A man who had been accused of killing East Palo Alto activist David Lewis in 2010 was ordered back into custody Wednesday, Feb. 26, three weeks after a San Mateo County Superior Court judge released him on his own recognizance.

Judge Craig Parsons said Wednesday morning that if he had been given accurate information by the defense about Elarms’ time served on weapons charges, to which he pleaded no contest, he would not have released 60-year-old Gregory Elarms at a Feb. 5 hearing.

Time served is a combination of actual days in jail plus statutory credits for good behavior or work time, Chief Deputy District Attorney Karen Guidotti said.

“We had been adamant all along that he had not had enough credit,” she said. Such a miscalculation is “not very typical,” she added.

Elarms was immediately handcuffed and taken into custody Wednesday morning, briefly looking back at his mother before being led out of the courtroom.

The weapons charges stem from incidents in February 2011, when Elarms was in custody awaiting trial for the fatal shooting of Lewis in the Hillsdale Shopping Center parking lot the previous June.

He was allegedly caught hiding a sharpened toothbrush, a sharpened “spork” and two pencils tied together in his cell, according to the district attorney’s office.

This January — two months after Judge Stephen Hall dismissed the murder charges against Elarms, charges that had been based on a confession that Hall ruled was in violation of his Miranda rights — Elarms pleaded no contest to three felony counts of possessing weapons in jail.

District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe has said his office is appealing the ruling dismissing the murder charges, a process that could take 12 to 18 months.

Meanwhile, Elarms is due back in court on March 5 for a hearing on a motion to withdraw his pleas of no contest to the weapons offenses, Guidotti said.

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  1. > Judge Craig Parsons said Wednesday morning that if he had been
    > given accurate information by the defense about Elarms’ time
    > served on weapons charges, to which he pleaded no contest, he
    > would not have released 60-year-old Gregory Elarms at
    > a Feb. 5 hearing.

    > Time served is a combination of actual days in
    > jail plus statutory credits for good behavior or
    > work time, Chief Deputy District Attorney Karen Guidotti said.

    > “We had been adamant all along that he had not had
    > enough credit,” she said. Such a miscalculation is
    > “not very typical,” she added.

    Another screw-up by the San Mateo County DA’s Office. Makes one wonder if there is any quality control in that office. For instance, are there standardized worksheets for this sort of calculation? Is there a sign-off by at least two DAs? Is the calculation done by hand, or is it done on the computer?

    It’s a sure bet that everyone in the SMC DA’s Office that has had a hand in this mess is making more than $200K a year!

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