Conditional Release Ordered in San Diego County for ‘Bolder-than-Most’ Rapist
A man dubbed the "bolder-than-most" rapist will be conditionally released to a temporary home in San Diego County, a judge has ruled.
A man dubbed the “bolder-than-most” rapist will be conditionally released to a temporary home in San Diego County, a judge ruled Thursday.
San Diego Superior Court Judge Marian Gaston ordered Thursday that Alvin Ray Quarles, 62, be released no later than Jan. 21 to a “non-fixed residence” recommended by Liberty Healthcare, which operates the state’s conditional release program for sexually violent predators, or SVPs.
Quarles’ release conditions include 24/7 GPS monitoring, with security guards or law enforcement also on site round-the-clock.
The location of the temporary residence was not disclosed during Thursday’s hearing, but Liberty Healthcare was ordered to continue searching for a fixed housing location.
Quarles, who pleaded guilty to four forcible rape counts in 1989, served 25 years in state prison, then spent approximately a decade undergoing sex offender treatment at Coalinga State Hospital.
Prosecutors said Quarles would assault his victims at knifepoint, sometimes forcing the women’s boyfriends or husbands to watch.
Quarles’ release is part of the conditional release program for SVPs, individuals convicted of sexually violent crimes and diagnosed with a mental disorder that makes them likely to reoffend.
After serving their prison sentences, SVPs undergo treatment at state hospitals, but may petition courts to continue their treatment in outpatient locations where they are monitored and must abide by stringent conditions.
Quarles first was ordered conditionally released nearly a year ago by San Diego County Superior Court Judge David M. Gill, but the subsequent search for housing for Quarles was unsuccessful, leading a different judge to order a “transient release.”
Locating housing for sexually violent predators has proven difficult due to the many regulations over where they can be housed and the public backlash over their releases.
A state audit earlier this year said it takes an average of 19 months to find a suitable SVP housing location in San Diego County.
Another SVP, Merle Wakefield, was ordered released on transient status last month after a four-year housing search that resulted in three proposed housing recommendations that were either rejected by a judge or rescinded by state hospital officials.
Wakefield was ultimately released in late November to a home in Jacumba Hot Springs on a temporary basis.
In both Quarles’ and Wakefield’s cases, judges ordered that however their housing situations play out, they will not be returned to the state hospital unless they violate the conditions of their release.
Among those who attended court to oppose Quarles’ release was Stephen Taylor, the husband of one of Quarles’ victims.
“Despite him being older now, I think the potential is still there that he can perpetrate (more crimes),” Taylor said after Thursday’s hearing. “I’m really concerned about members of the community who could be at risk.”
Terri Larson, a friend of Taylor’s and member of the citizens group Your Voice Has Power, called Quarles “a monster,” and said the public should be privy to what led state hospital officials to recommend his release.
San Diego County Supervisor Jim Desmond also submitted a letter to the court asking for Quarles to remain confined in Coalinga.
“Releasing Mr. Quarles into our community – even under supervision – places residents in danger and disregards the trauma still endured by his victims,” Desmond wrote.
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