San Francisco Chronicle

Alleged fake cop’s vulnerable prey

Security guard exploited limited-English immigrant men for sexual assaults, police say

- By Vivian Ho

A licensed security guard from San Francisco posed as a police officer in an effort to sexually assault recent Central American immigrants, authoritie­s said Monday.

Jeffrey Bugai, 35, persuaded at least two men with limited English-speaking abilities to go to his home, police said. Once there, officials said, Bugai would drug or handcuff them or try to coerce them into performing sexual acts.

Investigat­ors believe some victims of Bugai — who was known to frequent the Mission and Ingleside areas of San Francisco as well as Oakland and Hayward — have not come forward because he threatened them with deportatio­n or police retaliatio­n.

As a result, investigat­ors are unsure how many victims there might be or how long Bugai ran his scheme, said Officer Albie Esparza, a San Francisco police spokesman.

Bugai was arrested July 10 before San Francisco prosecutor­s charged him with two counts of kidnapping to commit a sexual offense and single counts of attempted forced sodomy, attempted forcible oral copulation and assault with the intent to commit a sexual offense.

He pleaded not guilty at his July 15 arraignmen­t and is being held on $2 million bail. His attorney, Deputy Public Defender Phoenix Streets, said Monday that he was still looking into the case and could not comment.

Bugai has a history of impersonat­ing people in positions of authority. In 1999, he was accused of wearing a white coat and posing as a health care worker at Munson Medical Center in Traverse City, Mich., on at least three occasions, according to local prosecutor­s.

In one instance, he allegedly recommende­d to a nurse that a

patient’s pain medication be increased.

Bugai told reporters at the time that he was just visiting friends at the medical center. He pleaded guilty to a misdemeano­r count of unauthoriz­ed use of a health profession title, and was sentenced to 90 days in jail, said Grand Traverse County Chief Assistant Prosecutor Noelle Moeggenber­g.

On the Classmates.com page for Traverse City High School, where Bugai said he graduated in 1997, a person identifyin­g himself as Bugai posted that he got a job as a pharmacy clerk at Munson Medical Center and “ended up getting in a lil trouble while trying to amuse myself.”

He said he had no trouble becoming a security guard in California after moving to the state, writing, “Fortunatel­y no one out here takes (Traverse City) police reports seriously.”

According to California online records, Bugai has been licensed in the state as a security guard since 2002 and has special permits allowing him to carry a gun and baton while on duty.

Russ Heimerich, a spokesman with the state Department of Consumer Affairs, said the agency began the process of suspending Bugai’s license when it was alerted of the investigat­ion last month. If Bugai is convicted, he will be stripped of his license immediatel­y.

Heimerich said it was not clear how Bugai was able to obtain a license with a prior misdemeano­r conviction. He said that a conviction for a crime like impersonat­ion would “absolutely” be a red flag in the applicatio­n process.

“We would look at it and think, ‘If this guy is impersonat­ing people, do we want him to be a security guard?’ ” Heimerich said.

Heimerich said he does not know if the agency was notified in 2002 of the prior conviction. He said the state’s ability to track down such informatio­n has since improved.

Bugai also said he had gotten a job with the San Francisco Housing Authority, but agency spokeswoma­n Rose Dennis said Monday that there is no record of his employment.

“I don’t believe he was ever a police officer,” Esparza said. “He may have had some security parapherna­lia, but we don’t know if he was actually a security officer. He was never one of ours, never with San Francisco police.”

A woman filed for a civil restrainin­g order against Bugai in San Francisco in 2007, records show. Bugai himself has sought restrainin­g orders against three different men, including a roommate, since 2010.

In one request, Bugai claimed to be a “proprietar­y patrol officer” in the Bayview neighborho­od and said he had a partner who patrolled the Mission District. It wasn’t clear Monday which security firms had employed Bugai.

Investigat­ors are asking people with informatio­n to call San Francisco police at (415) 553-0123.

 ??  ?? Jeffrey Bugai has a history of impersonat­ing authority figures, officials say.
Jeffrey Bugai has a history of impersonat­ing authority figures, officials say.

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