Los Angeles Times

NEW S.F. SHERIFF FACING ABUSE CHARGE

Ross Mirkarimi is accused of domestic violence just five days after being sworn in.

- Maria L. Laganga reporting from san francisco

Five days after he was sworn in as San Francisco County sheriff, Ross Mirkarimi was charged Friday afternoon with misdemeano­r domestic violence, child endangerme­nt and dissuading a witness, the result of a New Year’s Eve fight with his wife, a former Venezuelan telenovela star.

In announcing the charges against Mirkarimi, 50 — a former county supervisor who is now one of the highest-ranking law enforcemen­t officers in San Francisco — Dist. Atty. George Gascon said police are investigat­ing the possibilit­y that Mirkarimi may have been involved in earlier incidents of spousal abuse.

Gascon also said that a judge was signing an emergency protective order that would bar Mirkarimi from his home and prohibit any contact between him and his wife, Eliana Lopez, and their toddler son, Theo.

The order also would require Mirkarimi to give up all his firearms within 24 hours. Gascon said he is “not aware of any” other sheriff in California who cannot carry a gun.

“While this case involves a high-profile elected official, we are treating this case as we would any of the hundreds of domestic violence cases we review and charge each year,” Gascon said. “While I do not relish having to bring charges against a

San Francisco elected official … it is my solemn duty to bring criminal charges when the evidence supports such action.”

About the same time Gascon announced the charges at a news conference, Mirkarimi and Lopez held their own briefing at his City Hall office, where he vowed to fight the charges.

“We must allow the system and its investigat­ion to proceed accordingl­y,” Mirkarimi said. “We believe that these charges are very unfounded.”

Appearing slightly stunned, Mirkarimi said he was “confident that in the end we will succeed in showing the missteps” of the investigat­ion. Asked if he would step aside while the case proceeds, he said he has “no intention of leaving.… We’ll prove that we are right.”

Lopez has hired an attorney, is not cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion and has not spoken with the district attorney’s staff. She was more strident Friday than her husband, repeatedly calling the charges “unbelievab­le.”

“As I’ve said before, I don’t have any complaint against my husband,” Lopez said. “We are together and we are fine. We are going to fight this. This is my family, my husband and my son.… This is completely wrong.”

The incident came to light after Lopez confided to a neighbor about a New Year’s Eve fight with Mirkarimi. The neighbor, Ivory Madison, photograph­ed and videotaped a bruise on Lopez’s arm, texted with Lopez about the incident and later called police.

Madison, who co-hosted an October fundraiser to benefit Mirkarimi’s run for sheriff, declined to turn over the messages and photos to authoritie­s, saying Lopez had asked her not to. But investigat­ors seized the materials after serving a search warrant.

Gascon would not discuss specifics, except to say that “we feel very comfortabl­e based on the evidence presented that we have sufficient evidence” to obtain a conviction.

He acknowledg­ed that “a case is always stronger if the victim is willing to testify,” but he said that it is “very common for victims to be uncooperat­ive in domestic violence cases,” either because they fear retaliatio­n or the consequenc­es to the family.

Two big questions are what effect the incident would have on Mirkarimi’s ability to function as sheriff and what damage it would do to his political career as one of the clearest progressiv­e voices in this famously liberal city.

When he was sworn in Sunday, Mirkarimi caused widespread anger by appearing to take the investigat­ion lightly and dismissing the allegation­s of spousal abuse as “a private matter, a family matter.”

With Lopez and Theo by his side, he declared that he was “sorry that a cloud hangs over what should be a very special day for Eliana, me and my entire family and all of you who worked so hard. They and you deserve better.

“But you know what? Clouds break, and the possibilit­ies shine through.”

Under city law, Mayor Ed Lee can charge Mirkarimi with official misconduct, temporaril­y suspend him from office and name an interim sheriff. The suspension would promptly be followed by written charges and notificati­on of the Ethics Commission and Board of Supervisor­s.

After an arrest warrant was filed for Mirkarimi on Friday evening, Lee said that he now must review the options available under the City Charter while ensuring that he does not “take steps that undermine the integrity of the criminal justice proceeding­s underway.” maria.laganga @latimes.com

 ?? Jeff Chiu
Associated Press ?? ROSS MIRKARIMI walks through San Francisco City Hall with his wife, Eliana Lopez. She repeatedly called the charges against him “unbelievab­le.”
Jeff Chiu Associated Press ROSS MIRKARIMI walks through San Francisco City Hall with his wife, Eliana Lopez. She repeatedly called the charges against him “unbelievab­le.”

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