Wine Tasting

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“Wow,” quoth the raven. I’d always been unnecessarily confused by Imagery Estate. Something to do with art, that I got. But I had to visit the winery to sort it all out. Located on the site of the short-lived Sonoma Mountain Brewery, Imagery Estate results from a 20-year collaboration between winemaker Joe Benziger and artist Bob Nugent, who created the first label and curates the series. The concept: Commission unique artwork from contemporary artists for each release of often uncommon varietal wines. The wine gets drunk. The art goes on the gallery wall. Not so complicated after all.

Although the bar was generously staffed with attentive pourers, we circled a while before landing amid the hubbub of the Sunday-afternoon crowd. First, we inspected the assemblage of souvenir merchandise, including Imagery posters, coasters, geegaws and baubles. The sight of pink baseball caps almost ruined the experience for me, but the gallery proved more highbrow. Chief among amusements was spotting the signature Parthenon that appears in each label, sometimes cleverly hidden in the design.

At last we felt ready. Imagery offers $5 regular and $10 reserve tastings. A sincere interest sufficed to dissolve the five-taste limit. Our young pourer was helpful and charming, but a little tricky on the whites. She introduced 2004 White Burgundy ($27) as an unoaked, fresh and fruity style of Chardonnay. Curiously, it was just the opposite: old cheese, musty oak. Corked? She thoughtfully swirled with us and didn’t look displeased. The 2005 Viognier ($26) lacked both floral aromas and stone fruit taste, which Miss Contrary informed us was a varietal characteristic.

We all fared better with reds. The strawberry jam-scented 2006 Pinot Meunier ($22) made an enticing rosé; I’d cellar it for, oh, about 20 minutes in the freezer before popping it on a warm evening. The promising-looking 2003 Taylor Vineyard Zinfandel ($42) didn’t deliver as much as the licorice-fruity 2004 Lagrein ($40). What’s a Lagrein? Take a stroll down the informative “varietal walk” on the grounds to find out.

In a flash of food-pairing inspiration, I was confident that the 2004 Sangiovese ($27), tart with high cherry notes, would drink swell with seafood pasta. The 2003 Malbec ($34) was a tad dry, but perfect in every other way, if Malbec’s candied cherry/rubber tire combo appeals to you. Those partial to richer wines might check out the violet-scented 2003 Petit Verdot ($38) and the 2004 Petite Sirah ($42), a hearty soup of dried fruit and blackberry with a touch of sweetness that carries it easily over the tongue.

Lastly, out came the chocolates and the “port slippers.” The 2005 Petite Sirah Port ($34) is served from delicate glassware that looks like an antique, well, pipe of some kind. One sips and inhales the aroma from a little bowl held close under the nose. Alas, I’d spent the first part of the day scrubbing moldy walls, and all I could smell was the bleach on my hands, so I traded the slipper for a regular glass.

Imagery Estate Winery, 14335 Hwy. 12, Glen Ellen. Tasting room open daily 10am to 4:30pm; after Memorial Day, until 5:30pm. 707.935.4515.

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Duo Vision

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music & nightlife |

By Gabe Meline

In 1998, then-27-year-old Brad Mehldau recorded a very elegant rendition of “Exit Music (For a Film),” sourced from Radiohead’s then-recent opus OK Computer. It exploded Mehldau’s visibility, turned a young generation on to jazz, and summarily overshadowed his entire repertoire. To fuel public demand, more Radiohead songs followed, along with introspective interpretations of Nick Drake, George Harrison and Paul Simon.

That Mehldau is an iconoclast is a generally accepted, though largely untrue, point of view owing mostly to his flirtation with non-jazz idioms (the first time Mehldau performed in the Bay Area, he appeared at a small club specializing mostly in hip-hop). What unfortunately has gotten lost is Mehldau’s own intricate compositional skill and heroic ability to infuse deserving beauty into hoary, sentimental tunes (“Young at Heart,” “Someone to Watch Over Me,” “Secret Love”). Like Sonny Rollins, he lets melody be the judge, even while pleading insanity on the stand.

The pianist recently teamed up with electric-fusion guitarist Pat Metheny for an eponymous release, Metheny/Mehldau, to explore the simplicity of harmonic invention as one half of a pair. Though Mehldau hates being compared to Bill Evans–even going so far as to explain why in the liner notes to his albums–any piano/guitar duet in the realm of jazz must be weighed against the two albums of infinite treasure that Evans made with guitarist Jim Hall, Undercurrent and Intermodulation. Amazingly, Metheny and Mehldau capture the same telepathic brilliance as their predecessors, and for the most part their intimate work together is breathtaking; Metheny’s compulsion for guitar effects pollutes only a small percentage of the dialogue.

