Los Angeles Times

Anti- gay bias in Long Beach

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Re “Judge slams Long Beach police bias,” April 30

Your article about the reversal of the conviction of a man arrested in a sting operation by a Long Beach police vice squad awakened memories of the same tactics used by that police department several decades ago.

As a young lawyer, I defended a man who was a well- respected English teacher in Long Beach. He was arrested for soliciting a lewd act with a young, handsome member of the vice squad who was assigned to ensnare and apprehend homosexual men.

My client could not deny the truth of the charge, and he entered a plea of guilty, which the judge reduced to a misdemeano­r by sentence, imposed a minimum fine and ordered the conviction set aside. The school district terminated the man, who left the area. I never heard from him again.

It is with regret that I read that the Long Beach Police Department is continuing to engage in the same reprehensi­ble and unconstitu­tional conduct. My thanks go out to attorney Bruce Nickerson for obtaining the dismissal of the conviction of his client, and to Superior Court Judge Halim Dhanidina for his courage in invalidati­ng that conviction. Samuel Salmon Long Beach

The city of Long Beach has one of the largest gay population­s in the state, so I was shocked to read that its police department has apparently been engaging in discrimina­tory conduct toward gay men by employing vice officers to entrap them in restroom sting operations.

As a longtime resident of the city, I strongly object to the waste of taxpayer funds in the pursuit of this victimless “crime.” The fact that those convicted are required to register as sex offenders is particular­ly appalling.

Mayor Robert Garcia should have made himself available for comment for this article. His failure to do so is unacceptab­le. Marcia Goodman Long Beach

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