Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Bryant crash: Fire captain sues over phone demand

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an

A Los Angeles County fire captain who was at the scene of the helicopter crash that killed Kobe Bryant and eight others has filed a retaliatio­n lawsuit against the county, alleging he was demoted for refusing to fully cooperate with an investigat­ion into graphic photos taken of the crash site.

The lawsuit, filed Wednesday by Capt. Tony Imbrenda, marks the latest fallout from the photo scandal that embroiled the county’s fire agency and the Sheriff ’s Department. The Times reported this year that sheriff ’s deputies shared gruesome images of the scene in the hills above Calabasas.

Imbrenda, who served as a spokesman for the fire department in the days after the crash and later was stripped of that title during the investigat­ion, alleges his career prospects were damaged severely by the cloud of suspicion cast over him during the inquiry.

“Imbrenda had an impeccable reputation in the Southern California PIO community with extensive earning potential in his post fire service career,” the lawsuit said. “That potential is now totally destroyed.”

The Fire Department did not respond to a request for comment.

Imbrenda said in his lawsuit that he was dispatched to the Jan. 26 crash scene, where he helped organize a press conference some distance from the debris field for journalist­s who arrived as word of Bryant’s death spread. That first day, he said he received multiple photograph­s from people working at the crash site, “as is common practice on all major incidents,” according to his lawsuit.

The lawsuit did not explain why it is routine for a spokespers­on to receive photograph­s of a crime or accident scene from others that are not to be released to the public.

Imbrenda said he returned the next day to help with the investigat­ion, traveling to the accident site “to gain intelligen­ce on conditions and to assist the FBI photograph­er with her equipment.” While there, he took a few photos on his own, according to the lawsuit.

Imbrenda’s superiors did not communicat­e that photos of the scene were not allowed, and there’s no department policy on photograph­y at emergency incidents, the lawsuit said.

In the weeks that followed, as it became clear the Sheriff ’s Department was investigat­ing its deputies for sharing images of the incident, Imbrenda, 50, alerted firefighte­rs who had sent him photos that they should be deleted, according to the lawsuit.

He also “spread the word” that possession of graphic images could be problemati­c, the lawsuit said, and that “everyone should delete them so as to minimize the potential for the content to fall into the wrong hands.”

On March 6, the lawsuit said, Imbrenda complied with an order to hand over his department cellphone and laptop. He was then informed he was the subject of a fire department investigat­ion into the alleged photo taking and sharing, which was “something Imbrenda had never done,” according to the lawsuit.

Imbrenda subsequent­ly was ordered to turn over his personal cell phone or face suspension or discharge. He refused to do so, saying the order was a violation of the Firefighte­r Bill of Rights. In response, he alleges, he was removed from the spokesman position and his county vehicle was taken away.

In the lawsuit, Imbrenda denies taking photos of the victims’ bodies and said he did not take photos with his personal cell phone. But he did not address whether he transferre­d images to his personal phone.

He was first reassigned to a telemedici­ne unit, where he worked 12-hour days in a “dungeon-like setting” earning half of what he made as a spokesman, the lawsuit said. Then, he was transferre­d to work in serology testing, a “totally humiliatin­g” experience because other employees made jokes and laughed at his expense, according to the lawsuit. In September, he moved to a fire station in Altadena.

Imbrenda still does not know what misconduct allegation­s were lodged against him, the lawsuit said. The status and scope of the fire department’s investigat­ion into the photos is unclear.

At the Sheriff ’s Department, after a citizen filed a complaint about a deputy sharing gruesome images from the crash at a bar in Norwalk, Sheriff Alex Villanueva initially sought to cover up the behavior by quietly ordering the photos deleted. But when The Times exposed the conduct, the sheriff quickly ordered an investigat­ion. .

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