Mehldau has found rare time for collaboration outside of his trio with bassist Larry Grenadier and drummer Jeff Ballard, and a four-man follow-up, Quartet, arrived last month as no surprise. It is just as much a rewarding listen as Metheny/Mehldau, if slightly less voyeuristic, and points further toward the hope that Mehldau’s fantastic talent will eventually dilute his reputation as “the Radiohead guy.”

Brad Mehldau and Pat Metheny appear with Larry Grenadier and Jeff Ballard this Tuesday, March 27, at the Napa Valley Opera House. 1030 Main St., Napa. $55. 707.226.7372.




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Ask Sydney

March 21-27, 2007

Dear Sydney, how do I get rid of a stalker without moving, changing my name or changing my appearance? I have a problem with attracting needy men who, after being rejected by me, turn into stalkers. They won’t leave me alone no matter how mean, nice, rude, beautiful, ugly, stinky, dirty, bad or good I am. They come to my work, corner me in the hallway outside of work, follow me to my car. They never leave me in peace. I’ve changed my name, cut and dyed my hair, changed my style of clothes, even my car. I’ve just moved for the last time, and won’t change anything about myself ever again! Help!–Serial Stalkee

Dear Stalked: You’ve just moved to a new place, and it’s not too late to change this pattern. Go forward into your new town with confidence that you will never be stalked again. First, examine why this keeps happening. Do you find yourself attracted to men who are predisposed to stalking? Are there some commonalities that you can map? Some stalker characteristics? Or are these otherwise “normal” guys who just freak out when they meet you, as if you exude some kind of “stalk me” scent? Pay close attention to your interactions with people, especially to potentially needy men, and see if you can adjust your interactions from the very beginning so as to better avoid another bad situation. This is not to say you bring this on yourself. No one deserves to be so disrespected. But there is the reality that when you are interacting with another person, the only one you can really control is yourself. Take a self-defense class, if you haven’t already. Make all potential dates pass through a rigorous screening process. Make it known from the very beginning that you are not a victim (practice looking tough in the mirror). Don’t have sex with anyone until you trust them. And in this new town, insist on having relationships with people who have your best interests in mind.

Dear Sydney, in response to (Ask Sydney, March 7), this woman can either be part of the problem or part of the solution. The only way she can have any genuine influence on her children’s relationship is to mend her relationship with her own sister and parents. To attempt to influence her children, without “living” the very thing that she is attempting to espouse, will be thoroughly conflicting and, without a doubt, will further alienate her children from each other and from her. She is creating the likelihood that her immediate family relations will breakdown further because she is not doing her very best to resolve her own serious conflicts. The only means for her to feel better is to deal with the reality of the situation and her contribution to it (without blame or guilt). Many wonderful and powerful gifts are on the outside of resolving issues like these, and “magic” can be experienced in a way that wouldn’t be otherwise available had these normal and perfectly determinable challenges not existed in the first place. I hope this is received as it is intended, which is to offer a new perspective and a bit of insight.–Another Take on It

Dear AT: My assumption is that if “Family Meltdown” has been unable to reconcile with her family members, there must be a reason for it. Ideally, you’re right: it would be most helpful if she could provide her children with a solid foundation of familial love, setting a good example and perhaps cashing in on a holiday meal or two. It is also true, as you say, that some of the challenges we face make us stronger. But challenges can still be pretty shitty, and the reality is that some people end up with family that in no way, shape or form deserves to be labeled as such. If this is the case for FM, then there might be nothing she can do to change things. For her sake, I hope that this is not the case and that she will read your letter and realize that there is another way to go about making things better.

Dear Sydney, what’s going on with the calls I keep getting from someone in India trying to get me to sign up for some credit card? They’ve started using non-Indian names, like “Tom Smith” or “Shelly Davis” when they introduce themselves. Every time I get a call, I feel ashamed to even be living in a country where companies feel like I won’t accept a credit card deal from someone with an Indian name! Like if the telemarketer says his name is Joe, I’ll think he’s calling from Iowa. Every time I get one of these calls, I want to apologize to the person, and tell them that even though I don’t want the card, I would like to support them in using their real name, and that if there’s a petition going around, I’d sign it. Is there anything I can do about this? Am I the only one disgusted?–Embarrassed American

Dear Citizen: The first step in dealing with this name-changing business, which I agree is offensive and embarrassing, is to ask your telemarketer for a U.S. address where you can write to the company. Send a note, explaining that you will never accept a credit card offer from a company that forces its employees to adopt new names. The only way to instigate change is to make your voice heard. Recently, I was told by a telemarketer from India that she would need to record our conversation in order to help fight “the war on terror.” I told her that I didn’t believe in the war on terror and apologized for my country. She seemed confused, and our conversation went nowhere. Maybe it was the connection. Next time I receive such a call, I’ll write as well. That makes two letters the company will receive, which is at least a start.

