Report: RV park killer kept sons despite molestation allegations

Posted by adminwp | RV Park | Wednesday 22 February 2012 10:00 am

William DeJesus' youngest son called him the “Monster.”

At a Polk County foster home, the boy shrieked from nightmares and insisted the Monster was hiding under his bed.

He had good reason to fear: DeJesus had been accused of beating, stabbing and raping the boy's mother, who, in turn, once told authorities the couple had repeatedly molested the boy and his older brother.

But the “Monster” didn't remain under the bed.

Two weeks ago, DeJesus, 41, drove his family to a Deerfield Beach trailer home, killed the occupant and held police at bay for seven hours while he stabbed each member of his own family before killing himself. DeJesus' oldest son, 9-year-old Jeshiah, was pronounced dead at the scene; born disabled, he never uttered a word in his short life. His brother, 7, was hospitalized with a knife blade stuck in his head. He remained impaled for a day before a surgeon could remove it.

The youngster and DeJesus' wife, 37-year-old Deanna Beauchamp, are now recovering.

In the weeks since Jeshiah's death, Broward Sheriff's Office detectives have tried to figure out why DeJesus chose to execute the man in the quiet Broward neighborhood and why he tried to wipe out his own family.

But there is also this question: How could state child-protection administrators' actions toward the family have ended so tragically?

The inquiry centers on a petition the Department of Children & Families filed — and later withdrew — seeking to permanently sever the rights of DeJesus and Beauchamp to their young sons.

A foster mother had warned darkly that she was “afraid for the children if they are returned.”

But returned they were.

Said Joe Follick, the Department of Children & Families spokesman: “Obviously this is a terrible tragedy. Our immediate focus is in ensuring that the surviving child receives everything he needs.”

Records of the case — 500 pages of which were given to The Miami Herald under the state's public records law — paint a picture of an agency acting swiftly to strip DeJesus and Beauchamp of all parental rights until an abrupt about-face in May 2009. Then, agency workers were equally determined to keep the family intact — even in the face of warnings that the boys were in danger.

The surviving child is not being named to protect his privacy.

DeJesus' involvement with child-protection workers actually began several years earlier, when New York state permanently severed his right to children from a prior marriage. Records show DeJesus had been accused of abusing his former wife and molesting their children. The wife obtained an order barring DeJesus from contacting her or the children for five years.

By 2007, DeJesus and Beauchamp were raising two boys in Florida. Jeshiah was 4 and suffered from autism. His brother was 2 and was also being tested for a developmental disability. DCF's child-abuse hotline received a report on Sept. 18, 2007. During a drinking binge, DeJesus had choked his wife and punched his children's bedroom door, leaving a hole.

A police report on the incident said DeJesus had a handgun on the couch when officers arrived. Beauchamp was crying. “Thank you, thank you,” she said. “You saved me.”

The abuse had gone on, Beauchamp said, for eight years, and she showed an investigator scars to prove it. Beauchamp said DeJesus had stabbed her, punched her in the stomach, causing a miscarriage, and pushed her in the bathtub, leading to a back injury.

DCF filed a dependency petition in court, asking a judge to order the family to accept the agency's help and supervision, but the children were not taken into protective custody. “No evidence of physical or sexual abuse to the children, nor is any suspected,” an investigator wrote.

But the evidence soon followed. In February 2008, after Beauchamp left DeJesus and went to a domestic violence shelter, she told authorities that both parents had been molesting the children.

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Maple Falls RV park blaze destroys mobile home

Posted by adminwp | RV Park | Wednesday 22 February 2012 2:11 am

MAPLE FALLS – A mobile home, its attachments and a trailer were destroyed by a mid-morning blaze at the Glen at Maple Falls RV park Tuesday, Feb. 21

The fire started after 9 a.m. and soon engulfed the mobile home. The home was attached to a 15-by-20-foot wood shed and 20-by-20-foot deck, which also burned, said Fire District 14 Chief Jerry DeBruin.

An electrical problem appears to be the cause, he said.

The Canadian owners were at the park during the weekend, DeBruin said. Estimated damage is $50,000.

Although nearby homes were separated from the fire by only a fence, 17 firefighters, two engines and a tender were able to contain the blaze and put it out before it spread.

The fire was reported by residents almost a quarter-mile down the road, who said they heard popping and saw the home was already burning.

“Two propane tanks were venting and it made things a little more interesting,” DeBruin said.

The area is surrounded by trees, but the rainy conditions helped prevent the trees from igniting into a big fire.

“Fortunately, there wasn't any wind. If we had that in the middle of the summer it could have flamed up and put the trees on fire,” DeBruin said. “In the summer this could have been a different story.”

