Los Angeles Times

Long Beach won’t appeal decision in stings

A judge had found that Long Beach’s department unfairly targeted gay men.

- By James Queally james.queally@latimes.com Twitter: @JamesQueal­lyLAT

A judge had ruled the city’s police unfairly targeted gay men while investigat­ing alleged lewd conduct.

Long Beach’s city prosecutor said Wednesday that he will not appeal a judge’s ruling that said the city Police Department unfairly targeted gay men when it carried out lewd-conduct stings.

In an email announcing the decision, Douglas Haubert said he did not agree with the April 29 ruling by Superior Court Judge Halim Dhanidina, and did not believe the judge’s findings should affect relations between the city and its LGBT residents.

“The City of Long Beach and the Long Beach Police Department have worked hard to build a positive relationsh­ip with the LGBTQ community, a relationsh­ip built over many years and based on mutual respect and open dialogue,” he said in an email. “I do not think this ruling will or should hinder that relationsh­ip.”

The controvers­y stemmed from the 2014 arrest of Rory Moroney, a 50year-old Long Beach resident who was charged with indecent exposure and lewd conduct after a run-in with an undercover police officer inside a restroom at Recreation Park.

Moroney’s attorney, Bruce Nickerson, had argued that the department’s vice unit unfairly targeted gay men because they used only male undercover officers to arrest male suspects seeking sex with other men.

Moroney previously told The Times that he did not enter the restroom seeking a sexual encounter, and had simply responded to the undercover officer’s flirtation­s.

Dhanidina agreed. In his ruling, the judge found the Police Department “intentiona­lly targeted men who engaged in homosexual sex” and said the undercover officer’s tactics induced the crime.

News that the stings were continuing stunned some LGBT activists, especially in Long Beach, a city with an openly gay mayor. Similar tactics have been abandoned by some police department­s throughout the state amid political backlash and lawsuits in recent years.

Many of California’s largest police department­s instead favor posting uniformed officers near hot spots for lewd conduct.

In an interview with The Times last month, Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia said he was unaware the department had been carrying out such stings and promised to review the policy.

“I view Long Beach as a progressiv­e place that believes in justice and dignity for everybody,” he said. “So when I hear that something occurs that could be contrary to that, I’m alarmed.”

A police spokesman said Wednesday that the policy remained under review.

Los Angeles County Assessor Jeffrey Prang, who is gay, is a former special assistant in the Sheriff’s Department who worked with its LGBT advisory council. He said the prosecutor’s decision not to appeal is a positive step for the city.

Prang, who helped the Sheriff ’s Department modify its policy on the same issues, said he has spoken with Long Beach Police Chief Robert Luna about the stings and believes the department has become receptive to adopting new ways to tackle lewd-conduct problems.

“When I spoke with the chief, he was very interested in a better approach to deal with the issue, so I’m pretty encouraged. I think they recognized the challenges of the past enforcemen­t practices,” Prang said. “There is a large body of work that indicates there’s better ways to alleviate the problem.”

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? RORY MORONEY was arrested in 2014 after a runin with an undercover officer inside a park restroom.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times RORY MORONEY was arrested in 2014 after a runin with an undercover officer inside a park restroom.

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