No question too big, too small or too off-the-wall.


Letters to the Editor

March 21-27, 2007

Ag rag

(March 7) presented some misleading information when referring to our Sebastopol farm, Laguna Farm, and we’d like to comment. First, Jonah Raskin makes the increasingly common error of confusing the words “certified organic” and “organic” (he stated that our farm was not organic). Laguna Farm has chosen to drop our organic certification in the face of rising bureaucratic costs and lowered standards (following the implementation of the National Organic Program in 2002), but that does not mean that our standards have changed; in fact, we now refer to our methods as being “beyond organic,” because they exceed those of national certification. This error reinforces the bureaucratic notion that if a produce item isn’t certified, it isn’t organic–a regrettable concept.

While we certainly understand the need for certification in situations where the consumer doesn’t have access to the producer, there is a much bigger picture involved here.

There is another petty error that Raskin made that probably doesn’t need to be printed, but it’s also regrettable: he stated that I “[don’t] hide the fact that [my] parents gave [me] the land and that [I don’t] have a mortgage to pay.” In fact, my parents still own the land and we do pay them a sizable rent. This is regrettable in that readers will get the impression that at least one farm in Sonoma County doesn’t have an overhead–wishful thinking and a marvelous idea, but unfortunately not true.

Scott Mathieson, Laguna Farm, Sebastopol

Poisoned air?

On Monday, March 12, I went out to walk my dog. The air outside was so bad that I had to go back inside. The sky was clear and there was no wind that morning. I know from past year’s experience that on still mornings the farmers are out spraying. They are not allowed to spray on windy days.

I felt so bad that day I could hardly function. Other people I know also remarked how nasty the air was that day. It was not just around my house, but all around town.

When I’m housebound by the air, I always think about all the people out doing their daily work. People don’t tend to consider how chemicals in the air can affect their thinking and emotions. I worry about bad decisions made, arguments and depression caused by what’s in the air.

That day, I was so out of it I kept having this repetitive thought: “It’s legal to kill people with pesticide in this county.” Later, when my mind cleared, I felt like that was a stupid thought.

The next morning, I heard a Sebastopol resident describing the very strange behavior of wild birds at her house that Monday morning.

Then I found out about the young boy who was shot to death by the cops that same morning, and that he only had a pocketknife on him.

It made me think about my repetitive thought. Maybe it was not so stupid. I could not help but wonder if the air had been clean that morning, would things have turned out differently? Did whatever was in the air affect judgement?

In this county, we are not privy to how much is being sprayed until long after the fact. We should know when all the farmers are spraying.

Denise Lebel, Sebastopol

May as well ask as anything

We just wrote senators Feinstein and Boxer asking that they please only vote for a supplementary budget that includes language dictating a withdrawal from Iraq by the end of 2007 and requiring congressional authorization for any military action against Iran.

Although there may be pressure to weaken the Supplemental War Appropriations bill, they can push for the kind of brave and principled stances that will bring our troops home.

Remember that “supporting the troops” means bringing them home, not keeping them in the middle of an Iraqi civil war or bogging them down in a larger regional war in Iran. Real support for the troops means making sure that no more of them die for a war we never should have gotten into. Have you heard the reports from the Iraqi people on BBC? We urge your readers to write them, too.

Barby and Vic Ulmer, Saratoga

Senator Dianne Feinstein
United States Senate
331 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510

Senator Barbara Boxer
1700 Montgomery St., Suite 240
San Francisco, CA 94111

Please give Feinstein the Boho‘s best regards . . .


Wish it were a rumor

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music & nightlife |

By Brett Ascarelli

Like the rest of us, Mick Fleetwood goes to Costco. But unlike the rest of us, he has his own label to promote there–and it’s not a record label.

Tell me lies, tell me sweet little lies. If only this were a lie. No, friends, the percussionist and founding member of classic-rock behemoth Fleetwood Mac has joined the ranks of other celebrities from Larry Bird to Lorraine Bracco to Fess Parker to create his own wine brand: Mick Fleetwood Private Cellar. Reisling rings like a bell through the night. Wait, no. It’s Rhiannon, damn it. Rhiannon rings . . .

Rolling out the label in 2001, Fleetwood has just partnered with Costcos in the North Bay to sell his Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon and Sauvignon Blanc, all from 2005, along with Petite Sirah and Merlot from 2004.

