The tale sounded like bullshit from the start. On the morning of Valentine’s Day, a
frantic woman called 911 and told a dispatcher that her male friend “got beat up by a
couple of guys” at Cal State Fullerton’s Fraternity Row, “and our [other] friend is
missing.”
The dispatcher calmly asked when everything happened. The worried voice on the
other side chatted with the alleged male victim, Reef Bensworth, before responding that it was about an hour ago. “And you’re just calling now?” the dispatcher asked.
Fullerton police quickly arrived to interview Bensworth, a Cal State Fullerton student,
and search for the missing friend, Kirsten Wooley. Bensworth told the ocers that
the two had decided to park on Fraternity Row for a 6 a.m. stroll aer a night of
partying in downtown Fullerton with friends. But three angry Latino dudes with a pit
bull interrupted their morning walk and accused them of slashing tires in the
neighborhood. They beat up Bensworth before he managed to escape, leaving behind
Wooley without her cell phone or purse. Bensworth later returned for the rescue, but
he couldn’t nd her on Frat Row or at his home, which is when he had his other
female friend call 911.
Wooley reappeared two hours later with her own horror tale, according to a police
report: Bensworth got jumped by six people; a bald man had dragged her by the hair
to a garage; his friends made comments about raping and murdering her; a bald guy
head-butted Wooley when she wouldn’t stop crying; the man and his girlfriend
forced her into a Chevy Trailblazer and drove around from ATM to ATM,
demanding Wooley give them $1,000. Aer she was able to pull only $500 from her
mom’s card, the couple—openly complaining that Wooley had ruined their
Valentine’s Day—drove the 22-year-old back to her La Habra Heights home aer
seeing Fullerton police cars outside Bensworth’s place and on Frat Row.
Fullerton detectives noted Wooley had no bruising or markings from the supposed
assault, but they went to Frat Row and conducted a search of the apartment of Josh
Eddleman, a bald man whom police knew was on parole. While walking out, police
noticed his girlfriend, Jerrie Harvey, driving a Trailblazer and pulled it over at
gunpoint. They immediately arrested the two. “Is this about the girl I drove home?”
she asked as they forced her into the squad car.
At the police station, Harvey told the ocers they had it all wrong: There was a
confrontation, but it was Eddleman and his friends agging down Bensworth and
Wooley for slashing his tires. Wooley not only admitted that Bensworth had done it,
but she also oered to pay for the damages. Furthermore, Wooley agreed to hop into
the Trailblazer for a ride to Bensworth’s home so she could grab her purse and pull
money to help pay for her pal’s mayhem.
Police didn’t believe Harvey, and the Orange County District Attorney’s oce (OCDA)
charged her and Eddleman with felony kidnapping, robbery, burglary and assault,
holding them on $1 million bail, which neither of them was able to make. The two
were looking at 15 years to life if convicted. But Eddleman had a savior in his lawyer:
Frederick Fascenelli not only got the case against his clients tossed out of court, but
he also exposed the shoddy work of the Fullerton PD and OCDA.
“The Fullerton police took Bensworth and Wooley’s story hook, line and sinker,”
Fascenelli says. “I wish I could say that Fullerton PD just overlooked these glaring
inconsistencies by mistake, but I doubt it. This story was about as absurd as ‘A dingo
took my baby.’”
Armed with months of evidence that he and an investigator had gathered, Fascenelli’s
magic started during a Sept. 29 pretrial hearing before OC Superior Court Judge Nick
Thompson. During a deposition, he asked lead Fullerton detective Barry Coman if
he didn’t nd the one-hour gap between Bensworth’s supposed escape and him
having a friend call the police “a little strange.” Aer Coman admitted it sounded
weird, Fascenelli referred to bank videos that showed Wooley twice exiting the
Trailblazer to use an ATM machine without incident. She had told investigators that
she had seen ocers twice, yet Fascenelli pointed out to Coman that the video didn’t show her in any agitated state, nor did she ever try to ag down the police.
“Didn’t you nd that a little strange?” he again asked Coman.
Fascenelli wasn’t done. He presented the court with apartment surveillance-video
stills showing Bensworth making a stabbing motion at a car tire as Wooley looked on;
she then darts o past trash bins with a mischievous grin. Bensworth follows with
something sharp-looking in his hand, and then Wooley, Eddleman and another
person return to the car, which is now markedly lower. Fascenelli asked Wooley’s
mother under oath if that was her daughter on the stills; she claimed she couldn’t tell,
even though the sequence oered a clear view. And when Fascenelli called Bensworth
and Wooley to the witness stand, the two pleaded the Fih.
Thompson promptly dismissed the case on Sept. 29, ending Eddleman and Harvey’s
judicial nightmare. Free aer sitting in Orange County jail for nearly eight months,
Harvey nds her ordeal hard to put into words. “I thought my whole life was over,”
she says. While locked away, the mother of three missed her son’s high school
graduation. “That’s something I can never get back.”
Eddleman was unavailable for comment.
Harvey admits she should’ve just called the police on Bensworth and Wooley that
day, but she didn’t because Wooley agreed to pay for the tire slashing. “I didn’t look at
it like we were doing anything wrong because we weren’t,” Harvey adds. “I was just
taking her to the bank . . . and then I took her home.”
Fullerton police requested that all Weekly questions be passed on to the OCDA, who
only oered, through spokesperson Roxi Fyad, “The case was dismissed, and we are
now reviewing the case from all angles before a decision is made, and until then we
won’t be commenting further.”