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Dale Akiki Case 
describes crimes
Ex-School Volunteer Acquitted of Child Abuse Charges Verdict: After  
deliberating for just seven hours, jury finds Dale Akiki not guilty on all 35  
counts. 
Trial was longest in San Diego’s history. Los Angeles  Times  - Los Angeles, 
Calif. - Michael Granberry - Nov 20, 1993
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or+just+seven+hours%2C+jury+finds+Dale+Akiki+not+guilty+on+all+35+counts.+Tria
l+was+longest+in+San+Diego%27s+history_ 
(http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/60254778.html?dids=60254778:60254778&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&da
te=Nov+20,+1993&author=MICHAEL+GRANBERRY&pub=Los+Angeles+Times+(pre-1997+Fullt
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harges+Verdict:+After+deliberating+for+just+seven+hours,+jury+finds+Dale+Akiki
+not+guilty+on+all+35+counts.+Trial+was+longest+in+San+Diego's+history)  
A Superior Court jury concluded a 7 1/2-month trial Friday by acquitting a  
former nursery school volunteer of 35 counts of child abuse and kidnaping that  
had kept him jailed without bail for 2 1/2 years…. 
Nearly 170 witnesses testified during Akiki’s trial-the longest in San Diego  
history-which ended after only seven hours of jury deliberation…. 
Several on the (jury) panel sided with Akiki’s attorneys, public defenders  
Kathleen Coyne and Susan Clemens, who tried to show that Akiki’s alleged  
victims-nine boys and girls between the ages of 3 and 5-had been systematically 
 
brainwashed by parents and therapists. 
But Deputy Dist. Atty. Mary Avery, the lead prosecutor, disputed such  
claims. 
“The whole idea of contamination and suggestibility just does not account for 
 the major behavior changes that occurred (in the children) while they were 
in  Dale Akiki’s (nursery school) class,” she said, referring to such 
incidents as  bed-wetting and nightmares. 
Witnesses accused Akiki of sexually molesting and terrorizing children at  
Faith Chapel charismatic church in Spring Valley by hanging them upside-down  
from a chandelier, dunking them in toilets and making them drink the blood of  
animals in ritualistic ceremonies. 
Molestation Hearing Continues Next Week - Los Angeles Times - February 8,  
1992 - San Diego County Edition 
….Deputy Dist. Atty. Mary Avery has called some of the parents to testify  
about behavioral changes they observed in the children.   “There were  drastic 
changes observed,” Avery said.     Defense attorney  Kate Coyne, however, 
maintains that Akiki has been falsely accused by parents  who did not like his 
physical appearance. 
Judge Rejects Bail for Suspect In Molestations at Preschool - Los Angeles  
Times - May 25, 1991 Amy Wallace; Times Staff Writer 
….But Deputy Dist. Atty. Mary Avery, the prosecutor, said that, in addition  
to the grand jury testimony of seven children who attended the Faith Chapel in 
 Casa de Oro, her case will rely on behavioral symptoms observed by parents  
months before any allegations of abuse were raised. 
One mother said her daughter was so terrified of having her head near water  
that it was impossible to wash her hair, Avery said. Grand jury testimony 
later  revealed that at least one child had had her head dunked in a toilet, 
she  
said. 
Testimony was also heard that a child became hysterical when he was taken to  
a hospital to get stitches, apparently because he had a flashback of “the  
defendant holding him down and hurting him,” Avery said. The indictment filed  
against Akiki said he inflicted injuries on children with a needle. 
Avery maintained that some of the children remain so traumatized by Akiki’s  
treatment that they have attempted suicide–one by running in front of a car,  
another with a knife. 
Other Suspects Added to Child Sex Abuse Probe - Los Angeles Times - May 15,  
1991 -  Amy Wallace; Times Staff Writer 
As many as three former child care workers at Faith Chapel in Spring Valley  
are suspected of molesting and abusing preschoolers over a 15-month period  
ending in August, 1989, a San Diego County prosecutor said Tuesday. 
Speaking after the arraignment of Dale Anthony Akiki, a  former church  
volunteer who was indicted last week on 50 felony counts of child molestation  
and 
related charges, Deputy Dist. Atty. Mary Avery said two other former child  
care workers are being investigated…. 
According to the 13-page indictment, which a grand jury returned after  
hearing live televised testimony from seven of the children, Akiki abused them  
sexually and physically, at times using a bottle top, a toy, a glass, a stick  
and a needle. 
Church Volunteer Indicted in Molestations - Los Angeles Times - May 14, 1991  
- Amy Wallace; Alan Abrahamson; Times Staff Writers 
….Soon, Avery said, a couple of parents noticed that their children were  
exhibiting similar “unusual” and “regressive” behavior. The children had not 
yet  said they were abused, Avery said, but the parents observed a pattern. 
“In thinking it over, they realized the one thing the children had in common  
was they went to the same church,” she said. 
The church asked a licensed social worker to assess whether there was  
reasonable suspicion of abuse and, after talking to a few families, he reported 
 the 
case to the authorities. 
Avery began investigating in February, 1990. Since then, she said, the  
district attorney’s office has kept Akiki under periodic surveillance, “to make 
 
sure he was not working with children during the week or involved with child  
care in any way.” 
Avery said her case is strengthened by the fact that it relies on the  
children’s behavior as well as their testimony.    “It will focus  on behavior 
that 
was observed prior to the initial disclosure” of the alleged  abuse, she 
said. “So there cannot be a contamination issue regarding behavior  that 
occurred 
prior to anyone ever mentioning this to the children.” 
Unlike other child molestation cases that rely largely on the testimony of  
the victims, the Akiki case is “one which can be cleanly and coherently  
presented to a jury for their determination,” said Steve Casey, a spokesman for 
 the 
district attorney’s office.

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