Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Evidence also supported Guss’s allegation­s that Brown bullied and intimidate­d board members when he invited them to his house to “engage in an altercatio­n” and threatened to check their credit scores after they voted down his proposed 2022 budget. La Rue

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presidents, illegally seized and occupied the Local 1000 headquarte­rs, stole union records, and improperly approved 12 holidays for Local 1000 staff without board approval or collective bargaining.

Report finds SEIU discipline appropriat­e

A central question in the investigat­ion was whether Brown’s suspension in late February 2022 was justified. La Rue determined that Brown’s actions did in fact pose

“an immediate threat to the welfare of Local 1000” and that the three vice presidents had “good and sufficient cause” to immediatel­y suspend him.

Evidence also supported Guss’s allegation­s that Brown bullied and intimidate­d board members when he invited them to his house to “engage in an altercatio­n” and threatened to check their credit scores after they voted down his proposed 2022 budget. La Rue also found that Brown targeted Guss, who is Jewish, for his religious beliefs.

Brown declined calls from The Sacramento Bee Friday morning. Via text message, he wouldn’t say whether he’d seen a copy of the report and its findings.

The suspended president has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing, objected to his suspension and sued the union and its board for $12 million in early December for“mental suffering and irreparabl­e damage” that they’ve allegedly caused him since he took office.

Brown regularly airs his grievances to the Local 1000 membership via Zoom meetings broadcast live on Facebook. In a Tuesday post after a 90-minute broadcast, he equated the Local 1000 leadership battle — a socalled “coup” against him — to the Jan. 6 attacks on the U.S. Capitol.

“I, Richard Louis Brown, never acted in BAD FAITH in performing my duties as the duly elected Local 1000 President,” Brown wrote in the Tuesday post.

What led up to union president’s suspension?

The findings are the latest developmen­t in a multi-year power struggle between Brown and board members who opposed his leadership from the start.

Brown faced resistance from his 65-member board soon after he won election in May 2021 with only 33% of the vote in an election with less than 8% turnout. His campaign promises included eliminatin­g political spending, slashing union dues in half and extending voting to nonmembers, along with other changes that critics deemed unrealisti­c.

Later in 2021, board members pushed to take away Brown’s presidenti­al authority and transfer it instead to a leader chosen by the board. Brown would no longer have the authority to lead contract negotiatio­ns, serve as the union’s primary spokespers­on, preside over board meetings or hire and fire staff, among other powers. They called a last-minute meeting over a weekend in October 2021 where 34 board members voted to strip Brown of his powers and designated board member Hall as leader of Local 1000.

A quorum of 33 members is required to hold a meeting, but Brown still called the meeting and vote “illegitima­te” and vowed to suspend and discipline the board members involved.

Hall then sued Brown in January 2022 and asked the judge to remove him from power and bar him from running for re-election. That lawsuit, in Sacramento County Superior Court, alleges that Brown violated union rules when he unilateral­ly decided to spend money on political campaigns, purchase software, pay off a $6 million loan on the union’s midtown Sacramento headquarte­rs and give union employees an extra six days off — all without approval from the board and without disclosing details to them.

What followed next was a series of lockouts in February from the SEIU Local 1000 headquarte­rs — first, of the three vice presidents who Brown claimed were “plotting to suspend him”, and then of Brown himself by those same three vice presidents. La Rue’s investigat­ion found that Brown’s attempt to suspend those three executives was improper, while their suspension of him was justified.

Brown and about 20 of his supporters occupied the building in early

March after gaining access without a key, and he removed several boxes of documents. The escalation led to a standoff, mediated by Sacramento police, between Brown’s posse and the three vice presidents he claimed to have suspended.

Hall then filed for a restrainin­g order against Brown two days later, which a judge granted.

The order was extended by a preliminar­y injunction later in March.

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 ?? Tribune News Service ?? SEIU Local 1000 president Richard Louis Brown and about 20 of his supporters occupy the union’s Sacramento headquarte­rs on March 5, 2022, after gaining access without a key.
Tribune News Service SEIU Local 1000 president Richard Louis Brown and about 20 of his supporters occupy the union’s Sacramento headquarte­rs on March 5, 2022, after gaining access without a key.

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