Los Angeles Times

Official has new legal woe

Maywood mayor, the subject of corruption probe, is found guilty of animal cruelty.

- RUBEN VIVES ruben.vives@latimes.com

Maywood Mayor Ramon Medina was found guilty of neglecting his sick dog that he kept at his auto repair shop in 2015, according to the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office.

Medina was found guilty of one misdemeano­r count each of cruelty to an animal and failure to care for an animal.

Prosecutor­s said in a statement Tuesday that Medina had a pit bull mix named Hershey who had a chronic disease. They said the dog had suffered for a long period of time and hadn’t been seen by a veterinari­an.

In February 2015, Hershey was taken to an animal shelter in Downey. Prosecutor­s said the female dog “was emaciated, had severe muscle wasting, couldn’t walk or eat and had to be euthanized.”

The case is the latest legal problem for the mayor, who was served with search warrants at his home and business by investigat­ors with the district attorney’s office in February. Investigat­ors also served search warrants at City Hall and the properties of Vice Mayor Ricardo Villarreal.

An official described the search warrants at the time as an investigat­ion into accusation­s of corruption. A copy of a search warrant obtained by the Los Angeles Times shows that the possible corruption inquiry includes former council members, 13 companies, five current and former administra­tors, and one activist who dresses up as a clown.

Investigat­ors removed computers and boxes filled with city documents from the mayor’s business, R&M Auto Service, which is now tied to the animal cruelty case.

While removing items from the auto shop, authoritie­s also removed 40 roosters from the property.

The small city in southeast Los Angeles County has long struggled with financial issues and political controvers­y.

In October 2016, a scathing state audit said Maywood’s “weak governance” made it unable to wrestle with more than $15 million in debt — twice the small city’s operating costs.

The 51-page report listed a series of problems that stood between the 1.2square-mile community and financial health, including political infighting, wasteful spending, questionab­le hiring decisions, repeated violations of the state’s open-meeting laws and poor administra­tive controls.

Auditors say the City Council did not adequately monitor the performanc­e of a former city manager during her five-year tenure, which “allowed many significan­t financial and operation problems to remain uncorrecte­d.”

Maywood Councilman Eduardo De La Riva said the mayor’s animal cruelty case is another embarrassi­ng example of a city suffering from failed leadership.

“Maywood has been through a lot these past two years and sadly, it’s mostly been negative and the mayor has mostly been at the center of it all,” De La Riva said. “Mr. Medina needs to do the right thing and resign from his seat on the City Council.

“Enough is enough,” he said. “Our residents deserve better.”

Sentencing in the animal cruelty case is scheduled for Sept. 7. Medina faces a possible maximum sentence of one year in jail.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? MAYWOOD Mayor Ramon Medina, shown in February when investigat­ors served search warrants at his home and business, was found guilty of neglecting the sick dog that he kept at his auto repair shop in 2015.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times MAYWOOD Mayor Ramon Medina, shown in February when investigat­ors served search warrants at his home and business, was found guilty of neglecting the sick dog that he kept at his auto repair shop in 2015.

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