
O.C. man convicted of molesting 2 boys he tutored in Anaheim, faces sentence of up to 225 years to life
Zeta 'Jimmy' Dhanapanth, who acted as his own attorney during his trial, was convicted of a dozen felony counts of lewd or lascivious acts with a minor younger than 14 and a count of possession of child pornography.
Jurors, who began deliberations Wednesday afternoon and reached verdicts before noon Thursday, also found true sentencing enhancements for multiple victims and substantial sexual conduct.
Dhanapanth faces up to 225 years to life in prison. He is scheduled to be sentenced July 18.
Dhanapanth took off his glasses and rubbed his eyes when the first guilty verdict was read aloud in court Thursday. He asked Orange County Superior Court Judge Larry Yellin about his appellate rights before settling on a sentencing date.
Dhanapanth got rid of his court-appointed attorney just as the trial was about to start. He took the stand in his defense and attempted to portray his accusers as liars with what he characterized as inconsistencies with theirvarious statements to investigators.
Deputy Dist. Atty. Sarah Rahman said in her closing argument, 'Learning is supposed to be fun... Math is supposed to be fun... Math is also about consistency and so was the abuse by this defendant.'
She argued that over the course of four years he would sexually assault the boys.
'Even when he was warned not to be alone with [the victims],' he continued to abuse them, Rahman said.
'Even when [one of the victims] tried to speak up and stop the defendant he continued to violate him,' Rahman said.
'Both victims' stories were very similar, supported by witnesses,' Rahman said. 'Their stories are supported by electronic evidence found on his devices. The defendant admitted to possessing child pornography and having a sexual interest in children ... and that he found those boys to be attractive. ... It all adds up to guilt.'
Rahman argued the defendant also admitted in his testimony that he found sex among children 'fascinating.'
But she scoffed at his assertion that he 'never acted it out,' adding, 'That's absolutely unreasonable.'
The boys were 'manipulated' to keep quiet and continue taking the abuse by Dhanapanth's gifts and praise.One of the boys'liked getting good grades. ... He liked that someone appeared to love him and give him gifts,' Rahman said.
The prosecutor said the defendant would 'test the waters' initially by sitting close to them or touching their legs and would then move on to 'putting his hands in their shorts' and to more explicit sex acts, Rahmansaid in her opening statement of the trial.
'Both boys needed help in English and math,' Rahman said.
Dhanapanth taught in an after-school program at Anaheim Indepencia Center from 2012 through 2016. He volunteered for the School on Wheels program, which would bring tutors to the homes of needy students, Rahman said.
In one instance, the defendant sodomized one of the victims with a sex toy in his van, Rahman said.
'Over the years [the boy] would ask 'Is this normal?'' Rahman said, adding he would also ask, 'Do adults do this? Does this make me gay?'
Dhanapanth would show the boys pornographic videos as well as 'fan fiction' stories from the web about sex between adults and children, Rahman said.
He did so 'to convince [the boys] all of this was normal,' Rahman said.
The defendant would give one of the boys Legos, 'which [the victim] loved but the family could no longer afford,' Rahman said.
When the defendant first tried to 'test the waters' with the other victim, 'he didn't like it,' Rahman said.
The boy was taken out of the program but returned to it when he was 11, the prosecutor said. Dhanapanth would also give that boy gifts in exchange for sexual acts, Rahman said.
At one point, a teacher walked in on the defendant with one of the boys in a 'compromising situation,' Rahman said.
'Both looked shocked and scared,' Rahman said.
The teacher told her supervisor, who called sheriff's deputies, Rahman said.
Initially that boy denied anything happened, Rahman said.
Psychologist Jody Ward testified about Child Abuse Accommodation Syndrome and how underage sex crime victims often do not immediately report abuse, Rahman said.
'When they do, it is years later,' she said.
When investigators searched Dhanapanth's home they found 'Legos in sexual positions,' sex toys, 'cookie cutters in sexual positions,' and a variety of electronic devices that contained 16 'very specifically organizedvideos of child pornography,' Rahman said.
Dhanapanth would also search for 'pedophilia' online, Rahman said.
Dhanapanth said he noticed during jury selection that some jurors 'didn't understand me because of my accent,' so he asked to read his opening statement as it was placed on a projector for jurors to read along with him.
