We thought we'd bring you up to speed here with a bizarre event that occurred during the Ayres trial in California in 2009. .
Reporter Victoria Balfour- who blew the whistle on Ayres; investigated him for five years and turned over the names of victims she had found to the San Mateo Police Department so that they could get a search warrant- called San Mateo Chief Deputy DA Steve Wagstaffe in May 2009 and asked if it would be OK to attend the trial.
Sure, Wagstaffe told Balfour. Come on out. We're not calling you as a witness. And it would be "suicide" for Ayres' lawyer to call you.
So Balfour buys a plane ticket from New York to California. She's been waiting for this day for five years, ever since a stranger named Steve confided to her in 2002 that he had been molested by a child psychiatrist named Dr. William Ayres.
But when she gets into the courtroom, something bad happens. Prosecutor Melissa Mckowan- who would not have been trying the Ayres case had it not been for Balfour's work, comes barreling over to Balfour and says in a manner that is both hostile and threatening: "What are you doing here? If Ayres' lawyer sees you he is going to subpoena you." Balfour, shocked by the prosecutor's hostile tone, replied, " I checked with your boss, Steve Wagstaffe, and he gave me the go-ahead to come out here. He said I wouldn't be called as a witness."
This made Mckowan even angrier. "Steve doesn't know what he's talking about!" she snapped. (Gee, one would think one would think twice about talking about one's boss like that in public- especially as the mother of an Ayres victim was sitting right next to Balfour and heard the whole thing!) Mckowan insisted that Ayres' lawyer was going to call her to the stand.
Confused, traumatized and upset, Balfour went immediately up to the office of Mckowan's boss, Steve Wagstaffe. He assured her that Mckowan was wrong, that Ayres' lawyer would never call her to the stand and that she had "every right" to be in the courtroom. Wagstaffe agreed that Mckowan had acted improperly towards Balfour and promised to speak with Mckowan.
It does not appear that he did, because the hostility from Mckowan towards Balfour escalated over the next few days. Mckowan's statement that Ayres' lawyer would subpoena Balfour appears to be off the mark - which was understandable because he didn't know what Balfour looked like!
But Mckowan was determined to get Balfour out of the courtroom- Finally, she made her move. During a pretrial hearing, the judge in the Ayres case announced that anyone who was going to be a witness had to leave the courtroom. Weinberg looked at Balfour and did not ask her to leave. Of course he wouldn't as he knew she was never going to be a witness!! It was Mckowan who leaned over to Ayres' lawyer, giggling, and pointed out Balfour to Ayres' lawyer. It was only then that Weinberg, Ayres' lawyer, in a casual fashion asked Balfour to leave. The look of triumph on Mckowan's face was something to behold.
Balfour went back up to the office of Steve Wagstaffe who for the third time stated that Balfour had every right to be in the courtroom and would never be called as a defense witness. He promised to speak to Mckowan about helping Balfour- the person who handed the DA their case- to get back in the courtoom. Later, Wagstaffe told Balfour in a voice mail ( like a coward he called Balfour and left a voice mail at 5:01 pm , when the courts had already closed) and told her there was nothing he could do to help Balfour as Mckowan had accepted Balfour's exclusion and had not asked Ayres' lawyer for "offer of proof." That's what good prosecutors do when they think someone is being unfairly excluded from the courtroom. But not Mckowan!
Fortunately, Balfour had some feisty journalist friends back in New York City who urged her to fight the exclusionary order. So Balfour even found herself, with some trouble, a local lawyer who agreed to work pro bono and help her get back into the courtroom. But meanwhile, she was missing the trial -- the trial that wouldn't be happening had it not been for her investigative and advocacy work.
The news for Balfour got worse. When her lawyer called Mckowan, Mckowan was, the lawyer told Balfour,"Extremely hostile" to the idea of permitting Balfour into the courtroom. Balfour felt betrayed by the San Mateo County DA's office, and in truth, she was.
No one -including some of Balfour's friends who were partners in shark -like law firms in New York City could figure out what was up with Mckowan and her aversion to having her in the courtroom. Nor could they figure out what the heck was up with the bizarre mixed messages the DA's office was sending to Balfour. On the one hand, there was Steve Wagstaffe, next in line for the top DA job, assuring Balfour that she had every right to be in the courtroom. Then you have his employee, Melissa Mckowan who appeared to have a demonic need to shover her out. Balfour's lawyer friends back in New York couldn't figure out what was up with the San Mateo DA's office Was Wagstaffe a weak manager with no control over his out of control employees, they asked themselves? Or was he just being two-faced- telling Balfour whatever she wanted to hear?
It took Balfour two attempts and three lawyers to finally get back in to see the trial. But by that time she had missed more than half of it- a trial she had been hoping to see for five years.
And this is the part we don't get: after being so hostile and doing everything she could to keep Balfour out of the courtroom, the first day Balfour was able to attend the trial - with no thanks to Steve Wagstaffe or the San Mateo District Attorney's office- prosecutor Mckowan actually had the gall to walk up to Balfour and ask her if she would look over Ayres' resume - which was pages and pages long- to see if it was "Ok." People wondered how Mckowan dare ask Balfour such a thing... What we were more concerned about was why Mckowan was asking Balfour to check out Ayres' resume.... five minutes before she was to cross examine Ayres!!
To be continued.....