Die-hard Mac fans, don’t despair. The good news is that the wine has gotten good reviews; in fact, the Wall Street Journal drily named it “Best Wine by a Living Musician.” Fleetwood sources the grapes from various vineyards in California and Washington, and leaves the production and bottling up to already established wineries, like Lucas & Lewellen in Santa Barbara.

After selling some 19 million copies of Rumours (which, by the way, was partly recorded in Sausalito), Fleetwood is still riding that train, even after the career change. It’s hard to stomach a publicity photo of him dressed in the Rumours cover outfit and photoshopped onto an image of a warmly lit underground wine cellar. If you don’t love me now, you will never love me again. Poignant, but quite honestly, Mick, we can’t commit yet.

Mick Fleetwood will be trapped at the following Costcos on the following days; Friday, March 23, at Costco, 1900 Santa Rosa Ave., Santa Rosa, 11am-2pm, 707.578.3775, then later that day at Costco, 5901 Redwood Drive, Rohnert Park, 3pm-6pm, 707.540.9110, and finally on Saturday, March 24, at Costco, 300 Vintage Way, Novato. 415.899.8539. All events free–if you’re a member.




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Talking Trash

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the arts | visual arts |

By Brett Ascarelli

Without knowing anything about Tim Gaudreau, one can surmise a fairly accurate picture of the man simply by looking at his trash. Based on his discarded Ben and Jerry’s ice cream cartons, Stonyfield Farm yogurt cups and old hiking boots, this man is crunchy. He likely owns a cat (Scoop Away carton), is conversant with current technologies (computer monitor, CDs), gets lucky often enough (Trojan packages), is a yuppie (disposable coffee cup, Asian takeout carton, Snapple bottles) and is artsy (can of spray glue or paint). Contrary to how it may appear, we actually haven’t been digging into other people’s garbage to sniff out news. No, we were actually invited to look at this guy’s trash, and so are you.

It turns out that Tim Gaudreau isn’t just artsy; he’s actually a bona fide artist. His new work, “Self Portrait as Revealed by Trash: 365 Days of Photographing Everything That I Throw Out,” is on view at Gallery Route One March 23 through April 29. For this fragmented and indirect self portrait, he whittled over 5,000 photographs of all the individual items he tossed out from April 2004 to March 2005 down to a sampling of roughly 60 of the most representative objects. Besides bravely baring his personality through these photos, Gaudreau, a New Hampshire-based artist who believes that artistic work should be relevant to society, wants for his piece to communicate a green message above all.

“What are the consequences,” he asks, “to this American throwaway culture where, if it’s out of sight, it’s out of mind? I don’t think that we get away with it: we eat, drink and breathe these plastic cups long after the dump truck makes its weekly run.”

Over the course of documenting his trash, Gaudreau was so horrified by the number of bottles and cups he drank through every day (five), that he says “there came a point where I couldn’t bear to admit throwing out another one.” He started bringing his own mug to the coffee shop, mixing his own sports drinks and drinking tap instead of bottled water. He’s calculated that with these reforms, he’ll be saving over the course of his lifetime some 78,000 bottles from ever being manufactured and tossed.

“Self Portrait as Revealed by Trash” exhibits from Friday, March 23, at Gallery Route One, 11101 Hwy. 1, Point Reyes. See Openings for details. 415.663.1347.



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The Byrne Report

March 21-27, 2007

It was a balmy evening in late February at the Sausalito Cruising Club. Inside the shiplike restaurant, a political organizing group called Democracy for America-Marin was holding a forum, “presenting evidence of a direct link between breast cancer and the environment.” About a hundred people, mostly women, attended the informative event.

The panel sported an array of environmental experts, including Barbara Brenner of Breast Cancer Action, Deborah Raphael of San Francisco’s Department of the Environment, two Marin County supervisors and several activists, among them, Peter Coyote, the movie actor. Although the speakers focused on the chemical causes of breast cancer, many other cancers were implicated in the sad story of how our watery bodies are infused with toxic cocktails mixed from 100,000 industrial chemicals.

Coyote was vastly entertaining. The lanky baritone actor, who drove a vegetable-oil-combusting car to the Cruising Club, addressed the question of why people living in green-leafed, ocean-breeze-swept, affluent Marin County should care about the environmental degradation of less fortunate demographic zones. He recounted, “A wise old Indonesian peasant once told me the tale of a goose with two necks, one short and one long. The mouth on the long neck was able to reach the greenest and cleanest of leaves and find the healthiest of bugs to eat. The short neck ate only poison filth lying on the ground. The goose died, of course. Here in Marin, we are the long-neck goose.”