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Emerald Desert Rv Resort and Classic Club Golf Course Host Charity Golf Tournament — Palm Desert and Hemet Golfers …

Posted by adminwp | RV Park | Tuesday 21 February 2012 6:06 pm

Sunland RV Resorts, a Southern California luxury RV Park and Resort company, invites guests from its premier resorts, Emerald Desert RV Resort and Golden Village Palms RV Resort, to participate in a charity golf tournament at renowned Classic Club Golf Course in Palm Desert. The Children’s Fund, a non-profit organization created to prevent child abuse, will receive a percentage of the tournament proceeds. The tournament will take place on Thursday March 1, 2012 at the Classic Club course with a limited registration of 60 golfers.

Palm Desert, California (PRWEB) February 21, 2012

Sunland RV Resorts, a Southern California luxury RV Park and Resort company, invites guests from its premier resorts, Emerald Desert RV Resort and Golden Village Palms RV Resort, to participate in a charity golf tournament at renowned Classic Club Golf Course in Palm Desert. The Children’s Fund, a non-profit organization created to prevent child abuse, will receive a percentage of the tournament proceeds. The tournament will take place on Thursday March 1, 2012 at the Classic Club course with a limited registration of 60 golfers.

Charity: Children’s Fund

When: Thursday, March 1, 2012

Tee-off: 12:30 PM

Where: Classic Club Golf Course

75200 Classic Club Blvd

Palm Desert, California 92211

Fee: $75 per player

Registration: Register at Emerald Desert RV Resort

Limited Entry: 60 Players

The event originated at the Emerald Desert RV Resort property as the popular Palm Desert RV destination has been a long time partner with Classic Club Golf Course. The Classic Club extends a $99 discounted rate from a regular $129 a round rate to Emerald Desert guests. This tournament, a charity fund raiser for the Children’s Fund, is just $75 per player giving Sunland’s golf aficionados and philanthropists an opportunity to explore a course that has been rated one of the “Top Five New Public Courses in the Americas,” by Golf Week.

Emerald Desert and Golden Village Palms RV Resort management work hard to give back to their communities. In addition to this event, the two properties have held events in support of the Wounded Warrior Foundation, The Heart Foundation, the Spark of Love Toy Drive, the Hemet Hospice, and local first responders all in the last few months.

More about:

Emerald Desert RV Resort – http://www.emeralddesert.com

Golden Village Palms RV Resort – http://www.goldenvillagepalms.com

Children’s Fund – http://www.childrensfundonline.org/

Classic Club Golf Course – http://www.classicclubgolf.com

About Sunland RV Resorts:

Sunland RV Resorts is an outdoor resort hospitality company established to develop strategic outdoor resort travel destinations in America with accessibility to world famous southern California destinations. With seven resorts throughout Southern California from Palm Desert to San Diego, Sunland RV Resorts offers a range of amenities and recreation activities both on and near resort locations, giving our guests the best the RV industry has to offer in outdoor hospitality.

# # #

Lenora Lostaunau
Sunland RV Resorts
858-456-9201 1107
Email Information

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Righteous Vendetta RV Parking Tour 1/2 – Video

Posted by adminwp | RV Park | Tuesday 21 February 2012 6:32 am


19-01-2010 14:17

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Righteous Vendetta RV Parking Tour 1/2 – Video

LAGOONS RV RESORT Rockport Texas – Video

Posted by admin | RV Park | Tuesday 21 February 2012 6:32 am


27-03-2010 21:18 A true luxury resort with an indoor pool and a terrific club house complex. You can buy a cute cottage onsite here, too.

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LAGOONS RV RESORT Rockport Texas – Video

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Marathon RV park finally getting sewered

Posted by admin | RV Park | Sunday 19 February 2012 6:44 am

By RYAN McCARTHY

This sign at Jessie Hobbs Park has worn out its life and will be replaced.

Just more than a year after the city of Marathon and Key RV mobile-home park settled a long-running lawsuit over sewer fees, the latter will finally be sewered.

The City Council on Tuesday awarded a $657,322 contract to Caribe Utilities of Florida Inc. to install a wastewater collection system at the mile marker 50.5 park.

The Key RV homeowners association sued the city in October 2008 alleging discrimination in assessing park residents more than $1 million combined to connect to the citywide sewer system. Several versions of potential settlements bounced around and the sides finally agreed in January 2011.

As part of the agreement, Key RV will pay the city to construct the system, while “Key RV will retain ownership and the responsibility for operations.” Park owners will also be responsible for lateral connections from their lots to the system.

The lawsuit boiled down to whether it's legal to charge the park's individual owners the same sewer fees as other equivalent dwelling units in the city based on the form of ownership. The mobile-home park switched to a condominium form of ownership in 2004.

Single-family homeowners in Marathon pay a combined $5,700 per equivalent dwelling unit; that represents the connection fee and a system development charge, which is what Key RV residents will pay.

