Crime & Safety
'Erica's Law' Regarding Body Dumping Goes Into Effect In 2018
Erica's Law goes into effect in 2018, offering more time to authorities in prosecuting someone who dumps a body to conceal a crime.

Erica's Law legislation with regard to prosecution of body dumpers, goes into effect in January of 2018, it was announced on Friday. The legislation was prompted by the dumping of the body of 27-year-old Erica Alonso in a creek bed near Ortega Highway and Hot Springs Canyon Road in 2015.
State Sen. Janet Nguyen, R-Garden Grove, sponsored the bill, which was signed Monday by Gov. Jerry Brown.
Nguyen had sought tougher penalties for anyone who dumps a body, but the new legislation, which takes effect Jan. 1, only extends the statute of limitations for such a crime.
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Although the new legislation did not enhance punishment for offenders, Nguyen said at a news conference that she considered it a "victory for the Alonso family, for other victims and their families and for the state of California... It's been over two years since we lost Erica but her legacy lives on through this legislation. Erica's Law honors her life, and provides future victims a greater opportunity for justice."
The law allows for charges to be filed for the concealment of an accidental death up to one year after a suspect is identified by law enforcement, but extends the statute of limitations to four years after the dumping of the body.
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The law "will provide investigators with additional ability to pursue and charge individuals who commit the crime of concealing a body due to an accidental death," Orange County Sheriff Sandra Hutchens said. "Extending the consequence for this crime will hopefully discourage individuals from failing to be forthcoming with law enforcement."
Alonso was last seen leaving her boyfriend's home in Irvine about 3:45 a.m. on Feb. 15, 2015. Authorities located her 2014 Honda Civic EX near Cedarbrook and Redwood in the Glenwood Park neighborhood of Aliso Viejo on March 25 of that year.
Orange County sheriff's investigators concluded it was not a homicide. Alonso had a lethal dose of alcohol and the drug GHB in her system, according to an autopsy that showed her blood-alcohol level was .22, nearly three times the legal limit for driving.
Read:
Body Found Near San Juan Capistrano: Erica Alonso's Family Visits Site
Local Tragedy Prompts Bill to Increase Consequences for Dumping a Body
City News Service contributed to this report.
Courtesy photo, provided by family.
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