Coyote went on to excoriate our corporate-run government for putting the profit of capitalists before the health of the planet. “It will only get worse before it gets better,” he remarked. “It makes me feel homicidal, and I am a practicing Buddhist for 32 years.”

Brenner made a PowerPoint presentation showing the correlation between cancer and xenoestrogens, which are industrial chemicals that mimic estrogen in our bodies. These compounds are found in many household cleaning products, pesticides, herbicides and ubiquitously licked, sucked and fondled plastic artifacts, including chewable toys tendered to infants. Brenner presented State of Evidence, a collection of facts, scientifically informed essays and political analysis produced by Breast Cancer Action and the Breast Cancer Fund, both headquartered in San Francisco. I learned from this zine that professional journalists are at a particularly high risk for contracting the Big C. Yipes!

Other at-risk groups include dental hygienists, librarians, farmworkers, social workers, nurses and radiologic technologists. Mammograms, which are ionizing radiation, can cause breast cancer. The fatty tissue of most newborn babies is laced with carcinogenic chemical traces; eating barbecued meat is a very bad idea; certain brands of sunscreen can ignite skin cancers. The appendix of the report lists hundreds of chemical sources of cancerous pain, including urethane, the cancer-curing pharmaceutical tamoxifen, alcoholic beverages and (sigh) wood dust.

Raphael’s presentation was sharp. She talked about how San Francisco has legislated use of the precautionary principle, which means not asking if a possibly unhealthy product or chemical substance is legal or safe, but asking if it is necessary and, if not, banning it. San Francisco did that with plastic grocery bags and immediately got hit with a lawsuit by the American Chemistry Council. “They want to keep their right to put known carcinogens in teething rings,” says Raphael.

Activist Sandy Ross spoke about the struggle to mandate integrated pest management in Marin, which would use the precautionary principle to regulate the use of insecticides. Trade groups from the agricultural industry oppose this reasonable approach, naturally. Their friends in the California Legislature passed a law that allows state agencies to preempt local environmental-protection ordinances in favor of the state’s looser standards. Plus, federal law tends to preempt state environmental rules–and we all know what Bush-Cheney did to environmental protections at the federal level: eviscerated them. Worse, the pollution-loving World Trade Organization has the power to preempt the scarred stumps of those castrated protections.

Marin County supervisors Susan Adams and Charles McGlashan were articulate and greenish. Adams bragged about wetland restoration and getting rid of junk-food vending machines in county offices. Those are steps forward, but too little and too late to save us. McGlashan, who has worked with the Natural Step Foundation, was more profound. He laid out several principles for fixing our world. Do not pull anything out of the earth’s crust that does not belong in the biosphere, like coal, oil, mercury, etc., he counseled. If you must, keep it contained in closed loops. Allow no artificial chemicals to build up in the biosphere. Keep habitats natural by not pushing nature away. Create an equitable society.

Those laudable goals will require the long necks to do more than invest in socially responsible mutual funds, which was one of the solutions proffered by Coyote. I wonder what our short-necked brethren have to offer?

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Deadly Force

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Photograph by Michael Amsler
Memento: An informal memorial in Sebastopol’s Plaza features a photo of Jeremiah in meditation pose.

By Peter Byrne

On March 12, Jeremiah Chass, a 16-year-old teenage boy, was shot and killed in the driveway of his Sebastopol home by Sonoma County deputy sheriffs. The sudden violence of his death has not only traumatized the Chass family, but the local community as well. Close to a thousand people attended a Sebastopol memorial for Chass on March 17. Mixed with expressions of grief by young and old alike was a resolve to find out exactly what had happened.

The morning after Chass’ death, his parents, Mark and Yvette Chass, asked two close friends to visit them. In person, the shocked couple told Beth Pisani and her husband, Marc Ripley, about the circumstances surrounding their son’s killing. Pisani and Ripley have a six-year-old son, Tyler, who is close friends with and a classmate to the Chass’ youngest son. Pisani says she has received Yvette Chass’ blessing to talk on the record about the tragic event.

The Chass’ account as told to Pisani and Ripley differs from inconsistent narratives released by the Santa Rosa Police Department and Sonoma County Sheriff-Coroner Bill Cogbill. Pressing questions about whether or not deadly force was used unnecessarily remain unanswered because law-enforcement officials have so far refused to release 911 tapes of the event. Like many other people, Pisani and Ripley are concerned that important facts and analysis are missing from both official and press accounts.

