Los Angeles Times

Inquiry criticizes official’s conduct

L.A. commission­er’s remarks to staffers violated standards, an investigat­ion finds.

- By Dakota Smith

A Los Angeles city commission­er violated city standards of conduct when he called staffers “gorgeous” or said they “look good” in a suggestive tone, an investigat­ion has found.

A personnel department report found that city Commission­er Scott Crawford “repeatedly engaged in inappropri­ate behavior” toward city employees.

Crawford, 68, was appointed by Mayor Eric Garcetti to the El Pueblo de Los Angeles Historical Monument Authority commission, an unpaid position helping to oversee one of the city’s smallest department­s.

In December, four women and one man from the department filed complaints against Crawford.

Crawford remains a commission­er and completed sexual harassment training this year, said Garcetti spokesman Alex Comisar. The mayor ordered training for all city commission­ers in the wake of sexual misconduct allegation­s made last fall against film producer Harvey Weinstein.

Crawford has defended himself, saying that he frequently compliment­s people. He accused an El Pueblo staffer, whom he has declined to name, of organizing the complaints as part of an effort to drive him from the commission.

Crawford said in an interview last week that he had retained an attorney “to protect me,” but declined to elaborate. He said he received a letter this month outlining the results of the

investigat­ion of the allegation­s against him, but hadn’t seen the full report.

He called the complaints “ludicrous” and said that, as a gay man, he is used to censoring himself.

He became comfortabl­e only recently with the “realizatio­n that I can be me,” Crawford said.

“And now, with this, I have to go back to censoring myself,” he said. “It’s like going back into the closet.”

The 13-page report, obtained by The Times through a public records request, found that Crawford “demonstrat­ed insensitiv­ity to others by making unwanted comments, jokes, teasing, remarks or questions of a sexual nature.… [That behavior] fails to meet the standards expected of a city representa­tive.”

The report includes a complaint that Crawford looked up and down at a female staffer who attended a work-related event with her boyfriend and was “off duty.” When her boyfriend stepped away, Crawford told the woman, “You look good” in a suggestive tone of voice, according to the report.

Another female staffer complained that Crawford began a phone conversati­on by saying, “Hi, beautiful.”

The report also details a statement from a male staffer who said Crawford called and asked him to email some commission-related informatio­n. Crawford gave his Hotmail address, then added: “I am the hot male. Do you get it? I’m a hot male.”

Crawford told the personnel department investigat­or that he frequently makes the “hot male” comment so people can remember his email address, according to the report.

dakota.smith @latimes.com Twitter: @dakotacdsm­ith

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