Los Angeles Times

Exec’s police abuse case rejected

Appeals court upholds rulings in suits by man injured after a run-in with L.A. officers.

- By Joel Rubin joel.rubin@latimes.com Twitter: @joelrubin

A federal appeals court Monday firmly rejected a former Hollywood and bank executive’s allegation­s that he was beaten by Los Angeles police officers and maligned by union officials.

The decision by a panel of judges from the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld lower-court rulings in lawsuits Brian C. Mulligan brought after a bloody 2012 encounter with officers.

Mulligan, a onetime cochairman of Universal Pictures and executive with Deutsche Bank, was badly injured when he allegedly tried to attack two LAPD officers who were trying to take him into custody. The officers had found Mulligan acting suspicious­ly in an Eagle Rock neighborho­od and later encountere­d him trying to get into other people’s cars and screaming, according to police reports.

After trying to run from the officers, Mulligan snarled and pretended to scratch at the officers as if he believed his hands were claws before charging at them, the reports said.

Mulligan’s attorney at the time gave a dramatical­ly different account of the arrest. The officers, the attorney said, had kidnapped Mulligan, forced him to go to a motel and then beat him in a brutal, unprovoked attack when he tried to flee.

He also denied the officers’ assertion that Mulligan had admitted to using bath salts and marijuana, and he accused the officers of lying in their arrest reports to cover up the alleged abuse. Bath salts are a group of synthetic drugs that can cause a user to become agitated and aggressive.

In response to the attorney’s allegation­s, the Los Angeles Police Protective League, which represents rank-and-file officers, issued a statement that portrayed Mulligan as a drug-abusing liar and accused him of trying to “shake down” the Police Department.

The statement included a link to a website on which the union had uploaded an audio recording that an officer from a different department had made during a chance encounter with Mulligan shortly before the arrest. On the recording, Mulligan admits to repeated use of bath salts.

In his lawsuits, Mulligan contended that the force the officers used had been improper and that union officials had infringed on his constituti­onal right to free speech by posting the recording — a move Mulligan said was aimed at forcing him to drop his legal fight against the officers.

Mulligan failed to prevail on any of his claims in U.S. District Court and appealed to the 9th Circuit. Mulligan’s attorney raised several issues but the appeal panel shot them all down. It paid particular attention to Mulligan’s constituti­onal claim.

“The First Amendment of the Constituti­on protects citizens from attempts by government officials to chill their speech. One question presented by this case is whether that same constituti­onal guarantee also requires those officials to remain silent when accused of misconduct, lest they risk liability for unlawful retaliatio­n. We conclude that it does not,” Judge Richard R. Clifton wrote for the panel.

Eric Rose, a former union spokespers­on named in one of the lawsuits, expressed relief at the ruling.

“One cannot hold a highprofil­e news conference accusing public officials of misconduct and threaten those same public officials with liability for unlawful retaliatio­n if they respond to those allegation­s,” he said.

Mulligan’s attorney, Louis “Skip” Miller, disagreed.

“It’s wrong,” he said of the ruling, pledging to seek another hearing in front of the 9th Circuit.

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