According to Pisani and Ripley, on the morning of Monday, March 12, Jeremiah Chass suffered a psychotic breakdown after a period of declining mental health. His frightened parents called Sonoma County emergency services for help in restraining him. Deputy Sheriff John Misita arrived on the scene at 8:43am, followed a few minutes later by another deputy, John Ryan. What the two white deputies saw upon arrival was a white couple (Yvette and Mark) and a white child (their six-year-old son Isaiah Chass) and a severely agitated black man (Jeremiah) with a jackknife. Instead of backing off and verbally de-escalating the situation as first responders are trained to do, the deputies attacked, reportedly using pepper spray, a baton and fists. It appears that the paranoiac, frightened Jeremiah kicked at least one deputy in the face, drawing blood.

What is not disputed is that the deputies shot him multiple times.

Pisani says, “When I talked to Mark early in the morning on the day after it happened, when he called to see if we could take Isaiah to be with Tyler for a while, I asked him, through my tears, if excessive force had been used. He replied, ‘Yes, no question.’

“I talked to Yvette on Thursday about speaking to the Bohemian,” Pisani continues. “Reiterating conversations we had before about racism in our county, and our personal experience with it, Yvette said, ‘The truth has to come out.’ I asked her if she thought that racism influenced what happened. She said, ‘Yes.’ Yvette says that she forgives the deputies. She is a very spiritual person.”

The Chass’ attorney, Eric Safire, underscored that Pisani and Ripley do not speak for his clients, who remain in seclusion, and declined to comment for this article.

Jeremiah Chass was known as a peaceful, loving, philosophical, articulate teenager. He was a vegan. He enjoyed the study of physics and mathematics. Along with his mother, he had a strong spiritual practice, which included meditation and chanting. His simple, meticulously organized bedroom was adorned with prayer flags and a poster of Mahatma Gandhi.

Born to a Caucasian mother and an African-American father who died when he was a small child, Jeremiah was a fan of Ladysmith Black Mambazo. He had recently chatted with a member of the a cappella chorus from South Africa after a concert. The group’s music inspired him to save money by performing odd jobs for neighbors so that he could travel to South Africa after he graduated from high school.

Marc Ripley, a general contractor, admired Jeremiah, who occasionally worked for him. “I was impressed with his maturity,” Ripley says. “The way he held himself. We had many philosophical discussions. He smiled a lot; he was happy, he was very present.”

Being close to Jeremiah, Ripley was able to see that the youngster had changed over the past few months. Ripley says that Jeremiah seemed to be retreating from reality, disassociating from the present even when surrounded by the adoring children he coached in soccer.

Last Presidents Day weekend, Pisani and her mother’s group, including Yvette, made an overnight trip with their respective first-graders to Monterey to visit the aquarium and lounge on the beach. Jeremiah accompanied them. “On the drive down, Jeremiah meditated most of the time. He quietly held his hands in his lap, thinking,” Pisani remembers. When one of the moms asked him what he was pondering, Jeremiah replied that he was working to integrate his scientific and spiritual sides, developing an equation of unity, acceptance, love and peace.

During the last few months, Ripley and Pisani say, Jeremiah ate and drank very little and lost a lot of weight. They attributed it, in part, to his asceticism and principled, minimalist approach to living in a materialist society. “He was self-disciplined, on a spiritual path of purity,” says Pisani, who is a registered nurse, adding that both she and Yvette, who works as an occupational therapist, were increasingly concerned about Jeremiah’s well-being. “Yvette reached out to friends, brainstorming about what is normal behavior for teenagers and what is not. At the same time, she had a lot of faith in him and who he was. They had deep conversations about what he was thinking. They were very connected.”

On Sunday, March 11, Pisani and Ripley saw Jeremiah at Tyler’s soccer game. “His parents were checking in with him during the game, patting him on the back, chatting with him,” says Pisani. Jeremiah had decided to allow the team to “self-coach.” He had appointed one child as team captain, and he purposefully stayed out of the game. “I looked over at him and he was not agitated, but absent,” Ripley recalls.

“Yvette believes that for Jeremiah the line between his two worlds [the spiritual and the physical] was becoming less defined,” says Pisani.

After the soccer game, Jeremiah went home with his parents. That was the last time that his friends saw him alive.

According to Pisani and Ripley, Yvette started making telephone calls to mental health specialists after the game on Sunday. She gathered information from five different healthcare professionals. Given Jeremiah’s increasingly bizarre behavior, she was advised to admit him to emergency care if she felt it was an unsafe situation. She made the decision to wait until Monday morning. She stayed with him all night. He woke up once in an agitated state. She sat with him and calmed him down.

In the morning, he showered and dressed. Yvette told him she was taking him to see a doctor. He did not want to get into the family minivan. He did not seem to recognize his parents. His usually fluid speech emerged as broken, disconnected. He began talking about irrelevant things. He talked about army boots. He asked for ice cream (a friend of his had recently told him he needed to eat more dairy products to gain weight). He went back into the house to get an It’s-It.

