Los Angeles Times

Another former Huizar staffer f iles lawsuit

She says councilman retaliated after she reported an affair and ‘a lack of boundaries.’

- By David Zahniser david.zahniser @latimes.com

Second woman alleges facing retaliatio­n for reporting councilman’s affair and improper use of office aides.

A second former staffer for Los Angeles City Councilman Jose Huizar has filed a lawsuit against the city, alleging she faced retaliatio­n after complainin­g that Huizar had an affair with a staffer and had instructed his aides to perform inappropri­ate tasks.

Pauline Medina, 45, said in her discrimina­tion, harassment and wrongful-terminatio­n lawsuit that Huizar launched a campaign to push her out in 2017 after she told the councilman’s chief of staff that her boss was in a relationsh­ip with someone else in the office.

Medina, who left Huizar’s office in June, said she also was punished for complainin­g about a “lack of boundaries” in her workplace, with staffers being ordered to pick up the councilman’s dry cleaning, collect his children from school and move his wife’s car so that she would not get a parking ticket on street-sweeping day.

“Ms. Medina had no choice but to speak up — both on account of her own morality and for her own sanity,” the lawsuit states.

Many of the allegation­s made by Medina are similar to those contained in a separate lawsuit filed last week by Mayra Alvarez, another former Huizar aide. Both share the same attorney, Terrence Jones. Both say that Huizar gave preferenti­al treatment to an unnamed aide with whom he was having an extramarit­al relationsh­ip.

Huizar, in a statement, called Medina a disgruntle­d former employee who “left on her own accord after being confronted with an investigat­ion that revealed her misconduct.”

“This lawsuit is full of misreprese­ntations and I deny all these crazy allegation­s,” he said. “This is nothing more than a coordinate­d political attack by individual­s who share the same attorney and have a vested interest in denigratin­g my name and supporting certain political opportunis­ts.”

Huizar did not say who he believes is coordinati­ng the alleged attack.

Alvarez, like Medina, is alleging she faced retaliatio­n after complainin­g about an affair. Alvarez also said she was punished for voicing concern that Huizar aides had been assigned to work during city time on the council campaign of Huizar’s wife, Richelle Huizar.

Huizar called Alvarez’s lawsuit “nonsense” in a statement last week. His wife is running in the 2020 election to succeed Huizar in the 14th District, which stretches from downtown and Boyle Heights to Eagle Rock.

Huizar hired Medina in 2008. She has a son with one of Huizar’s brothers and said in her lawsuit that her familial relationsh­ip with the councilman helped her land the job. The relationsh­ip with Huizar’s brother ended in 2012, according to the filing.

A former office manager, Medina said in her suit that she became uncomforta­ble with some of the councilman’s activities, such as using city funds to pay for golf tournament­s.

She also alleged that staffers had been required to “engage in fundraisin­g activities” for Huizar’s alma mater, Salesian High School in Boyle Heights, during city work hours.

An official at Salesian did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Medina’s last day was June 20, according to a spokesman for the city’s personnel department. That day officials said that they received a complaint against Huizar on MyVoiceLA, Mayor Eric Garcetti’s new web portal for reporting harassment and bias at City Hall.

When Medina left Huizar’s office, she was earning nearly $62,000 annually, the personnel spokesman said. Medina said that before she resigned, she was experienci­ng anxiety, migraines, panic attacks and other health issues.

The two lawsuits come five years after another aide, former Huizar deputy chief of staff Francine Godoy, filed a sexual harassment case against the councilman. Godoy said in that case that she faced retaliatio­n after she refused to provide the councilman “sexual favors.”

At the time, Huizar called those allegation­s “false and malicious” but said that he did have an “occasional and consensual” affair with Godoy. He and Godoy later settled the case privately.

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