Los Angeles Times

Former lieutenant is charged

Now-retired sheriff ’s officer had warned a massage parlor about raids in exchange for sex, prosecutor­s say.

- By James Queally james.queally@latimes.com Twitter: @JamesQueal­lyLAT

A retired Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department lieutenant has pleaded not guilty to charges of tipping off a West Hollywood massage parlor about potential raids “in exchange for sexual favors or other gifts,” according to a criminal complaint made public Friday.

David Smith, 59, was accused of giving informatio­n about law enforcemen­t activities to an employee at the massage parlor and has been charged with two counts of obstructio­n of justice, according to a statement issued by the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office.

Smith, a former lieutenant with the West Hollywood station, is accused of advising an employee at Pine Therapy Massage on Santa Monica Boulevard about vice operations being conducted in the area, according to the complaint.

In June 2017, Smith told the woman he believed police were in the area and suggested “she should be careful or close for the evening,” according to the complaint.

Prosecutor­s also accused Smith of visiting the parlor and paying for acts of prostituti­on in 2016 and 2017, the complaint said.

In addition, Smith used on-duty Sheriff’s Department personnel to determine whether authoritie­s were “involved in any law enforcemen­t actions” in the area, the complaint said.

Under questionin­g from Sheriff ’s Department investigat­ors last June, Smith admitted to warning the employee about potential law enforcemen­t activities and said he frequently visited the parlor for sex, according to the complaint.

If convicted, Smith could face up to three years in prison.

Calls to Smith’s attorney, Vicki Podberesky, seeking comment were not immediatel­y returned Friday.

Smith made a brief appearance in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom Friday and is due back in court July 23, prosecutor­s said.

Greg Risling, a spokesman for the district attorney’s office, described the employee Smith was in contact with as an “uncharged co-conspirato­r” and did not say whether she might face prosecutio­n in the case.

While the complaint names the parlor connected to the case as “Pine Therapy Massage,” the only business listed at that address on Santa Monica Boulevard is named “Fine Therapy.”

An employee who answered the phone at Fine Therapy declined to comment.

Smith was arrested after the Sheriff’s Department’s Internal Criminal Investigat­ions Bureau launched a “comprehens­ive undercover investigat­ion,” according to Nicole Nishida, a Sheriff’s Department spokeswoma­n.

Nishida said Smith left the Sheriff ’s Department in September, ending a 35-year career, and a case was presented to the district attorney’s office in December.

Nishida did not say whether Smith was fired or resigned. The district attorney’s office described him as “retired.”

Smith, who worked in the West Hollywood station for roughly three decades, was a beloved local cop who went by the nickname “Smitty” in the neighborho­od, according to a profile published in the WeHo Times in March of last year.

“I love the community,” Smith, who was described as a father of five, told the publicatio­n last year. “It’s something new every day. It’s not stagnant.

“This is a fun place to work,” he said. “There’s always something new to discover and challenges that we have to work on to make it the safest city possible.”

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