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Paparazzo Fails to Come to Court

Warrants are issued for Todd K. Wallace, who is wanted in a child endangerment and battery case involving Reese Witherspoon.

January 05, 2006|Richard Winton, Times Staff Writer

Authorities are searching for a paparazzo who failed to appear in court to face misdemeanor charges stemming from his efforts to photograph actress Reese Witherspoon at a family outing at a Disney theme park, prosecutors said.

Arrest warrants were issued for Todd K. Wallace, 44, after he missed a Dec. 19 bail hearing on child endangerment and battery counts brought in the Witherspoon case and a Dec. 27 arraignment on a separate felony petty theft charge, prosecutors said.


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"We have no idea where he is right now," said Patrick Ahle, an Anaheim prosecutor handling the Witherspoon case. "He is in the wind.

"He has both U.S. and British Honduras passports. Right now, a lot of people are looking for him," Ahle said.

Wallace, 44, is one of several paparazzi accused over the past year of endangering stars to get photographs for tabloid publications.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed into law a bill setting triple damages for paparazzi who assault celebrities in the course of trying to photograph them, and the Los Angeles County district attorney's office has opened a conspiracy investigation into aggressive photographers and the agencies that buy or broker their photographs.

Wallace was arrested in 2004 after allegedly threatening to assault an assistant manager at a Robertson Boulevard boutique, court records show. He was charged with disturbing the peace, but the Los Angeles city attorney's office later dismissed the case.

He was arrested again last September after allegedly pushing a friend of Witherspoon's and striking the friend's 5-year-old daughter with his camera during the actress' visit to Disney's California Adventure park. He is also accused of roughing up two park employees who tried to intervene.

Witherspoon, in an interview shortly after the incident, said she had to shield her son to protect him from the photographer.

"He became so aggressive. He began pushing and shoved our tour guide," said Witherspoon, who described the incident as "an awful experience."

In an interview with The Times in October, Wallace defended his conduct and said authorities were just out to get paparazzi.

"The governor on down, the order is do whatever it takes to get us," he said. Wallace also said he never touched anyone, but asserted that Disney park employees had pushed him.

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