The council also took the following actions Tuesday:

Unanimously approved replacing the dilapidated sign at Jessie Hobbs Park at U.S. 1 and 41st Street.

The $800 sign will be an exact replica of the existing sign. Vice Mayor Dick Ramsay represented the city at Martin Luther King Jr. Day festivities at the park and saw its condition.

Councilman Mike Cinque has suggested the city consider building a bathroom at the park. That will be addressed during budget season this summer.

The sign will be designed and built by Signs By Renee on Coco Plum Drive.

Renewed a contract with lobbying firm Floridian Partners LLC for $5,000 per month over 18 months.

City Manager Roger Hernstadt told the council the city intentionally delayed renewing the contract to further evaluate the firm. He said the firm represented the city well in securing 100 hotel-room allocations from the state Cabinet last month.

The $5,000 monthly price tag equals $60,000 annually. That's up from the previous $46,350 per year total. “In my estimation, for cities of this size, a typical rate is $5,000 per month in the current marketplace,” Hernstadt said.

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Structure at Vegas RV park catches fire

Posted by admin | RV Park | Friday 17 February 2012 9:39 pm

LAS VEGAS (FOX5) –

No one was hurt in a fire at a recreational vehicle park outbuilding Friday morning.

The fire happened in the area of Buckskin Avenue and N. Buffalo Drive around 5:31 a.m., Las Vegas Fire and Rescue reported.

Fire officials said crews engaged in a heavy fire attack on an outbuilding storing an RV but were able to contain it within 10 minutes of arriving on scene.

Part of the RV and a boat was damaged by the fire. No estimate on damage was disclosed.

The fire's cause is under investigation.

Copyright 2012 KVVU (KVVU Broadcasting Corporation). All rights reserved.

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Structure at Vegas RV park catches fire

Posted by admin | RV Park | Friday 17 February 2012 9:39 pm

LAS VEGAS (FOX5) –

No one was hurt in a fire at a recreational vehicle park outbuilding Friday morning.

The fire happened in the area of Buckskin Avenue and N. Buffalo Drive around 5:31 a.m., Las Vegas Fire and Rescue reported.

Fire officials said crews engaged in a heavy fire attack on an outbuilding storing an RV but were able to contain it within 10 minutes of arriving on scene.

Part of the RV and a boat was damaged by the fire. No estimate on damage was disclosed.

The fire's cause is under investigation.

Copyright 2012 KVVU (KVVU Broadcasting Corporation). All rights reserved.

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County settles RV park dispute

Posted by admin | RV Park | Friday 17 February 2012 8:12 am

Escambia County commissioners on Thursday settled a dispute with developers building an RV park on Pensacola Beach.

They unanimously approved a settlement agreement between Escambia County and Holiday Holding Trust, the developer of a $2.4 million RV park on the beach.

The developers agreed in the settlement to comply with a county code enforcement order requiring them to remove thousands of cubic yards of discolored sand from the building site.

The settlement was recommended by local attorney William Bond, who mediated the settlement between the two parties.

Pensacola attorney and developer Jim Reeves and businessman Thomas Bizzell, with Holiday Holding Trust, had challenged a county action ordering them to remove discolored sand from the RV park construction site.

An ordinance ? designed to protect the white-sand beach ? was cited by the county to order the top two feet of discolored sand removed from the island without spilling a grain.

Reeves initially said the order was too financially burdensome and would add $100,000 to his project.

However, during mediation, Reeves' attorney, Wes Reeder, said the developers already had removed 3,198 cubic yards of the 3,407 yards of discolored sand required by the county, and only needed to remove an additional 209 yards to be in compliance.

The developer's attorneys must prove they hauled off the sand through a sworn affidavit and supporting documentation showing dump truck “trip tickets.”

“They will not be free and clear until there is written confirmation from the Community and Environment Department verifying the loads,” said County Attorney Alison Rogers.

The developers will be required to come into compliance within 48 hours of commissioners' approval of the settlement.

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Split vote approves Paso's newest RV park

Posted by admin | RV Park | Friday 17 February 2012 6:11 am

PHOTO 1: An artist's rendering by world-renowned artist Steve Kalar of San Miguel depicts the facade on the new Paso Robles Motorcoach/RV resort. PHOTO 2: Project components in the project will help alleviate nearby flooding, which can occur during even minor rain events, according to City Engineer John Falkenstein. PHOTO 3: This architectural drawing shows how the project will look. Courtesy images. Paso Robles' newest RV park/resort is now approved, despite some changes to the project that ignited concerns from a group of neighbors concerned about perceived impacts.

On Tuesday, the Paso Robles Planning Commission voted 4-3 with commissioners Joel Peterson, Chuck Treatch and Margaret Holstine dissenting to approve changes made to the Paso Robles Recreational Vehicle Resort and approved its application.