Dhanapanth said the allegations are 'not supported by any witness ...or evidence.''
The defendant, referring to himself in the third person as Jimmy, said he was 'very excited' to get a partial scholarship to Baylor University in 1997 and recounted his emigrating from Thailand.
'So when Jimmy arrived he never spoke English before,' he said. 'He did not come from a wealthy family.'
He got a job as a server in the campus cafeteria and would daily get recorded lectures from his professors so he could hear the lessons again and better learn English.
When he started tutoring, he said, most of his clients were from 'family referrals' of satisfied customers.
Dhanapanth said he sympathized with one of the accusers because of his difficult emigration from Mexico to the U.S. The defendant said the boy was 'abandoned' by his parents and cared for by his grandparents. 'He was not able to speak any human language. He was mute,' the defendant said.
The defendant said he helped the boy learn to read and speak from graphic novels and audio books.
'Jimmy was very proud' of the boy, he said.
When the boy's father pulled him out of tutoring, the defendant said he was 'stunned.'
The defendant read the statements from his accusers to police in separate interviews to try to point out what he considered were 'inconsistencies.' The statements included explicit and graphic allegations of sexual abuse.
'We all know when people make up a story they try to change it because they can't remember what they said,' Dhanapanth said. 'They want to make the story better.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
2 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Los Angeles school year begins amid fears over immigration enforcement
As children played in the schoolyard, there were no reports of federal agents in the area. Advertisement Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Alberto Carvalho has urged immigration authorities not to conduct enforcement activity within a two-block radius of schools, starting an hour before the school day begins and until one hour after classes let out. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'Hungry children, children in fear, cannot learn well,' Carvalho said in a news conference on Monday. He announced several measures intended to protect students and families, including altering bus routes to accommodate more students. The district will also distribute family preparedness packets that include know-your-rights information, emergency contact updates, and tips on designating a backup caregiver in case a parent is detained. The sprawling district, which covers more than two dozen cities, is the nation's second largest, with more than 500,000 students. Some 30,000 students are immigrants, and an estimated quarter of them are without legal status, according to the teachers' union. Advertisement Under US law, children have the right to an education regardless of immigration status. Districts across the country have grappled with what to do if federal agents came to school campuses, with some, including LA and Oakland, declaring themselves 'sanctuary' districts. While immigration agents have not detained anyone inside a school, a 15-year-old boy was pulled from a car and handcuffed outside Arleta High School in northern Los Angeles on Monday, Carvalho said. He had significant disabilities and was released after a bystander intervened in the case of 'mistaken identity,' the superintendent said. 'This is the exact type of incident that traumatizes our communities; it cannot repeat itself,' he added. Administrators at two elementary schools previously denied entry to Department of Homeland Security officials in April, and immigration agents have been seen in vehicles outside schools. DHS did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment. Carvalho said that while staffers and district police officers can't interfere with immigration enforcement and don't have jurisdiction beyond school property, federal agents parked in front of schools have left in the past after conversations with staff. The district is partnering with law enforcement in some cities and forming a 'rapid response' network to disseminate information about the presence of federal agents, he said. Teachers say they are concerned some students might not show up the first day. Lupe Carrasco Cardona, a high school social studies and English teacher at the Roybal Learning Center, said attendance dipped in January when President Trump took office. And when raids ramped up in June, graduation ceremonies took a hit. One raid at a Home Depot near MacArthur Park, an area with many immigrant families from Central America, took place the same morning as an eighth grade graduation at a nearby middle school. Advertisement 'People were crying. For the actual graduation ceremony, there were hardly any parents there,' Cardona said. Raids in California's Central Valley in January and February coincided with a 22 percent spike in student absences compared with the previous two school years, according to a recent study from Stanford University economist Thomas Dee and Big Local News. One 11th-grader, who spoke on the condition that her last name not be published because she is in the country without legal permission and fears being targeted, said she is afraid to return to school. 'Instead of feeling excited, really what I'm feeling is concern,' said Madelyn, a 17-year-old from Central America. 'I am very, very scared, and there is a lot of pressure.' She said she takes public transportation to school but fears being targeted on the bus by immigration agents because of her skin color. 'We are simply young people with dreams who want to study, move forward, and contribute to this country as well,' she said. Madelyn joined a club that provides support and community for immigrant students and said she intends to persevere in that work. 'I plan to continue supporting other students who need it very much, even if I feel scared,' she said. Some families who decided the in-person risk is too great opted for online learning, said Carvalho, with virtual enrollment up 7 percent this year. The district contacted at least 10,000 parents and visited more than 800 families over the summer to provide information about resources such as transportation and legal and financial support, and is deploying 1,000 workers from its central office on the first day of classes to 'critical areas' that have seen immigration raids. Advertisement 'We want no one to stay home as a result of fears,' Carvalho said.


