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New Miss California crowned after mix-up
Ryan Pearson
BEVERLY HILLS(Calif)—In the business of crowning beauty queens, there’s
one thing you’d think they’d get right: crowning the right beauty queen.
Miss California USA organizers say they got that wrong, but corrected
themselves Thursday by crowning Miss Barstow, Raquel Beezley, a
21-year-old waitress they said rightfully earned the title.
And they tried to put an end to a kerfuffle that began last month when
they crowned Miss Los Angeles, Christina Silva, only to backtrack days
later, blaming a vote tabulation error.
Silva hired a lawyer, booked an appearance on “Ellen,” and won support
from a Los Angeles Times columnist who murmured in print of hanging
chads. Silva, 24, lives in L.A.’s Koreatown and is of Ecuadoran and
Mexican descent. Was she too ethnic? Too urban? Did judges find some
dirty secret in her past at the last minute?
California pageant executive director Keith Lewis stared out at cameras
in a Beverly Hilton conference room hoping to tamp down speculation.
“This was a human error. We have apologized for it,” he said. “I believe
in the integrity by which we must stand. I’m here today to right that
wrong of crowning the incorrect person.”
To that end, last year’s winner Meagan Tandy emerged wearing a black
dress, and placed a tiara on Beezley’s head to the sound of cheers from
her parents and brothers.
“It is bittersweet,” Beezley said of her win. “I just want her to know
that it was not my fault nor her fault. This has been very hard for the
both of us.”
At any rate, it’s another hit for Donald Trump’s Miss USA pageant, which
in the past year has seen state-level winners lose their titles for
appearing in risque pictures and getting pregnant. Trump personally gave
the overall winner, Tara Conner, a second chance after she was seen
boozing at New York clubs and agreed to enter rehab.
Judges approached Lewis immediately after the Nov. 25 pageant finals in
Los Angeles, concerned that their votes hadn’t been correctly tallied.
He asked for a re-count, and it turned out the points assigned to
finalists had been reversed. He said he broke the news to Silva in a
“lengthy, heartfelt, truthful” conversation, then the two of them called
Beezley.
Beezley interrupted her waitress shift at DiNapoli’s Firehouse Pizza
restaurant in Barstow to take the call from the two of them on
speakerphone. Beezley said Silva told her about the error and
congratulated her, saying, “I do not want this crown and sash if I
didn’t rightfully win it.”
The pageant let Silva, now listed as second runner-up, keep all her
accouterments — the sash, the crown, the necklace — and gave her $1,500
entry fee back. But Silva now says she felt unfairly pressured to
relinquish her title, and feels something is fishy about the “accountant
error” reason supplied by organizers.
“Everything’s inaccurate and it’s not consistent,” Silva told Ellen
DeGeneres during an “Ellen” show broadcast Thursday. “All I could do was
shake and cry, just cry in my mom’s arms.”
Beezley’s mother Christine Parrish said she was upset about speculation
her daughter, was bumped up because she appears less ethnic. “I heard
somebody calling her a whitey! It’s sad,” she said, noting that Beezley
is one-fourth Filipino, had won a pageant in Mazatlan, Mexico, and
judged a pageant in the Phillipines.
Beezley, who hid her shaking hands behind a desk after being crowned,
was disappointed that she and Silva would be lumped in with other
scandals in Trump’s pageant empire.
“The thing is, we didn’t do anything wrong,” she said. “We’re both
innocent in this case. It’s crazy.”
Beezley, who attends Barstow Community College, will represent
California in April in the Miss USA pageant, and hopes to become a
correspondent for “Access Hollywood.”
There was also a happy ending for Silva. DeGeneres crowned her Miss
Ellen and gave her a yearlong modelling contract and year’s worth of
styling by Ken Paves or Prive hair salons. |