When he came back out of the house, he was clutching a Leatherman (a small multipurpose tool with folding pliers, screwdriver, can opener and several jack knives). He had a two-inch blade open as he advanced toward the minivan in which Isaiah sat, waiting in the front seat. Yvette was scared. She got in the driver’s side to use the power locks–too late.

When Jeremiah got into the front, Isaiah leapt into the back seat. Jeremiah followed and sat on his brother; he did not hold him at knife-point. According to the informed narrative of Pisani and Ripley, Jeremiah sat on Isaiah and yelled out a death threat. He did not seem to know his brother’s name. Isaiah told him, “You do not want to kill me, Bud.” Mark Chass began madly clicking through the phone book on his cell phone, looking for preprogrammed emergency service numbers. He dialed what he thought was the fire department, asking for manpower and medics to help him subdue Jeremiah.

Yvette began singing and chanting to Jeremiah–meditation chants that they often did together with their spiritual group–trying to bring him back to reality, to connect with him, to show him who she was.

When Deputy Misita arrived, Mark was struggling with all his strength to hold his son down inside the minivan. Mark had pinned Jeremiah’s Leatherman-holding hand to the seat. According to Pisani and Ripley’s account, Misita waded right in and tackled Jeremiah. He may have used pepper spray on the teenager, but the Chasses did not mention the use of that weapon. Struggling, Jeremiah probably kicked the deputy in the face, causing bloodshed.

When the second deputy arrived, Yvette motioned him to stay back. He reportedly said, “No, that’s my partner!” and moved in with his baton. In the confusion, Isaiah had escaped from the minivan and was screaming in meltdown. Yvette took him into the house. Still struggling with his son in the minivan, Mark heard a shot.

Mark told Pisani and Ripley that he turned to a deputy and said, “Is that a pellet gun?” Then he turned toward Jeremiah and saw his chest was open with blood gushing and his eyes rolling back inside his head.

A preliminary autopsy press release notes that Jeremiah was shot in his chest, right arm, right leg and left knee, suffering what the Sheriff’s department terms “lethal injuries” to his heart, left lung and arteries. The release does not report on non-lethal injuries Jeremiah may have incurred during the altercation. The final autopsy report being prepared under the supervision of Sheriff-Coroner Cogbill is not scheduled to be released for 90 days.

This is not the first time that Deputy Misita has had a questionable encounter with a mentally distressed person. The deputy’s nose and thumb were broken near Two Rock in June 2005 after he had a physical tangle with a man whose mother had called to have his mental state evaluated. According to the sheriff’s report on the incident, Misita pepper-sprayed the subject because “he reached for his pocket.”

As with Jeremiah, it was reported that the pepper spray had “no effect,” and that it was “unfortunate [that] Deputy Misita was not equipped with a TASER.” Nor did Misita have his TASER–which law-enforcement protocol requires to be used in these situations–with him when he confronted Jeremiah.

At 9am, paramedics who had apparently been parked at the bottom of the driveway during the fracas pronounced Jeremiah dead. Santa Rosa police arrived to take charge of the “violent crime” scene. The Chass’ nightmare was just beginning. Mark, Yvette and Isaiah were transported to the Santa Rosa police station without being told by officers that they had the options of not going to the station and not being questioned. The police took the Chass’ cell phones. At the station, they were held for several hours and interrogated. The police asked if they could interview six-year-old Isaiah. Mark refused. While the shocked, grieving family was being interrogated, police investigators swept through their house, removing computers, medical record files, soccer game schedules and the individual doses of daily vitamins for each family member that sat in a row on a kitchen counter.

The day after Jeremiah was killed, the Chasses asked Pisani and Ripley to take Isaiah to be with Tyler for a few hours. Looking to make some sense of the tragedy, Pisani says that as she was driving the two children to her home, Isaiah told his friend what had happened to his brother in excruciating detail.

“Jeremiah is not going to be jumping on the trampoline with us anymore,” Isaiah concluded.

“Why not?” Tyler asked.

“Because he is dead,” Isaiah responded.

“No, he is not dead,” Tyler said. “His soul is still with us, as his spirit.”

“So now he is flying free with God,” Isaiah mused.

“I believe good people go to heaven,” Tyler said. “Bad people just die.”


