A former employee of the San Diego County Probation Department who used her post to try to help her son escape the capture when he was wanted, suspected of murder, was sentenced to the county prison on Wednesday, plus probation.
The prosecutors said that Carla White, 54, had led her son Hunter Randall White to the scene of a deadly shooting in the county of East and then shared a leaflet with him, which indicated that the police were looking for him for homicide. That the depliant of the police was information to which she was able to access through her work and was prohibited to be disseminated to the general public, according to the prosecutors.
Hunter White, 22, and Kristian Thomas Wolf, 24, remain accused of murder for November 13, 2023, pulling on Javier Medina, 27, in an area not formed in a company near El Cajon.
Sheriff deputies found Medina suffering from ball injury on East Bradley Avenue just before 10 p.m. that evening. He was taken to the hospital, where he died two days later.
Hunter White and Wolf owe a preliminary hearing in the case of murder next month.
Carla White pleaded guilty to a crime charm to be an accessory after the fact and a statement of unauthorized information offense. She has been working for the probation service since 2006 and was more recently office assistant.
At White’s condemnation hearing, the District Deputy Prosecutor described Garrison described his actions as “a blatant abuse of public confidence” and said that she had “repeated and detailed attempts to have her son hide and avoid the consequences for the murder of another human being in cold blood”.
The deputy public defender Graydon Rose asked the judge of the Superior Court CJ Mody to consider alternatives to prison, such as home detention, citing the lack of criminal history of his client, a plea of early guilt and “although certainly not excusable or a legal defense”, that she was motivated by wanting to help his son.
Mody said that when he had initially taken the change of plea, he accepted a sentence no more than a year, but said that after learning additional “flagrant” facts on the case, he would rather have considered a longer sentence with the possibility of the state prison sentence. The judge finally decided to honor the initial advocacy agreement, but said that the guard was appropriate.
The District Prosecutor’s Office requested as a result of his release of detention, the time of White in probation will not be supervised by anyone with whom she worked directly in the county probation department.
Originally published:
California Daily Newspapers