The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Officers’ retaliatio­n lawsuit heads to trial

2 acquitted in Pomona excessive force claim say ex-chief limited their duties

- By City News Service

Two sworn members of the Pomona Police Department who allege they were subjected to disparate treatment by the former police chief when they returned to work despite being acquitted of charges related to a confrontat­ion with a teen patron at the 2015 Los Angeles County Fair can take their case to trial, a judge has ruled.

On Friday, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Elaine Lu denied a motion by the city to dismiss the complaint brought by Sgt. Michael Neaderbaom­er and Cpl. Chad Jensen. Lu heard arguments on June 1 and took the motion under submission.

In their suit brought in May 2020 alleging retaliatio­n and civil rights violations, both plaintiffs state they were indicted on and later acquitted of federal charges in connection with the alleged excessive force incident involving County Fair attendee Christian Aguilar, who the city would later pay $500,000 to settle his civil lawsuit over the encounter.

Jensen and Neaderbaom­er maintain that despite their reinstatem­ents to the department, exchief Michael Olivieri limited their abilities to act as sworn officers.

“They were not assigned to patrol shift, they were not allowed to do administra­tive police work, but were in fact ordered to assist with physically moving department furniture and equipment using their own personal vehicles between buildings owned by the city,” the plaintiffs’ attorneys stated in their court papers. “They were not allowed to assist with investigat­ions from within the department building. They were not allowed to take overtime assignment­s and contract work.”

When the plaintiffs complained about allegedly being passed over for promotions granted to less-qual

ified employees, they were told that giving them the increase in their ranks “would make the department look bad in front of the public and the Department of Justice,” the plaintiffs’ attorneys stated in court documents.

In their court papers, defense attorneys denied any wrongdoing on the part of the city or Olivieri, who was previously dismissed as a defendant in the case by the judge.

“Although they were not convicted after federal jury trials, plaintiffs’ conduct caused both officers and the city of Pomona to be subject to significan­t public scrutiny, criticism and embarrassm­ent,” the defense lawyers argued in their court papers. “Given the public opposition and outcry … Chief Olivieri understand­ably did not promote either plaintiff.”

Neaderbaom­er was originally charged with obstructio­n along with two counts of lying to the FBI. A jury acquitted him of the first count and deadlocked in favor of acquittal on the remaining charges, which were later dismissed by a judge.

Neaderbaom­er was also accused of trying to dissuade Aguilar’s mother from pursuing an internal police investigat­ion into the arrest of her son. Prosecutor­s alleged that the lawman falsely told Erain Aguilar that he had video footage of her son punching an officer.

Prosecutor­s also claimed the sergeant falsely insisted that if the teen wished to pursue a complaint for excessive force, the then-16year-old boy would have to meet by himself with police officials for a videotaped interview.

The false statements counts stemmed from interviews with the FBI in which Neaderbaom­er allegedly denied his earlier exchanges with the mother, who has worked as an Irwindale Police Department dispatcher.

Jensen and Officer Prince Hutchinson were tried separately from Neaderbaom­er and were involved in the actual confrontat­ion with Aguilar. Their first trial ended with jurors deadlocked 11-1 in favor of guilt on all counts, but in a retrial the pair were acquitted.

Trial of the Jensen-neaderbaom­er civil suit is scheduled for Aug. 21, 2023.

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