Bonnie M. Dumanis | |
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San Diego County District Attorney | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office 2003 |
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Preceded by | Paul Pfingst |
Personal details | |
Born | December 16, 1951 Brokton United States |
Political party | Republican |
Residence | San Diego |
Alma mater | University of Massachusetts Amherst Western State University College of Law |
Occupation | Attorney |
Website | [1] |
Bonnie M. Dumanis (born December 16, 1951, Brockton, Massachusetts) is currently the District Attorney of San Diego County. Dumanis has been the District Attorney since 2003, when she defeated incumbent Paul Pfingst.[1] Dumanis is currently running for Mayor of San Diego.[2]
Dumanis, a Republican, is the first openly gay or lesbian DA in the country.[3] She is the first Jewish woman to hold the post of District Attorney in San Diego.[4]
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Dumanis received a Bachelor of Arts in sociology from the University of Massachusetts Amherst. She received her Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from Western State University College of Law (now Thomas Jefferson School of Law) in 1976,[5][6] and was admitted to the bar in 1977. Her first job as a junior typist in San Diego County as she studied law at night. Following admission, she served as a Deputy District Attorney from 1978 to 1990. In 1994, Dumanis was elected to the Municipal Court where she would serve for four years and started the first Drug Courts in San Diego, which has been recognized as a national model. In 1998, Dumanis was elected to the San Diego Superior Court where she started, a program called Domestic Violence Court to reduce reoccurrences by perpetrators.[1]
Dumanis's office helped write and fought to pass:
John Albert Gardner III (born April 9, 1979) is an American convicted double murderer and sex offender. He confessed to the rape and murder of 14-year-old Amber Dubois from Escondido, California, the February 2010 rape and murder of 17-year-old Chelsea King from Poway, California, not far from Gardner's mother's home, where he lived, in the Rancho Bernardo community. Additionally, Gardner attempted to rape Candice Moncayo of San Diego County, and had been previously incarcerated for the molestation of a 13-year-old girl.
Dumanis has urged the U.S. Supreme Court to uphold a ban on handguns in Washington, D.C. Dumanis participated in an amicus curiae brief in the case D.C. v. Heller pending before the U.S. Supreme Court, supporting the District of Columbia's ban on keeping functional firearms in the home for self defense, and on the possession of handguns.[7][8][9]
In April, 2008, a woman accused and convicted by Dumanis's office of murder, was released, after two plus years of incarceration. Cynthia Sommer was convicted of fatally poisoning her Miramar Marine husband with arsenic. Charges were dropped on reasonable doubt after conclusions reached by toxicology experts during a review, prompted by the defense, of the evidence used for trial and conviction. Dumanis said her office acted based on available evidence, when it charged Sommer with murder in March 2006 and tried her in January 2007.[10]
In February 2009, the District Attorney's office filed charges against 33 individuals charged in a drug investigation called Endless Summer. In a press conference for the operation DA Dumanis said the investigation was to protect military housing. The local news also ran the DA's story.[11] After further investigation it was revealed that fourteen of those arrested are medical marijuana patients who were the initial target of the investigation named Green RX. A number of those charged were shown not to have any ties to the military, as had been claimed by Dumanis' office.[12]
Since that time at least two of the 14 medical marijuana defendants have been acquitted by juries, further calling into question her investigation.[13][14]
Legal offices | ||
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Preceded by Paul Pfingst |
San Diego County District Attorney 2003–present |
Incumbent |