will see that these messages are nothing more paper and human waste in PHOTO/COURTESY VENTANA WILDERNESS ALLIANCE Sykes than I have ever seen.” See EMAILS page 31A At Sykes Camp in Big Sur, a popular but overused destination for backpackers, volunteers from the VWA removed trash, tried to deal with human waste, and examined an illegal camping structure. See TRASH page 14A Dueling Fort Ord Men nabbed in armed robbery of jewelry store ballot measures lose n $172,000 in valuables recovered tomer in the store was untouched. “They were so quick to come into the store, they surprised n P.G. school bond also rejected By MARY SCHLEY the employees, and the safe happened to be open,” Powell said, enabling the robbers to grab a lot of expensive pieces in By KELLY NIX THREE MALES— two of them armed and two of them a short amount of time and flee the store. He said he believes teenagers — tied up the owner and an employee at a Dolores the thieves timed their entry believing they might find the DESPITE BIG contributions that poured into the cam- Street jewelry store and stole more than $170,000 worth of safe open. paigns for competing Fort Ord ballot measures, voters decid- rings and other pieces Wednesday morning, but police caught But the victims managed to free themselves and alert ed neither was good for the former military base and reject- the trio in Marina before they could get rid of the jewelry or authorities. ed both at the polls Tuesday. the guns, according to Carmel Police Sgt. Luke Powell. “In the robbers’ haste, they did not secure the zip ties,” Measure M, which would have prevented development of Carmel P.D. received several 911 calls reporting an armed Powell said. The employee chased after the men, and a about 540 acres in the Parker Flats area of Fort Ord, received robbery had occurred at around 11:15 a.m. Nov. 6 at La woman saw them get into a turquoise Chevy Blazer and drive 16,622 Yes votes (47 percent) to 18,742 No votes (53 per- Renaissance, located just south of Ocean Avenue, after three south. cent). Hispanic males entered the shop, one carrying a loaded revolver and another carrying what turned to be a replica of See ROBBERS page 25A See RESULTS page 13A a semiautomatic handgun. They forced the owner and an employee into the back office, where they used zip ties to secure the victims’ hands, according to Powell, while a cus- C.V. surgeon wins award for one-hour dentures By KELLY NIX in private practice for 25 years, HALLOWEEN CAR CHASE Wallace’s foray into manufacturing THERE’S NO arguing that a teeth began in 2007, about a dozen LEADS TO ARREST OF Carmel Valley man’s innovative years after retiring from practice. method of making dentures has a lot He perfected the dentures in 2010 of teeth behind it. and they have been on the market SUSPECTED RAPIST Lawrence Wallace’s “Larell One since. Step Denture” requires a fraction of “Originally we were doing this By MARY SCHLEY the time to make and costs much for nursing home patients,” he said, less than traditional, laboratory- “and we just saw that they were A 49-YEAR-OLD Glendale man led Carmel police on a manufactured dentures. applicable in so many areas.” high-speed chase through downtown and down Highway 1 “They are made in one hour on The old way of making dentures before driving a stolen black Toyota into a ditch on the spot without the use of a lab,” requires several visits to a dentist Halloween night, according to Sgt. Luke Powell. Wallace told The Pine Cone. for fittings and takes from six to Howard Cohen had taken the car from his ex-girlfriend The dentures won Wallace and eight weeks for a laboratory to man- after battering and raping her in a Dolores Street hotel, he his wife, Ellen, a former dental ufacture them. said, though officers didn’t know that when they noticed him assistant, a Miller Lite-sponsored “And they cost between $3,000 driving on the wrong side of the center island on Lincoln semifinal award in a competition in and $5,000,” Ellen Wallace said. Street between Fourth and Fifth avenues around 10:30 p.m. October for the best new business in “Our denture retails for about Oct. 31. the nation. The Wallaces will com- $1,200, upper and lower.” While patrolling downtown for possible DUI drivers, offi- pete at the finals in December for Made of thermoplastic — a poly- cer Chris Johnson saw the car on the wrong side of the street the $250,000 grand prize. mer that is malleable when heated and made a U-turn to follow it. Initially, the Toyota driver Larell dentures — the term is — Wallace’s Larell dentures come pulled over on Ocean Avenue, but as Johnson left his police derived from the first three letters of in five templates of different sizes vehicle and walked toward the car, it sped off, said Powell, the couple’s names — amount to a for the upper and lower teeth, PHOTO/KELLY NIX who was riding shotgun at the time. “breakthrough” in the world of false instead of being custom made as tra- Lawrence Wallace of Carmel Valley doesn’t wear teeth, he maintains. false teeth, but he’s the inventor of a new type of See CHASE page 25A A retired oral surgeon who was See TEETH page 31A dentures that is less expensive and easier to make. Have the complete Carmel Pine Cone delivered every Thursday evening to your iPad, laptop, PC or phone. Free subscriptions available at www.carmelpinecone.com 2A The Carmel Pine Cone November 8, 2013 A Big Thank-You Sandy Claws By Lisa Crawford Watson & Sincere Retirement Wishes to Susan Tiny trio Tescher Rogers SHE WAS on a mission when for 26 years of she visited a spot in South County excellent Dental where people sometimes dump Hygiene Service unwanted dogs. Known as the unof- ficial dog catcher for the area, she You’ll be missed by rescued lost or abandoned dogs hundreds of patients and placed them in loving homes. & your very appreciative co-workers! One day, she spied an itty bitty dog that looked lost. But, while get- Dr. David Hatton & staff ting out her dog treats to lure him, another small dog arrived. Barking mightily at her, he ushered the other into the brush, and the dogs disap- peared. Undaunted, she returned to the scene to try again to collect both dogs, who appeared to be tiny terri- ers with a little Chihuahua mixed in. getg ccozy Unable to part with the pair, she named them Abby and Maverick, and brought them home. Turns out Abby was pregnant, which is how warm up with they got Scooby. Scandinavian Eleven years later, the tiny trio is “We still treat Scooby like a baby, even though she’s still a happy little family that does everything together, wool blankets 11,” says her person, “because she’s the puppy.
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