Los Angeles Times

LAUSD SETTLES 2 ABUSE LAWSUITS

$22 million in payouts will close 16 students’ claims of molestatio­n by two coaches.

- By Hannah Fry

The Los Angeles Unified School District has agreed to pay $22 million to settle two lawsuits with 16 students who say they were molested by two coaches.

The settlement, announced Wednesday, effectivel­y ends two civil suits: one filed by the families of nine Cahuenga Elementary School students who say they were molested by Ronnie Lee Roman and another filed on behalf of seven Franklin High School football players who accused Jaime Jimenez of sexually abusing them. Both lawsuits against the district were filed in Los Angeles Superior Court in 2016.

The plaintiffs in the elementary school case will receive $14 million, and $8 million will be paid to those in the Jimenez case. During a closed-session meeting Aug. 21, the Los Angeles Board of Education unanimousl­y approved the settlement­s and voted to sue insurance companies to cover costs related to the lawsuits.

The district — the country’s second-largest school system — has been plagued by a series of cases alleging that officials have missed indication­s of teacher misconduct and, in some instances, continued to employ teachers who were suspected of wrongdoing.

Such accusation­s have led to a string of massive payouts to victims and attorneys that has surpassed $300 million in recent years.

While district spokeswoma­n Shannon Haber declined to comment on the settlement­s, she wrote in a prepared statement that “student safety is always of utmost concern, and we have made changes in our policies and practices to strengthen the protection­s for our students.”

“While we have made much progress, we will continue to work diligently with our parents and the community to provide the safest possible environmen­t for our students to learn and succeed,” she said.

Morgan Stewart, an attorney who represente­d former and current students in both cases, said that despite what he called the district’s “claimed efforts” to bolster its training and enforce more stringent standards for vetting staff, students continue to be abused.

“These horrific cases provide two more sickening examples of LAUSD’s continuing failure to protect children under its care,” Stewart said. “LAUSD ignored complaints against Roman going back more than a decade and failed to heed law enforcemen­t’s indication­s that he was in fact abusing children.”

Roman, 45, of San Fernando is serving 105 years to life in prison after being convicted last year of molesting young girls at the Koreatown elementary school between January 2012 and September 2014. At the time of the abuse, prosecutor­s said, Roman worked as a Youth Services coach for an afterschoo­l program called Beyond the Bell.

Six of the assaults occurred on school grounds and a seventh was at a victim’s home, authoritie­s said.

Jimenez, 50, of Los Angeles, a former Franklin High School volunteer football coach, was sentenced to more than 36 years in state prison after pleading no contest in 2016 to sexually assaulting teen players at the Highland Park school from 2002 until his arrest in 2015.

Witnesses testified during a preliminar­y hearing in 2016 that Jimenez gave students rides from practice, bought them gifts and regularly invited them to his house, where he sometimes plied them with alcohol, according to court records.

Attorneys for the students said in court filings that district administra­tors ignored several red flags about Jimenez’s behavior, including secluding students in equipment and locker rooms, giving them rides in his car and taking photos with them.

Roman and Jimenez will be eligible for parole in 2040, according to the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion.

 ?? Los Angeles Police Department ?? RONNIE Lee Roman was convicted last year.
Los Angeles Police Department RONNIE Lee Roman was convicted last year.
 ?? Los Angeles Police Department ?? JAIME Jimenez pleaded no contest in 2016.
Los Angeles Police Department JAIME Jimenez pleaded no contest in 2016.

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