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Public Safety

Judge Refuses To Lower Bail For Man Who Did Voice of Charlie Brown

Oceanside resident Peter Robbins, the voice of Charlie Brown in several Peanuts films and television specials.
Channel 10 News
Oceanside resident Peter Robbins, the voice of Charlie Brown in several Peanuts films and television specials.

A judge today refused to lower the $550,000 bail for Oceanside resident Peter Robbins -- the voice of Charlie Brown in several Peanuts films and television specials -- who is charged with threatening his girlfriend and the doctor who performed her breast enhancement surgery.

Robbins faces up to nine years in prison if convicted of two counts of stalking and 10 counts of making criminal threats, said Deputy District Attorney Elizabeth McClutchey.

After a bail review hearing today, Judge Peter Deddeh said Robbins' bail should remain as set.

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A readiness conference is scheduled March 19, and a preliminary hearing is set for March 22.

Robbins, 56, was taken into custody the night of Jan. 20 while coming back into the United States from Mexico after he was named in an arrest warrant.

At the defendant's Jan. 23 arraignment, McClutchey urged Judge David Szumowski to keep the defendant's bail at $550,000 because it was the alleged victims' perception that Robbins was a "desperate man'' and "had nothing to lose.''

The prosecutor also said Robbins had purchased a gun but had not yet received it and had practiced firing a gun at a shooting range.

McClutchey alleged that on Dec. 31, Robbins threatened Dr. Lori Saltz, who had performed breast enhancement surgery on his girlfriend, Shawna Kern.

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According to a declaration in support of the arrest warrant, Saltz told authorities that Robbins had paid for the surgery and follow-up appointments.

Kern, of Los Angeles, told authorities she was staying at a hotel in Carlsbad when she was involved in a domestic violence incident with Robbins in which he allegedly grabbed her by the neck and demanded that she go with him to get back the money he paid for her breast enhancement surgery.

Kern said her relationship with Robbins ended after that and that he began calling Saltz's office demanding his money back, according to the court document.

McClutchey said Saltz stayed at a hotel because she was fearful of Robbins and also hired an armed guard for her business.

The prosecutor alleged that Robbins left several threatening phone messages for Kern, saying in one, "You better hide, Shawna. I'm coming for you. I'm going to find you in Sun Valley or wherever the (expletive) you live and I'm going to kill you.''

In an uncharged incident, Robbins allegedly threatened to kill a police sergeant who arrested him on Jan. 13, McClutchey said. He was released on bond the next day.

Robbins was nine years old when he began doing the voice of Charlie Brown for such films and television specials as "A Boy Named Charlie Brown,'' "A Charlie Brown Christmas'' and "It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown.''

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