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California officials attempt to house sexually violent offenders for the third time since 2021

For the third time in recent years, authorities are considering placing sex offender Merle Wakefield in a community in San Diego County – this time in Poway.

Placing Wakefield has been challenging: a proposed site in Mount Helix was quickly and loudly criticized by local residents in 2021, and another was withdrawn later that year so Wakefield could receive more treatment.

This week, a new home was proposed for him at 15720 Sycamore Canyon Road, north of the Goodan Ranch Nature Preserve, and opposition is already building.

Merle Wade Wakefield, 67, was recommended for placement in a home at 15720 Sycamore Canyon Road in Poway by the California Department of State Hospitals. (San Diego County Sheriff's Department)
Merle Wade Wakefield, 67, was recommended by the California Department of State Hospitals for placement at a home located at 15720 Sycamore Canyon Road in Poway. (San Diego County Sheriff’s Department) Courtesy of San Diego County Sheriff’s Department

If approved, Wakefield, 67, would be the eighth sex offender to be housed in a San Diego County community.

A hearing to discuss the proposed placement is scheduled for August 9 at 9 a.m. in Department 1704 with Judge Yvonne Campos of the San Diego Superior Court. Public comments will be accepted through July 22 via email to [email protected], by phone at (858) 583-7238, or by mail to SVP Release/SAFE Task Force, 9425 Chesapeake Drive, San Diego, CA, 92123.

Depending on the court’s decision, comments may also be accepted during the August hearing.

Community members and elected officials did not hesitate to object.

Poway Mayor Steve Vaus said placing the home in Wakefield would be a “ticking time bomb” because the proposed home is near several equestrian facilities where women and girls often train.

“Poway will stand together and say: Not here, not now, not ever!” he said of the site.

Resident Amanda Corona, who lives on a street near the proposed site, said in an email that an elementary school, popular hiking trails and parks are all within a mile or two of Wakefield’s proposed address. She said the placement would pose risks “to the safety of our community, especially our children and families who frequent these areas.”

The proposal was also criticized by County Executive Joel Anderson and Republican Rep. Darrell Issa, whose districts include Poway.

“The California state government continues to force these offenders to move into neighborhoods where parents, children and seniors live,” Issa said. “There is a far better solution than the current broken system that seeks to force communities to accept the relocation of dozens of these violent offenders.”

In November, Issa introduced the Stopping Sexually Violent Predators Act.

The bill makes changes to an existing law, the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act. If passed, it would effectively ban the confinement of sexually violent offenders by prohibiting states from spending federal tax dollars to confine people with that classification outside of correctional facilities or closed medical facilities.

Most (if not all) sex offenders receive state-funded medical care, and by restricting the places where states can provide this care, community placement becomes much less likely, if not impossible.

According to prosecutors, Wakefield was convicted in 1981 of lewd acts with a minor under the age of 14. In 1990, Wakefield was convicted of rape by force or fear. He went to prison on both counts.