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All charges dismissed against Navy commander accused of attempted rape

REGION —  Acting on a motion by prosecutors, a judge today dismissed all charges against a Navy commander who was accused of trying to rape a junior officer in her Valencia Park home in 2016.

John Michael Neuhart II had been facing a third trial after two previous juries deadlocked on multiple charges.

Last month, Judge Laura Halgren dismissed a charge of assault with intent to commit rape during a burglary, but said prosecutors could retry Neuhart on charges of attempted forcible rape and assault with intent to commit rape.

Deputy District Attorney Patrick Espinoza said the Navy will now assume jurisdiction of the case.

Defense attorney Kerry Armstrong, who has been working on the case for 21 months, said Neuhart could face potential charges in the Navy, but “he’s a happy man today.”

Armstrong said he was “pleasantly surprised” when Espinoza told the judge that the District Attorney’s Office was moving to dismiss the case.

In the retrial, prosecutor Jennifer Tag told jurors that Neuhart, who was the alleged victim’s helicopter squadron commander in Guam before she was transferred to San Diego, was physically aggressive with the woman once they arrived at her home and pulled off her jeans.

The prosecutor said the woman, identified in court as Kristin B., has no memory of the limousine ride home from the downtown hotel to her home, but
remembers pushing the defendant out the door after the alleged assault on Sept. 12, 2016.

Neuhart, 41, came around to a back door and decided to videotape the encounter with his cell phone, Tag told the jury.

“I’ve wanted you for awhile,” the defendant tells Kristin through the closed door.

“No! Stop,” she replies.

“Is that your safe word?” the defendant says.

“Yes,” says Kristin.

Once she opens the door, Neuhart tells her to get a condom.

“It’s not what I want,” she says. “Spike stop! Spike stop!”

When called as one of the first witnesses at the retrial, Kristin testified that Spike was Neuhart’s call sign and stands for “Sweaty palms, I
know everything.”

A neighbor heard the woman’s screams and called 911, then confronted Neuhart, forcing him to gather up his clothes and run away, Tag told the jury, adding that Neuhart ran so hard through two canyons that he broke his leg before officers caught up to him and took him into custody.

During the ordeal, Kristin told the defendant “no,” “stop” “get out” or “get off” at least 90 times in less than 15 minutes, the prosecutor said.

Armstrong told jurors that Neuhart, a married Iraq War veteran and father of six, and his client had a mutual attraction to each other. He said things might have been misconstrued that night, and both of them were drunk.

Neuhart thought Kristin, a helicopter pilot and a lieutenant, had been flirting with him while they were in Guam, Armstrong said.

The attorney showed jurors hotel surveillance video in which the two are seen hugging and kissing at the bar and in an elevator the night of the incident in San Diego. At the end of the evening, he said, they debated where to go and decided to get a ride to her house.

The limousine driver thought Kristin was flirting with the defendant, the defense attorney said.

Neuhart asked her in the limo, “Does no mean no tonight?” and she said no, according to Armstrong. Once at her home, Neuhart was confused because
she was giving him mixed signals, his attorney said.

Neuhart decided to record the event because it was getting “so weird” and he wanted to protect himself, according to Armstrong.
The attorney said his client never touched Kristin’s private parts that night.

The defendant was relieved as commander of Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron 25 based at Anderson Air Force on Guam after his arrest.

He is still a Navy commander working a desk job in Coronado, Armstrong said.