With DA unable to show cause, kidnapping and sexual assault charges against Bay Area man dismissed

A Solano County Superior Court judge on Wednesday dismissed a felony case against a Fairfield man suspected of kidnapping and sexual assault in January because the deputy district attorney was unable to show cause.

Judge Jeffrey Kauffman dismissed the case against Gleen Alan Dunn, 62, during the morning session when Deputy District Attorney Elaine Kuo was unable to fulfill the show-cause order, official court records indicated. The judge also vacated a preliminary hearing scheduled for July 8 in the Justice Center in Fairfield.

Deputy Public Defender Denisse Tanasa represented Dunn.

As previously reported, detectives from the Suisun City Police Department responded to Kaiser Hospital in Vallejo Jan. 28 for a report of a sexual assault and kidnapping that occurred in the area of Walters Road and Highway 12 in Suisun City.

Related Articles

Crime and Public Safety |


Bay Area man pleads to assault on a cop, faces seven years in prison

Crime and Public Safety |


Oakland FBI raid subject linked to establishment suspected of human trafficking, selling drugs

Crime and Public Safety |


Thieves hit multiple homes, vehicles in Moraga

Crime and Public Safety |


CHP seeks information on East Bay freeway shooting

Crime and Public Safety |


Man killed, woman wounded in Oakland shootings

Sgt. Sig Neri said the victim identified Dunn as the alleged perpetrator. A joint effort by local police departments allowed officials to locate him in Fairfield.

Dunn was taken into custody on Jan. 30, and booked into the Solano County Jail on suspicion of several felony charges, including kidnapping, false imprisonment, rape by force and threat, assault with intent to rape and making criminal threats.

  Letters: Cost of protest | Homeless program | Ploy for office | Transparent recount | Equity grading

Over the following weeks and months, the defense attorney and prosecutor discussed the facts of the case and it remained unresolved until Wednesday.

Details on why Kauffman dismissed the case are somewhat unclear from court records, but, generally, a prosecutor will go forward with a case if he or she believes the charges are supported by probable cause, that the evidence will be sufficient to support conviction beyond a reasonable doubt, and that the decision to charge is in the interest of justice.

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *