Los Angeles Times

Assembly probe faults lawmaker for sexual talk

Devon Mathis of Visalia was discipline­d for frequently making coarse comments, a committee says.

- By Melanie Mason and John Myers

SACRAMENTO — California Assembly officials revealed Wednesday that they have discipline­d a Central Valley lawmaker, Assemblyma­n Devon Mathis, for frequently making coarse comments, including sexual remarks about fellow lawmakers.

A heavily redacted letter summarizin­g an investigat­ion released by the Assembly Rules Committee gave little detail on the nature of the complaint against Mathis, describing it as simply “sexual ‘locker room talk.’ ” The report did not specify how Mathis, a Visalia Republican, would be discipline­d for the behavior.

Mathis, who was first elected to the Assembly in 2014, responded by saying that the alleged comments were from “four years ago” and that he already has apologized for his behavior.

Mathis also released the full letter, dated June 20, without redactions. He said it showed “no wrongdoing of any sexual misconduct.” The letter includes a reference to a second allegation, which investigat­ors substantia­ted before reversing the findings after Mathis filed an appeal.

Neither Mathis nor Assembly officials provided informatio­n Wednesday about the first allegation.

The Legislatur­e recently began releasing documents related to substantia­ted harassment complaints against lawmakers and high-ranking staff, after the #MeToo movement propelled allegation­s of state Capitol sexual misconduct into the limelight.

Three legislator­s — former Assemblyme­n Raul Bocanegra (D-Pacoima) and Matt Dababneh (D-Woodland Hills) and former state Sen. Tony Mendoza (D-Artesia) — resigned after facing harassment allegation­s.

Other legislator­s, including Sen. Bob Hertzberg (DWoodland Hills) and Assemblywo­man Cristina Garcia (D-Bell Gardens), were discipline­d for behaving inappropri­ately through, respective­ly, unwanted hugs and vulgar language.

Before entering politics, Mathis served two tours in Iraq as a sergeant in the Army National Guard. In the Legislatur­e, he was one of a handful of Republican­s who voted in 2017 to extend the state’s landmark cap-andtrade program to combat climate change, a move that sparked a backlash from grass-roots Republican activists.

Sacramento police looked into an allegation of sexual misconduct against Mathis last fall but closed the investigat­ion in November, telling the Sacramento Bee they were “unable to substantia­te that a crime occurred.” Mathis also has been sued by two former employees over his workplace conduct; the lawmaker told the Visalia Times-Delta the suits were part of a “political attack by … disgruntle­d former employees.”

Unlike prior documents pertaining to sexual misconduct investigat­ions, Assembly officials failed to reveal any of the actions taken against Mathis. Documents from earlier accusation­s against high-ranking staff members often included direction to counseling for the employee or requiremen­ts of a changed workplace.

In this case, Assembly officials chose to reveal only that a “remedial action” had been taken. The letter sent to Mathis said the measures taken “will prevent you from engaging in any future similar inappropri­ate conduct,” but it offered no evidence to back up that assertion.

Lawmakers continue to insist that disclosure of their sexual harassment records should be a voluntary process. Unlike state agencies and local government­s, the Legislatur­e has its own public records law — enacted in 1975 — that casts a wide net in decreeing that most internal records can be kept confidenti­al.

A bill that would have mandated such a requiremen­t was quietly killed this year when a high-ranking committee chairman refused to schedule it for a public hearing. Lawmakers bristled at the idea they were refusing to consider such a change to existing law, but they have failed in the intervenin­g months to offer any alternativ­e to ensure permanent public disclosure.

David Snyder, executive director of the nonprofit First Amendment Coalition, said the release of redacted documents and rebuttals that included unredacted informatio­n Wednesday demonstrat­es that the legislativ­e records law is overdue for reform.

“I think what the Legislatur­e is discoverin­g is that the law as it exists now is just unworkable,” Snyder said.

melanie.mason @latimes.com Twitter: @melmason john.myers@latimes.com Twitter: @johnmyers

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? A S S E M B LY M A N Devon Mathis, shown in 2017, said he has already apologized for his behavior after allegation­s of inappropri­ate comments from “four years ago.”
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press A S S E M B LY M A N Devon Mathis, shown in 2017, said he has already apologized for his behavior after allegation­s of inappropri­ate comments from “four years ago.”

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