Crime & Safety
Orange County District Attorney: Former Orange County Deputy Sheriffs Plead Guilty To Filing A False Police Report
Mora is no longer employed by the Orange County Sheriff's Department.
October 30, 2021
SANTA ANA, Calif. β A former Orange County Sheriffβs deputy has pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of filing a false police report in connection with failing to properly book evidence. An Orange County superior court judge agreed to reduce the felony to a misdemeanor over the objection of prosecutors. Edwin Morales Mora, 45, was indicted on August 5, 2020 by a grand jury on one felony count of filing a false police report. On August 30, 2017, Mora, while employed as an Orange County Sheriffβs deputy, knowingly wrote and filed a false police report that stated he booked a knife, methamphetamine, and a glass smoking pipe into the Sheriffβs evidence locker in Santa Ana. He never booked the evidence. Mora is no longer employed by the Orange County Sheriffβs Department. Mora is the third former Orange County Sheriffβs deputy to be convicted of lying in police reports as a result of the fallout of an Orange County Sheriffβs Department audit that revealed systematic evidence booking issues. Joseph Anthony Atkinson, Jr., 39, and Bryce Richmond Simpson, 31, each pleaded guilty on June 5, 2020 to one misdemeanor count of willful omission to perform their official duty. Atkinson and Simpson were both sentenced to one year informal probation. Simpson became an Orange County Sheriffβs Deputy in 2012.
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Atikinson was hired in April 2013. Neither is currently employed by the Orange County Sheriffβs Department. In mid-November 2019, District Attorney Todd Spitzer became aware of the extent of evidence booking issues within the Orange County Sheriffβs Department (OCSD) and the existence of department-wide internal audits. District Attorney Spitzer had not been made aware of the extent of these audits previously and only became aware of the matter on November 15, 2019 when he was informed about it from a local newspaper reporter. Upon learning of the full extent of the audits, District Attorney Spitzer immediately requested additional information from the Sheriffβs Department about potentially impacted criminal cases to ensure that the District Attorneyβs Office was able to βidentify any and all cases handled by the OCDA where a defendantβs due process rights may have been negatively impacted by having evidence collected but not booked.β
District Attorney Spitzer also directed two senior prosecutors to oversee the officeβs response. Because of the deficiencies in the Sheriffβs audit, District Attorney Spitzer ordered a hand-search of all cases resulting in a conviction over a three-year period β from March 2015 to March 2018 β to determine if there were cases where evidence was collected but not booked. The OCDA reports on the Sheriffβs Department Evidence Booking Issues can be found here. In 2020, District Attorney Spitzer re-opened the criminal investigation of Simpson, Atkinson, Mora and the 14 other Orange County Sheriffβs deputies accused of not properly booking evidence after personally reviewing each file himself. Sixteen of the deputies have been added to the District Attorneyβs Brady Notification System. Brady v. Maryland requires prosecutors to disclose to the defense any material exculpatory evidence, including evidence that could be used to impeach police witnesses. As a result of the additional review, the District Attorneyβs Office hired veteran prosecutor Patrick K. OβToole as a special prosecutor to review the 17 cases and determine if criminal charges were warranted. OβToole served as the United States Attorney of the Southern District of California and as the head of the San Diego District Attorneyβs Public Integrity Division.
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βThe public has an absolute expectation that their law enforcement officers will carry out their duties lawfully and truthfully,β said Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer. βWhen law enforcement officers falsify reports and break the law, it deprives defendants and victims of their constitutional rights, jeopardizes the criminal justice system, and erodes the public trust. As soon as I was made aware of this situation, I immediately took action to ensure the rights of victims and defendants were safeguarded and to hold those who violated the law accountable.β
This press release was produced by Orange County District Attorney. The views expressed here are the authorβs own.