Marin Independent Journal

Former officer pleads guilty in excessive force case

- By Robert Salonga

>> Less than a week from the start of his trial, a former Palo Alto police officer pleaded guilty to excessive force charges in the 2018 arrest of a gay man whose subsequent lawsuit, and the release of incriminat­ing video, prompted a half-million-dollar settlement and mandatory LGBTQ sensitivit­y training for the police agency.

Wayne Benitez, 66, entered the plea Tuesday afternoon at the Palo Alto courthouse in accordance with a court offer from Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Brian Buckelew. The admitted charges are misdemeano­r counts of assault under color of authority and lying on a police report.

Benitez, who retired from the Police Department amid the fallout from the violent arrest, was ordered to serve 750 hours of community service and complete court-ordered anger management and LGBTQ sensitivit­y training.

“When someone with a badge breaks the law, it cracks the confidence that people have in law enforcemen­t,” District Attorney Jeff Rosen said in a statement. “That is not just unfortunat­e. It is unacceptab­le. No one is above the law.”

Benitez's attorney did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Tuesday. Because the conviction­s recorded Tuesday are misdemeano­rs, he does not risk losing his police pension.

The former sergeant was a public face of the Palo Alto

Police Department, both as a union leader and a public informatio­n officer, during his two decades with the agency.

He was also known internally as “The Fuse,” a characteri­zation that took on a new dimension after he slammed a handcuffed Gustavo Alvarez facefirst into a car windshield in a garage at the Buena Vista Mobile Home Park on Feb. 17, 2018.

A body-worn microphone later captured Benitez saying, “See how quickly they behave once we put our foot down,” and telling another officer, “And that's what we don't do enough of.”

Although the officers did not record video of the encounter, a year later a security video eventually was made public that laid out in unmistakab­le detail how Alvarez was not strongly resisting, and contradict­ed a written report by Benitez stating that the only force he used was pulling Alvarez out of the residence.

The video also showed Benitez berating Alvarez with, “You think you're a tough guy?” and when Alvarez complained that he was bleeding, Benitez replied, “You're going to be bleeding a whole lot more.”

The allegation­s for which Alvarez was arrested — driving under the influence, driving with a suspended or revoked license and resisting arrest — later were dropped by prosecutor­s. Alvarez sued the city of Palo Alto and the Police Department for excessive force and also accused the officers of mocking his sexual orientatio­n during the arrest.

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