More than a day after a jury and Presiding Judge Robert Naraja found Calvo guilty of sexually molesting a 13-year-old girl, he was directed to immediately report to and register with the Office of Adult Probation.
Tony Calvo, the former Rotary Club president’s elder brother and third-party custodian, was directed by Naraja to surrender his two rifles to the Department of Public Safety for temporary custody.
Patrick Calvo’s defense counsel, G. Anthony Long, and Assistant Attorney General Brian Gallagher, the prosecutor, spoke to the court when the bail hearing resumed at 1 p.m. yesterday.
After he was found guilty, Patrick Calvo was remanded to the custody of the Department of Corrections pending the bail hearing.
The court yesterday said Patrick Calvo will be placed under house arrest at his elder brother’s residence in Papago.
The court also ordered Calvo to observe a curfew from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. and to “put his business in order.”
He was told not to have any contact with any minor 18 years old below, unless in the presence of an adult.
He must report to Detective Andrea Ozawa or Officer Jason Tarkong every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, between 9 to 11 a.m.
He cannot leave the island, and must stay away from seaports and airports.
Gallagher objected to Tony Calvo as third-party custodian, saying that the elder Calvo had problems with anger management and undergone counseling.
But Tony Calvo said after the counseling, he can now “deal better with [his] short temper and able to control [his] anger.”
The elder Calvo, who retired after 21 years in government service, told the court he has never been charged nor arrested for any crime.
He said there are no minors staying at his house where he lives with his wife.
His house, he added, is on a one-acre property “very far” from neighbors.
He told the court that he fully understands the seriousness of being a third-party custodian.
On Monday, a jury found Patrick Calvo guilty of sexual assault in the second degree and sexual abuse of a minor in the second degree.
Naraja also convicted Calvo of sexual abuse of a minor in the third degree and disturbing the peace.