The resort, located on a 73-acre site at the northeastern end of Golden Hill Road near the Lowe's commercial development, was originally reviewed by the commission last month but was continued to allow more time for city staff to work with the applicants to gather information following issues raised by the commissioners and a group of vehemently opposed neighbors and nearby residents.

“I'm in favor of the project,” said commissioner Doug Barth. “I think they have done a lot of work, and I think they've addressed the concerns of the neighbors. It's denser in some spaces, granted, but I think the applicant has taken a project, tweaked it a little bit and made it fit into today's environment and actually made it better.”

He went on to say, “It's not perfect, but I think it's a good project. I think that ultimately this will end up a better situation for all.”

According to project representative Larry Werner of North Coast Engineering, changes made to the project were the direct result of the economy, and the changes made thereafter were designed to coincide with residents' concerns. Among them, the location of fencing, traffic impact fee confusion, RV stacking at the registration office/entry road, number of tent camping sites, check-in hours, drainage and architectural elevations.

The project entitlements were originally approved back in 2009 as a high-end motorcoach resort. However, the new changes changed the project focus from a motorcoach resort to an RV park. That was the crux of many of the neighbors concerns.

Werner said that the changes were made, in part, because approval came when the economy was “going off the cliff.”

“In today's world it's not a viable approach,” Werner said of the motorcoach approach, adding that the project changed in the last five years to have more broad uses, including several sites available for campers who may be visiting the RVs at the site. There are roughly 10 such sites on the project.

But not everyone agreed that the project was in the best interest of the city.

Peterson said he was not comfortable approving the project due to the changes made.

“It's too drastic of a change from what we saw last time when we saw a motorcoach (resort),” Peterson said.

Holsten said it has been a tough project for her, having seen the project several times over the past few years.

Despite neighborly concerns that the project was being “fast-tracked,” Holstein argued the contrary.

“We're not fast-tracking it,” Holstein said. “I personally feel that this is a different project than when originally approved. When it was presented to us it was presented…as a high-end motorcoach resort.”

She concluded, “I truly do believe that it's a different project; it's totally different from what we saw in the beginning,” and went on to question city staff, “I'm not understanding why we're back here hearing this again if it's not a changed project, and if you can answer that question for me, I?d appreciate it.”

Community Development Director Ed Gallagher then, following an explanation including remarks that the project had increased density, said, “I don't feel comfortable doing that (approving it), that's why it's here back in front of you.”

Other commissioners like Steve Gregory appeared comfortable with the changes being made. His comments, and those of others in favor of the project, came following an explanation by Gallagher of the nature of projects like this.

“I have sat in this room for 26 years, and I have gone through many a hearing that is controversial like this, and it's not uncommon to have a vacant piece of property where it's developed have the biggest problems in the world,” Gallagher said, citing Sierra Bonita and the concerns of residents that noise made by children would cause heart attacks. Gallagher cautioned that such concerns are typical in such projects.

Gregory, and all of the commissioners for that matter, thanked the residents for coming out to the hearing and that he appreciated their involvement.

“I'm sorry ? it's not a different project, it's a smaller project that's changed,” Gregory said. “I think they have done everything they can do to make this a better project for you.”

Gregory and others commended the development team for making improvements at their own will such as improving drainage issues in an already troubled nearby section of roadway, which periodically floods during even minor rain events. The project team plans to install piping that would help solve that problem.

Chairman Al Garcia thanked neighbors and said it was a tough decision. Garcia said he thinks the project coincides well with the city's Purple Belt strategy and that in an ideal world, farmland would stay that way permanently. But in reality, the project proposal was sound.

“I think it's a worthwhile project,” Garcia said. “I applaud the community, and I applaud the applicant for making it a good project.”

According to Werner, improvements include a more compact design, relocation of a gate near Circle B Road and alleviation of a flooding problem that occurs near the site ? though not attributed to being caused by the particular site at-hand.

Werner said that the project endured several changes, part due to the economy and in reflection of residents' concerns.

“This is a classic story of a good idea that bites you in the butt,” Werner said of the proposed camping sites, which received a vehement backlash from neighbors.

n Neighborly concerns

During the public hearing, several residents cited a host of concerns ranging from access issues to their property, concerns that the campsites would be unruly and draw in crime and bad elements, stacking of cars along the road fronting the property, flooding, noise, and the overall concern that the project had changed for the worse.

Among them, Dennis Spooltra is the president of the Circle B Springs Homeowners Association.

Spoolstra, who lives on the 3600 block of Golden Hill Road, said that, among other things, he wanted the camping component eliminated.

He went on to say, “Ask yourself, what kind of business is going to want to buy property and put a business on it where there are a lot of RVs?”

Spoolstra urged the commission to re-consider…

For the complete article see the 02-17-2012 issue.

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