For Immediate Release

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12/15/2020 Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE PRESS RELEASE

Date: December 15, 2020 Kimberly Edds

Case #:19HF1213 Public Informa on Officer

Office: 714-347-8405, Cell: 714-504-1917

media@da.ocgov.com

Man Charged with Aggravated Kidnapping for Ransom is First Orange


County Inmate to Petition to be Released on Own Recognizance Following
Judge’s Order in ACLU Lawsuit to Reduce Jail Population by Half
Inmate faces maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted on all charges; District
Attorney Spitzer warns judge’s order will result in hardcore criminals petitioning for
release
SANTA ANA, Calif. – A man charged with aggravated kidnapping for ransom and extortion in connection with
kidnapping an Irvine woman and holding her for ransom is the first Orange County inmate to petition to be
released on his own recognizance following a judge’s order Friday that ordered the Orange County Jail’s
population be reduced by half.

The inmate faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted on all charges.

Ezra Schley, 72, of Huntington Beach, is charged with one felony count of aggravated kidnapping for ransom
and extortion, one felony count of residential burglary, one felony count of attempted extortion, and one
misdemeanor count of carrying a loaded firearm in public.

Schley is one of four defendants charged in connection with kidnapping Jane Doe from her Irvine apartment and
holding her for two days in an attempt to extort a large sum of money from Jane Doe’s husband and mother-in-
law. The four defendants are also accused of sending pictures of Jane Doe being held captive to Jane Doe’s
husband through a phone web chatting app.

Schley is currently being held at the Orange County Jail on $1 million bail. His petition to be released on his own
recognizance is scheduled to be in Department H1 at the Harbor Justice Center in Newport Beach at 9 a.m. on
December 23, 2020.

Jane Doe was rescued by the Irvine Police Department after her mother-in-law contacted police and requested a
welfare check.

On Friday, an Orange County Superior Court judge issued a ruling in Campbell et. all v. Barnes which ordered
Sheriff Don Barnes to reduce the population of the Orange County Jail by 50% due to inmate safety concerns
over an increase in the number of inmates contracting COVID-19.

The Orange County District Attorney’s Office, in conjunction with the Sheriff’s Department, the Public Defender,
the Criminal Defense Bar, the County’s Health Care Agency, and the Orange County Superior Court, has worked
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12/15/2020 Press Release

collaboratively throughout the pandemic to conduct risk assessments in order to release medically vulnerable
inmates prior to completing their entire sentence.

The District Attorney’s Office has been keeping statistics in order to understand the impact of these court
orders. Orange County inmates released early before serving their full sentence or on $0 bail went out and
committed new crimes at rates at nearly triple normal recidivism rates: 44% for early release inmates and 38%
for $0 bail defendants.

A sample of their crimes: auto theft, burglary, robbery, assault, weapons, theft and narcotics.

As well as a 23-year-old man who stabbed his 17-year-old ex-girlfriend four times, killing her. He had been
released on $0 bail 3 ½ weeks earlier.

“The jail population has been reduced by more than 33 percent since the beginning of the pandemic in March,”
said Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer. “There are more than 400 people in custody who have
already been convicted or who are awaiting trial for murder or attempted murder. Now the ACLU is fighting to
release people who have been convicted or are awaiting trial on felony charges that could send them to prison
for the rest of their lives. These are hardcore criminals who are going to try everything they can to game the
system so they can get out and commit more crimes. The judge’s order is outrageous and I’m not going to
allow Orange County and Southern California residents to be put at risk by the release of dangerous and violent
criminals back into our communities.”

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