Fox News
8 hours ago
- Fox News
Priscilla Presley blasts lawsuit claiming she pulled plug on Lisa Marie to gain control of Elvis' estate
Priscilla Presley is being accused of creating a multimillion-dollar scheme involving fraud, cover-ups and the exploitation of her own daughter's death. In a $50 million lawsuit filed Monday in Los Angeles Superior Court, Priscilla's former business partners, Brigitte Kruse and Kevin Fialko, alleged the 80-year-old widow of Elvis Presley made a calculated move in the final hours of Lisa Marie's life, accusing her of allegedly pulling her daughter off life support against her wishes. Meanwhile, Priscilla's high-profile attorney, Marty Singer, blasted the lawsuit as "shameful" and "salacious," and told Fox News Digital the accusations are "malicious character assassination." "Accusing a grieving mother of contributing to her daughter's death is not savvy advocacy – it's disgusting," Singer said. According to a lawsuit obtained by Fox News Digital, Priscilla acted immediately after Lisa Marie went into cardiac arrest on Jan. 12, 2023. "Within just over twenty-four hours, Lisa suffered cardiac arrest on Thursday, January 12th and she was rushed to West Hills Hospital," the complaint instead of honoring Lisa Marie's medical direction to "prolong her life," the lawsuit claimed Priscilla saw a window to regain control of the Presley estate, especially with Lisa Marie reportedly in the process of removing her as trustee of a multimillion-dollar trust. "Priscilla rushed to West Hills Hospital, and despite Lisa's clear directive to 'prolong her life,' Priscilla pulled the plug within hours of Lisa being admitted," the lawsuit stated, adding that Riley Keough, Lisa Marie's daughter and heir, had not yet arrived. The lawsuit further alleged that Priscilla wasted no time taking command of the media response. According to the filing, she pressured Kruse to issue a carefully worded statement soon after Lisa Marie's passing – Kruse and Fialko claim the rapid-fire statement was part of a calculated effort to recast Presley as the grieving family figurehead and consolidate power amid looming estate battles. "It is with a heavy heart that I must share the devastating news that my beautiful daughter Lisa Marie has left us," her statement read. She has also been accused of instructing Kruse and Fialko to push press messaging that rebranded her as the "Queen" of Graceland. This allegation is one of several explosive claims in the $50 million lawsuit that accuses Priscilla of fraud, breach of contract and reputation destruction, including allegedly exploiting her daughter's death for personal and financial gain. Kruse and Fialko claimed Priscilla had sold the rights to her own name, image and likeness (NIL) two decades ago – and "forgot" to mention it. Their lawyer, Jordan Matthews, said in a statement obtained by Fox News Digital that the "evidence will establish that the real victims here are my clients, who invested millions and years of hard work into revitalizing Priscilla Presley's brand, only to be betrayed and falsely accused once the money was on the table and every personal and business issue had been resolved." Kruse and Fialko alleged that Priscilla first reached out to them in 2021 while drowning in debt – owing nearly $700,000 in taxes and reportedly behind on car payments. They claimed they spent thousands of hours – and millions in funding – revitalizing her brand, brokering deals and restructuring her finances. But behind the scenes, the lawsuit stated, Presley had already offloaded her NIL rights to Elvis Presley Enterprises in 2005 for $6.5 million – a deal she kept secret while leveraging her image to lure investments. The lawsuit stated that when confronted about the previous agreement, Priscilla repeatedly denied making it and later said she had forgotten about it when confronted with evidence of it. Kruse and Fialko also said they negotiated a $2.4 million payout for Priscilla in a high-stakes legal standoff with granddaughter Keough over the estate. They also claimed Priscilla cut them off, trashed their reputations and filed a retaliatory elder abuse lawsuit. "Elder abuse is a very serious problem in our society," attorney Matthews said. "Our complaint alleges that Priscilla targeted Kruse and Fialko from day one, when she was in dire financial need, faced with mounting IRS debt and multiple lawsuits, even within her own family. The complaint alleges that Priscilla's relationship with her daughter was in ruins for decades and long before Kruse and Fialko were involved." He added, "Kruse