Los Angeles Times

Top Beverly Hills cop loses suit

Jury orders the city to pay four employees who allege harassment and retaliatio­n.

- By James Queally

A Los Angeles jury on Tuesday upheld allegation­s of workplace harassment and retaliatio­n against Beverly Hills Police Chief Sandra Spagnoli, marking the latest defeat in a string of lawsuits lobbed at the chief from inside her own agency.

Beverly Hills Police Lts. Renato Moreno, Michael Foxen and Shan Davis and a civilian employee named Dona Norris were awarded $1.1 million after three days of deliberati­ons by the jury, said Brad Gage, an attorney representi­ng a number of people with claims against the chief. Moreno was awarded $350,000, while each of the other plaintiffs was granted $250,000 each, according to a statement from the city.

Spagnoli became the city’s first female police chief in 2016, and her tenure has been marked by repeated allegation­s that she made derogatory comments about the religions, sexual orientatio­n and ethnicity of subordinat­es.

At least 21 current and former department employees have filed civil lawsuits or employment complaints that accuse Spagnoli of a range of misconduct, according to court records reviewed by The Times.

The city paid $2.3 million in December to settle the first of those claims, brought by retired Capt. Mark Rosen, who accused Spagnoli of making anti-Semitic remarks and denying him promotiona­l opportunit­ies based on his religion.

According to the lawsuit that resulted in Tuesday’s verdict, Spagnoli reacted with disgust when she was told Norris was a lesbian. The chief also was accused of asking whether she would have to “dress Mexican” if she attended a holiday party hosted by Moreno.

Moreno and Foxen also said they were punished by Spagnoli for giving deposition­s favorable to Rosen’s case, according to court documents.

The jury rejected claims of racial discrimina­tion but upheld the other allegation­s.

Gage said last year that he had been made aware of more allegation­s of misconduct against the chief and that the number of employees suing her could balloon to 30. Those other suits, however, have yet to be filed.

“I think the city needs to wake up and smell the coffee, as they say,” Gage said Tuesday. “It needs to realize that there is a problem in the 90210 that needs to be corrected, and the fact that so many other people are coming forward — with a jury finding four different employees are victims of harassment or retaliatio­n — that’s significan­t.”

City officials said in a statement that they disagreed with parts of the verdict, and they echoed earlier comments from Spagnoli that the slew of lawsuits are the result of anger at reforms she has made. Last year, the chief told The Times that she had modified the agency’s disciplina­ry system and command structure shortly after taking office.

“The city remains committed to the police chief and her efforts to reform the department, and condemns those who are underminin­g those efforts,” the statement read.

City spokesman Keith Sterling said Beverly Hills had also settled a discrimina­tion lawsuit Tuesday that was brought by former forensic laboratory employee Clark Fogg, who alleged he was denied a supervisor­y position because of his age. The claim named Spagnoli and several other Police Department employees. Sterling said the city believes the claim was without merit, but chose to settle for $300,000. Fogg will retire under the terms of the settlement.

The hiring of Spagnoli, who previously served as the chief of the San Leandro and Benicia police department­s in Northern California, was met with much praise in 2016.

In reference to the alleged racist and anti-Semitic remarks, Spagnoli said in an interview with The Times last year that she was “not racist,” but she stopped short of denying that she had made them.

During the civil trial, Spagnoli admitted to making some of the remarks but said she didn’t intend for them to be offensive.

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