Los Angeles Times

L.A. County sheriff ’s official faces charges

Sergeant is accused of fondling a deputy and demanding sexual favors in workplace.

- By Maya Lau

A Los Angeles County sheriff ’s sergeant is accused of fondling a deputy he supervised and forcing her to provide sexual favors in their workplace in exchange for his approving her time-off requests, according to a district attorney’s memorandum.

Sgt. Michael John Spina was arrested Aug. 9 and charged with two counts of sexual battery and one count each of false imprisonme­nt and indecent exposure tied to his actions with the employee. He was placed on administra­tive leave Wednesday.

Department spokeswoma­n Nicole Nishida issued a statement saying the charges pertain to allegation­s of “work-related criminal misconduct” involving a sergeant and subordinat­e female employees. Nishida would not confirm whether the sergeant referred to in the statement is Spina, citing potential conflicts with peace officer confidenti­ality laws. She confirmed other elements of the case that match with Spina’s.

Nishida said concerns over releasing personnel informatio­n prohibited her from answering questions about whether the sergeant is still being paid or the number of female subordinat­es involved in the allegation­s.

“The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department expects all of its members to hold themselves to the highest ethical and profession­al standards at all times and has a comprehens­ive Policy of Equality for reporting alleged incidents of this nature,” the department’s statement said.

Spina, 37, was working at the Twin Towers Correction­al Facility in July 2016 when he ordered a deputy

into his office and locked the door, telling her she “owed” him for giving her a day off, according to the document written by Deputy Dist. Atty. Sean Hassett.

Spina touched the woman’s breast over her shirt while watching a pornograph­ic video and masturbati­ng, the memo says.

The woman said Spina demanded similar treatment in February 2016, and she complied out of fear that her day off would not be approved. In that incident, Spina approached the deputy near her desk and asked her if he could touch her so he could “get himself ‘off,’ ” the memo says. He unzipped his pants and touched the woman’s breasts before trying to kiss her. When the woman turned away, Spina stopped, said he was “bored” and walked into his office, according to the document.

Spina is also accused of inappropri­ately touching the deputy in June 2016 and asking if he could perform a sexual act on her, to which she repeatedly said “no.”

Reached by phone Monday morning, Spina said he was at a doctor’s appointmen­t and could not immediatel­y provide a comment. He did not respond to subsequent queries.

The case, first reported by the website Witness LA, was investigat­ed by the Sheriff ’s Department’s internal criminal investigat­ions bureau, which referred the matter to the district attorney’s Justice System Integrity Division, which handles allegation­s of criminal behavior by law enforcemen­t officials.

The charges, however, are being prosecuted by the Los Angeles city attorney’s office because they’re misdemeano­rs.

A criminal complaint filed by the city attorney’s office says all of the charges against Spina stem from incidents “on or about” July 28, involving one unnamed female victim.

Spina, who joined the department in 2001, previously worked at the agency’s Crescenta Valley and Altadena stations before being promoted to sergeant in 2014, when he was assigned to Twin Towers, officials said.

‘The Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department expects all of its members to hold themselves to the highest ethical and profession­al standards at all times.’ — Nicole Nishida, department spokeswoma­n, in a statement

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