Los Angeles Times

Ex- officer charged with assault

Mitchell Grobeson, 57, a former LAPD sergeant, is accused of attacking his husband.

- By Matt Hamilton and Richard Winton matt. hamilton @ latimes. com richard. winton @ latimes. com

A former Los Angeles police sergeant who waged a decades- long legal battle with the LAPD over its treatment of gay and lesbian officers was charged Tuesday with assaulting his husband at their West Hollywood home, prosecutor­s said.

Mitchell Grobeson, 57, faces a felony count of assault with a firearm and criminal threats. At his Tuesday arraignmen­t, he pleaded not guilty, said Ricardo Santiago, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office.

Grobeson, who described himself as the f irst openly gay officer in the LAPD, was arrested Friday after an hours- long standoff with L. A. County sheriff ’ s deputies.

Earlier in the day, the couple had a domestic dispute, and Grobeson allegedly pointed his handgun at his husband, ordering him to leave, prosecutor­s said.

His husband called the sheriff ’ s office so that he could return home to retrieve some possession­s, prosecutor­s said.

Sheriff ’s deputies arrived and Grobeson allegedly holed himself up in the home, refusing to leave.

More than three hours after deputies were called to the home in the 800 block of West Knoll Drive, crisis negotiator­s successful­ly persuaded Grobeson to surrender.

He is being held in lieu of $ 100,000 bail.

If convicted of all charges, Grobeson faces up to 14 years in state prison.

In 1988, at age 29, Grobeson f iled a lawsuit against the LAPD, alleging that fellow officers and their superiors forced him to resign after a mix of threats and intimidati­on over his sexual orientatio­n.

Before resigning from the force in 1988, Grobeson had served for nearly seven years.

He alleged in his lawsuit that superiors called him a pejorative term and that he once received a package labeled “AIDS survival kit.”

In February 1993, Grobeson, along with two other of- f icers, won $ 770,000 in damages and a promise by the department to improve its recruitmen­t, hiring and training of gay officers.

Grobeson f iled a second lawsuit against the department in 1996, alleging that the LAPD had failed to carry out the reforms promised in the earlier settlement.

He also alleged that officers and supervisor­s were harassing him on the job after he returned to the department.

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