MAN CONVICTED OF KIDNAPPING TODDLER IN CAR SEAT DURING ALISO VIEJO CARJACKING

 

For Immediate Release
Case # 11CF2844

August 13, 2013

Susan Kang Schroeder
Chief of Staff
Office: 714-347-8408
Cell: 714-292-2718

Farrah Emami
Spokesperson
Office: 714-347-8405
Cell: 714-323-4486

 

MAN CONVICTED OF KIDNAPPING TODDLER IN CAR SEAT DURING ALISO VIEJO CARJACKING

 

SANTA ANA – A man was convicted today for kidnapping a toddler, who was strapped into a car seat, during a carjacking in Aliso Viejo. James Christopher Corr, 35, Mission Viejo, was found guilty by a jury of one felony count each of first degree robbery, aggravated assault, carjacking, kidnapping, kidnapping during the commission of a carjacking, kidnapping child under 14 years old, child abuse, second degree vehicle burglary, hit and run with injury, first degree residential burglary, vandalism over $400, and one misdemeanor count of resisting an officer. His sentencing enhancements for non-accomplice present during a residential burglary and a prior prison conviction in Nevada for leaving the scene of an accident in 2005 were found true. Corr faces a maximum sentence of life in state prison at his sentencing Oct. 4, 2013, at 9:00 a.m. in Department C-36, Central Justice Center, Santa Ana.

 

Between 6:00 a.m. and 8:00 a.m. on Oct. 15, 2011, Corr broke into a Honda Accord parked in a lot in front of a business in Aliso Viejo and stole a purse and its contents, including credit cards. He then fled the scene.

 

Shortly after 8:00 a.m., Corr walked into a nearby neighborhood. Victim Suzanne C., who was seven months pregnant, was preparing to leave her home and was in her garage with the garage door open. The victim put her Saint Bernard in the caged-off rear area of her Volvo sport utility vehicle (SUV) and then put her 2-year-old son, John Doe, in his child safety seat in the back seat of the car behind the driver’s seat. She placed her keys in the car and left the driver’s door and door next to her son open as she walked into her home through the internal garage access door for a matter of seconds to get her son’s sippy cup.

 

In the few seconds that Suzanne C. was inside her home, Corr got into the driver’s seat of her car. The victim walked out and began screaming at Corr to let her get her son as John Doe cried in the back seat. The victim attempted to remove her son from his car seat through the open door, but the defendant backed out of the garage and knocked Suzanne C. to the ground with the SUV. He ran over her foot as he rapidly reversed, leaving tire skid marks from his speed.

 

Corr hit the frame of the victim’s garage door and crashed into a neighbor’s garage, causing the open rear door next to the crying toddler to break and hang off. Corr fled in the stolen vehicle with the knowledge that John Doe was in the back as Suzanne C. chased after the defendant screaming for her son.

 

A neighbor, who witnessed the carjacking and kidnapping, followed the defendant in her own car. Corr was speeding and driving erratically as he attempted to flee, including running through an intersection on a red light.

 

The defendant drove into an adjoining neighborhood and jumped out of the car without putting it in park with the engine still running. The car with the child and dog inside ran up a curb, nearly hitting a tree, before coming to a stop. The pursuing neighbor stopped to help John Doe as Corr fled on foot.