He probably would have needed a lawyer to do it for him which is ... good for lawyers, I guess.
The problem is, all the information I have found thus far indicates that he is required to present himself in court. He may (and is advised to) have a lawyer present, but it unclear whether the lawyer may be present in his place. It is listed as acceptable for a lawyer to take the place of a defendant in other types of hearings, so the lack of such a provision for this type is an anomaly, and anomalys always get my attention.
Tailgater said:
I'll remember that if you have a young girl and some guy hangs outside her school to take pictures of her and her friends to post on the internet and discuss how he likes her with other pedophiles while giving them advice on how they can do the same. His rights do not override hers.
My daughter's right to be in a public place and not have people take pictures? There are several court cases that show that that right does not generally exist.
It is not even a permanent order and he has the information to contact the courts as to how to appear or have his attorney address unreasonable requests. This is not the first time a judge has issued an overgeneralized order. The guy can create a website but can't make a phone call?
As I stated above, all information I have uncovered regarding California Civil Procedure shows that He, himself, must appear. An attorney does not appear to be able to appear in his place, and a phone call is insufficient. But all that information is from assistive digests published by the State of California, and may be incomplete.
To be more specific, my sister-in-law filed a restraining order against her husband.
A specific order for conduct with regard to a single person. The idea that "police won't arrest him for casual violations", is based solely on the discretion of the officer in question. As the law stands, even casual, incidental, unintentional contact is forbidden, and actionable.
But now there's more information. From
This Blog, we have a poster claiming to be Anthony D. Zinnanti, one of the lawyers involved in the case (the one that made sure to be present when Mr. McClellan was served) The post in about halfway down the page)
Anthony D. Zinnanti said:
The order was based on a pattern of chronicled conduct (coming into evidence per Ev. Code, section 1220, et seq.) including McClellan's self-described smuggling of narcotics onto an international flight (evading law enforcement in the airport), his use of such hallucinogens and, ...
Which was probably used for 'character', as it has nothing to do with the requested relief (the order).
continuing said:
...in particular, his chronicle of contemplating luring several children into his vehicle.
(emphasis added)
So, he was
thinking about doing something, but he never did it? If he had done it, they would have presented evidence of that, but they only had evidence that he had
thought about it. Thinking isn't actionable in this country, as far as I know.
They are trying to get around the Free Speech issues (of posting pictures taken in public places) by claiming that Mr. McClellan was being defamatory to the girls in question.
Anthony D. Zinnanti said:
However, it is our position that there is a false light argument with respect to the defamation aspect, in addition to concerns of invasion of privacy by virtue of appropriating a non-consenting minor's image and placing within the paradigm of "pedophilia."
It's an interesting tactic. I'm not sure of it's legal standing.
If Mr. McClellan had taken the pictures and labeled them "This girl is great in bed", it would be a definite defamatory action. But if he labeled them "She's really cute", I don't see the defaming of character. The plaintiff seems to be claiming that, because McClellan is an admitted pedophile that he's not allowed to post a picture and label it "She's cute", because it's being used "within the paradigm of "pedophilia."".
Were pedophilia illegal in and of itself, this would probably be valid, but it's not illegal in and of itself. Certain actions (which my be motivated by pedophilia) are, but they make no claim that Mr McClellan has performed any of those actions.