Imperial Valley Press

California police chief resigns amid sexual assault probe

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MARYSVILLE (AP) — A Northern California police chief resigned after a newspaper revealed he is the subject of a sexual assault investigat­ion involving a former police cadet.

Aaron Easton, the former police chief for Marysville, a town of 12,000 people 45 miles north of Sacramento, left his post Thursday, the city manager said in a statement.

City officials announced Easton’s resignatio­ns hours after the Marysville Appeal Democrat published a story saying the Yuba County Sheriff’s Office and the Yuba County District Attorney’s Office are investigat­ing Easton in the 2008 alleged sexual assault of a police cadet.

The woman, who was not identified, made the allegation­s last year while she was an inmate of the Sacramento County jail for failing to appear on a charge of misdemeano­r driving, according to affidavits obtained by the Appeal Democrat.

The woman said Easton forced her to perform oral sex on him while they were on a ride-along as part of her police training. At the time, Easton was a part time instructor at the Yuba College Police Academy and a full-time sheriff’s deputy.

She said she believed the sexual assault led to her dismissal from the academy and that it ruined her life.

Easton’s attorney, Adam Gasner, said in a text message to the newspaper that his client categorica­lly denies the allegation­s.

He “trusts that when this investigat­ion is complete these allegation­s will be shown to be what they are: false and unfounded,” Gasner said.

Details of the sexual assault allegation­s were explained in affidavits sworn by a Yuba County Sheriff’s Department investigat­or as he sought cellphone and computer informatio­n that had been gathered in a probe of the 2015 death of Easton’s wife, Sara Easton, the newspaper said.

The investigat­ion into Easton’s wife’s death has not been concluded, and the Sutter County coroner has not yet determined a cause of death. The probe was turned over to the state Department of Justice, which wouldn’t comment on that investigat­ion, the newspaper reported.

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