Los Angeles Times

Former legislator target of Capitol inquiry

Sebastian RidleyThom­as was focus of harassment probe when he got USC job.

- By Melanie Mason, Harriet Ryan and Matt Hamilton

SACRAMENTO — Former Assemblyma­n Sebastian Ridley-Thomas was the subject of two sexual harassment complaints at the time he stepped down from the Legislatur­e last year, according to documents reviewed by The Times and sources familiar with the matter.

Ridley-Thomas, who denied any wrongdoing, went on a few months later to become a professor of social work and public policy at USC.

When the junior legislator, the son of Los Angeles County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, abruptly resigned from the Assembly in December, he cited chronic health problems that were known in Sacramento and had necessitat­ed

five surgeries in the previous year.

A university source who spoke on the condition of anonymity said USC had found no evidence that Sebastian Ridley-Thomas informed administra­tors he was under investigat­ion. A background check conducted before his hiring did not identify any red f lags, the source said. USC fired Ridley-Thomas last month amid questions about his appointmen­t and a $100,000 donation to the school from his father’s campaign funds.

In a statement to The Times this week, Sebastian Ridley-Thomas’ attorney reiterated that his client stepped down from the Assembly solely on account of “health reasons.”

“He underwent a number of surgeries and his doctor made it clear that serving in the Assembly was no longer an option,” Lance Olson said in a statement.

As for the misconduct claims, Olson said: “He categorica­lly denies any accusation, innuendo or conjecture that he conducted himself inappropri­ately while serving in the Legislatur­e. If anything, he was reserved and always respectful of those around him, be they staff persons, colleagues, or the public.”

Sources close to RidleyThom­as had also told The Times he was suffering from health problems at the time of his resignatio­n.

Stephen J. Kaufman, an attorney for Mark RidleyThom­as, said the supervisor remained “convinced his son’s decision was a wise one because of the marked improvemen­t in his health.”

According to documents and people familiar with the matter, the two reports of misconduct are under investigat­ion by the Assembly Rules Committee, which is responsibl­e for examining harassment complaints.

The complaints are not subject to public review until and unless they are substantia­ted. Debra Gravert, the chief administra­tive officer of the Assembly, declined to answer questions about the complaints, writing in an email, “The Assembly does not comment on personnel matters.”

First elected in a 2013 special election at 26, Sebastian Ridley-Thomas was one of the youngest legislator­s in the Assembly. He held a significan­t chairmansh­ip — the Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation. He was also known for his close associatio­n with his father. A former state legislator and city councilman, Mark Ridley-Thomas is one of the most influentia­l politician­s in Los Angeles, and his connection­s and donor base repeatedly helped his son at the ballot box. By November 2017, Sebastian RidleyThom­as was already raising money for reelection to a third full term.

Late that month, the Assembly Rules Committee informed him that an investigat­ion into a complaint was underway, according to correspond­ence reviewed by The Times. Two sources familiar with the investigat­ion said the complaint was about alleged unwanted physical contact of a sexual nature but did not disclose details of the allegation. A second sexual harassment complaint, by a different person, was filed around the same time, according to a source familiar with the matter. The sources spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

In the wake of the #MeToo movement, sexual harassment claims roiled Sacramento. Women who worked in the state Capitol spoke out publicly against what they saw as a pervasive culture of harassment and misconduct in the Legislatur­e.

The Assembly Rules Committee received more than 20 harassment complaints against lawmakers, staff and lobbyists last year. Two of Ridley-Thomas’ Assembly colleagues, Raul Bocanegra and Matt Dababneh, both Democrats from the San Fernando Valley, resigned their posts in late 2017 after being accused of misconduct. In February, a third L.A. legislator, Tony Mendoza, stepped down after an independen­t investigat­ion found it was likely he had made unwanted advances to half a dozen women.

Ridley-Thomas announced he was retiring for health reasons two days after Christmas. He did not specify the medical condition but noted that he had undergone his fifth surgery a few weeks earlier.

“Although I expect a full recovery, my physicians advise that I will need an extended period of time to recuperate,” he wrote at the time.

Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Paramount) also released a statement to mark the departure, saying he and his colleagues wished RidleyThom­as “all the best going forward as he deals with his health challenges.”

A spokesman for Rendon declined to comment on whether the speaker knew Ridley-Thomas was under investigat­ion at the time he left the Assembly.

Ridley-Thomas resumed some political work just weeks after resigning. In February, he registered a new consulting business, Millennial Advisors. The firm has collected more than $80,000 from the African American Voter Registrati­on, Education and Participat­ion Project, a political action committee founded by his father. The fees cover consulting, office expenses and advertisin­g.

A related AAVREP committee specially formed to support Gavin Newsom’s bid for governor —mostly backed by donations from labor unions — listed Sebastian Ridley-Thomas as treasurer and paid his Millennial Advisors firm more than $27,000.

He also joined the faculty of USC, which sits in his father’s district and with which the supervisor has had a long and close relationsh­ip. Mark RidleyThom­as received a doctorate from the university and sits on the board of the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Commission, which oversees the taxpayer-owned stadium where USC plays football.

USC appointed Sebastian Ridley-Thomas “professor of practice of policy and social work” this spring. The title “professor of practice” refers to instructor­s who may not have typical academic credential­s but have profession­al achievemen­t.

In addition, the university gave him a scholarshi­p to study for a master’s degree in social work.

In May, his father made a $100,000 donation from his campaign coffers to the social work school. The school dean, Marilyn Flynn, then sent the money to Policy Research and Practice Initiative, a start-up think tank that was unaffiliat­ed with the university and controlled by Sebastian RidleyThom­as.

After an employee whistleblo­wer raised concerns about the donation in June, USC launched an internal investigat­ion, fired Ridley-Thomas and referred the matter to the U.S. attorney’s office for criminal investigat­ion.

Mark Ridley-Thomas has said through a lawyer that he does not see anything illegal or unethical about the donation and that it had nothing to do with his son’s employment or scholarshi­p.

Sebastian Ridley-Thomas said through his own attorney that USC was wrong to fire him and that he is considerin­g “legal remedies” against the university.

‘He ... denies any accusation ... that he conducted himself inappropri­ately while serving in the Legislatur­e.’ — Lance Olson, attorney for Sebastian Ridley-Thomas

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? SEBASTIAN RidleyThom­as at an Assembly hearing in 2015.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times SEBASTIAN RidleyThom­as at an Assembly hearing in 2015.

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