Los Angeles Times

Officer files suit against Torrance

Captain claims he was denied promotion after boss was ousted.

- By Laura Newberry and Hannah Fry laura.newberry @latimes.com Twitter: @LauraMNewb­erry hannah.fry@latimes.com Twitter: @Hannahnfry

Captain says he faced retaliatio­n after he lodged a harassment complaint against the former police chief.

A police captain alleged in a civil lawsuit filed against the city of Torrance on Tuesday that he faced retaliatio­n after he lodged a discrimina­tion and harassment complaint against the city’s former police chief.

Capt. Martin Vukotic, who joined the Torrance police force in 1995, wrote in court papers filed in Los Angeles Superior Court that he was retaliated against and denied a promotion after he filed a complaint alleging that former Police Chief Mark Matsuda made inflammato­ry comments about women, members of the LGBTQ community and Muslims.

Matsuda was suspended amid the controvers­y in February 2017 and announced his retirement four months later.

The Torrance city attorney could not immediatel­y be reached for comment Thursday.

Vukotic claims in the lawsuit that the Torrance Police Department’s top brass repeatedly discourage­d him from filing the complaint against Matsuda.

The captain alleges that Deputy Chief Jon Megeff, then a captain, refused to participat­e in the complaint because it could cause the chief to distrust him.

Megeff was promoted to deputy chief in January. Vukotic wrote that he also vied for that position, but alleges he was passed up for the promotion as retaliatio­n for his complaint against Matsuda.

Vukotic alleges Matsuda created a hostile work environmen­t.

Then-interim Chief Michael Browne allegedly told Vukotic that the city manager and City Council thought he “was the devil for reporting misconduct against Chief Matsuda.” Browne added that they wanted to “lynch” Vukotic, the lawsuit states.

Vukotic said in court filings that Matsuda once told a woman who was applying for a job that she was good looking and asked her to turn around “in order to get a better look at her.”

When an employee who is a lesbian voiced her concerns about how gay employees were being treated, Matsuda said she “looked like a dude,” the lawsuit alleges.

This is not the first time Matsuda has been ensnared in controvers­y.

Lt. Hector Bermudez, a 22-year member of the Torrance Police Department, accused Matsuda in 2017 of ordering him to halt an investigat­ion into possible criminal conduct by other members of the department.

Vukotic is seeking an unspecifie­d amount of money for damages including loss of income, benefits and emotional distress.

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