News Briefs

March 21-27, 2007

Trail troubles

Those who build and maintain trails and the folks who like to pedal them at high speeds are clashing again in Marin County. Dana Beckstoffer, 43, of Petaluma, is one of three mountain bikers who say they narrowly missed being injured by barbed wire and bent fence posts on a narrow pathway off the official Split Rock Trail above Fairfax. “We came upon two barbed wire barriers or booby traps,” Beckstoffer recalls angrily. “The barbed wire was strung about neck or head level. For anyone not looking up, it would be very, very hard to see. It would hit you in the head or neck.” When she discovered that the barriers were placed by the Marin County Open Space District, she was outraged. Beckstoffer is convinced the goal was physical harm. There was no such intent, says district director Sharon McMamee. The trail, built illegally about 10 years ago, passes through sensitive habitat. It’s closed to all traffic–hikers, equestrians and bikers–but McMamee says that the “restoration area” signs are stolen almost as soon as they’re posted. “We block it routinely, mostly with habitat such as rolling a tree or a boulder over the trail,” McMamee explains. “Unfortunately, this time one of our staff got a little more zealous with barbed wire and posts. It was not a booby trap. I feel so bad that word is being used.” The wire and posts were removed immediately, McMamee assures, and the habitat signs reposted. Beckstoffer says she’s been riding the trail for years. “I’ve never seen any signs,” she argues. “It’s a well-ridden and very well-known trail in the biking community. People ride it without getting citations all the time, so it has been believed to be kind of in the gray area.” Mountain bikers want access to more single-track trails rather than just wide fire roads. McMamee says, “We’d love to find a way to [give access to single-track trails] in areas that aren’t through sensitive preserves.”

Full disclosure

As discussed extensively in these pages, a San Francisco-based insurance agency that has promoted itself to Medicare recipients nationwide as Senior Educators, a “free” service for seniors, now has to add “Insurance Services” at the end of its name, according to Melinda Aval of the California Department of Insurance. Advocates for seniors charged that shortening the company’s legal DBA from Professional Senior Educators Insurance Services to just Senior Educators was misleading and obscured the fact that the company earns its income through commissions from private insurance companies. State officials determined that using “Senior Educators” was a technical violation, Aval says. The company agreed to always use the name Senior Educators Insurance Services and the investigation is closed. “This appears to solve the problem,” Aval says. The company could not be reached for comment.


Dead Rock Stars

0

music & nightlife |

By Gabe Meline

Death can really make you look like a star.–Andy Warhol

The house that Jared Powell inhabits, from the entryway to the back porch, is a living monument to the obsessed artist: canvases laid vertically against furniture, a coffee table blanketed in supplies, the walls in each room covered with finished and half-finished works. His kitchen on a recent evening is perhaps the most cluttered, as Powell, pushing aside pens, paints, markers and notebooks, pulls together material for “Cottonball Resurrection,” a silk-screen art show celebrating iconically troubled musicians that opens this weekend at Santa Rosa’s A Street Gallery.

In mostly collaborative pieces, Powell and artists Joe Leonard, Jayson Taylor, James Williams and Sal Lopez apply a crisp acrylic makeover to the bedraggled faces of great talents who deserved better in life. The top two images on the kitchen table tell the story. One is Lightnin’ Hopkins, his gold teeth shining beneath sunglasses and a fedora, concealing the ex-con who notoriously signed the world’s worst record contracts. Next to him is Ol’ Dirty Bastard, or, as the sprouting apparitions of crucifix-adorned milk bottles hint, “Big Baby Jesus,” his preferred nickname imagined in the deranged haze of cocaine that would eventually turn fatal.

Digging deeper into the pile, there’s penetrating perspectives of Marc Bolan, Sonny Boy Williamson, Wendy O’Williams and Keith Richards–“People who were fucked up,” Powell explains with a small trace of admiration, “but who still were prolific and put out quality work.” Adventurously presented on 12-inch LPs and sheet metal, the images contain so much detail and filigree that a second or third look yields miniscule, sometimes hidden clues to the stars’ woes (Richards, the only living musician in the show, floats among syringes).

Though the process does not imitate its subject to an illicit degree, it’s a well-known fact that Powell, Taylor, Leonard, Lopez and Williams pride themselves on burning both ends of the clock under a self-ordained “can’t stop, won’t stop” philosophy of insomniac obsession, explaining the collective drive behind the show. “It’s as much about educating people as it is about art,” Powell says. “Some girl came by and saw Leadbelly and was like, ‘Who’s that?'” With this, Powell pauses, leans forward to mimic his irritation, and reenacts his direct response: “The reason you have music.”

‘Cottonball Resurrection’ opens Saturday, March 24, at A Street Gallery. 312 S. A St., Santa Rosa. Live music will be provided by The Aces; very limited T-shirts from the show will be available. 5:30pm to 8:30pm. Free. 5707.578.9124.




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