and Fialko invested seven figures into rebuilding Priscilla's brand, stabilizing her finances, settling her lawsuits, cleaning up numerous private family ordeals, and attempting to help Priscilla repair her relationship with her daughter. Priscilla has, in turn, smeared Kruse and Fialko with false lies and malicious campaigns." Also named in the lawsuit was Keya Morgan, the controversial former manager of Marvel icon Stan Lee, previously charged with elder abuse. Kruse and Fialko accused Morgan of coaching Priscilla to make false abuse claims, threatening them directly and taking their seats at the Venice Film Festival premiere of "Priscilla" – a film they claimed they helped bring to life. Priscilla's own lawsuit against her former business partners, filed last year, painted a very different picture. She claimed Kruse and Fialko isolated her from longtime advisors, took over her bank accounts and tricked her into signing 20-plus contracts in under 30 minutes – including ones that gave them majority control over her own name and likeness. "If plaintiff's allegations are true… it's classic elder abuse," one judge ruled in an earlier case. But Kruse and Fialko argued the elder abuse narrative is a lie, a legal weapon used by Priscilla and Morgan to silence and erase their contractual claims. They want the court to order Presley to stop profiting off her NIL outside the companies they formed – and pay more than $50 million in damages.


Newsweek
9 hours ago
- Newsweek
Fact Check: Did Police Take Locals' Social Media Details for JD Vance Team?
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Multiple posts have gone viral on X this week sharing claims that a U.K. police department asked residents of a small English village for their social-media details, to pass on to U.S. Vice President JD Vance's security team. Vance is currently on vacation in the U.K. and spent several days staying near Dean, a hamlet in the Cotswolds, which is a popular getaway spot in the south west of the country. Thames Valley Police and a spokesperson for Vance have denied the claims. The Claim In an August 9 article, U.K. newspaper The Observer quoted an unnamed dog walker and resident of Dean as saying, "We have had the police knocking on every door. They wanted the names of everybody living there and details of their social media. I know several people refused. We asked them if they were protecting us, or Vance. At least they were honest and said it is for him and that it will all be passed on to the American security people." On August 12, Marc Owen Jones, a professor at Northwestern University in Qatar specializing in disinformation and digital authoritarianism, shared the article on X, alongside a post saying, "The police are asking local Cotswolds residents for their social media handles to be passed onto to JD Vance's security detail." Jones' post had 1.9 million views as of Thursday morning, and the claim was also covered on August 13 by The News Agents, a current affairs podcast co-hosted by veteran journalist Jon Sopel. U.S. Vice President JD Vance fishing at Chevening House in Kent, during his visit to the U.K. U.S. Vice President JD Vance fishing at Chevening House in Kent, during his visit to the U.K. Press Association via AP Images The Facts A Thames Valley Police spokesperson told Newsweek "this has not been taking place." "No officers were instructed to ask residents about their social media accounts or use, and we have received no complaints regarding this," the spokesperson said. "To reduce local impact due to temporary road restrictions during the visit, we held brief courtesy conversations with residents to understand their access needs and facilitate safe movement." "It was made clear that participation was entirely voluntary and that responses would not be shared outside the police force," they added. William Martin, Vance's communications director, called the claims "fake news" in a post on X, adding, "local police went on the record saying that they did not ask for details of anyone's social media. Neither did U.S. Secret Service." Newsweek contacted Vance's office, via email, for further comment. On Wednesday, Jones shared a quote from another article on X acknowledging the police department's denial. That post had 58,000 views as of Thursday morning. The Ruling False. Thames Valley Police said residents were not asked for their social-media details. Officers had discussions with locals about logistics ahead of the vice president's visit, and no details were shared outside the police department. FACT CHECK BY NEWSWEEK