Los Angeles Times

Griffith Park advisor accused of harassment

Three members of community panel resign in protest over city’s investigat­ion.

- By Emily Alpert Reyes

Accusation­s of sexual harassment have roiled the country from Hollywood to Capitol Hill in recent months, toppling politician­s, celebritie­s and other famous figures.

Now they have spurred alarm among Griffith Park community activists, who argue that a Los Angeles city investigat­ion over alleged misconduct has unfairly tarred a volunteer.

This month, the Department of Recreation and Parks informed Chris Laib, who sits on volunteer boards that advise the city about Griffith Park and the Greek Theatre, that its investigat­ion found he had engaged in “inappropri­ate behavior” toward a city staffer during a community event.

The letter, first reported by the Los Feliz Ledger, did not detail what had happened, but said that the parks department had received complaints from “third parties” about the incident. Laib said he was informed that the allegation­s involved hitting a female staffer with a plate on her backside.

Laib said the staffer had jokingly tried to cut ahead of him in line for breakfast at the event. He said he motioned her away with his plastic plate before they hugged.

“I may have tapped her on the hip, not the rear end,” he said. “We hugged again before we left.

“How could that be construed as sexual harassment?” Laib asked.

The staffer and a member of the Board of Recreation and Park Commission­ers, who was identified by others as having witnessed the incident, declined to comment last week.

The parks department

spoke to “relevant witnesses,” including Laib, and reviewed a video as part of its investigat­ion, according to the letter. It said his behavior violated a code of conduct that requires park advisory board members to act “in a profession­al manner at all times” and treat staff and the public with respect.

It is unclear what action might be taken.

Laib, who was appointed to the Greek Theatre Advisory Committee this year by Mayor Eric Garcetti, has not been removed from that or the Griffith Park Advisory Board, according to city officials.

In its letter, the parks department stated that the findings would be referred to “executive management” for their review.

“The Department of Recreation and Parks investigat­ed the complaint filed against him, and that investigat­ion has been completed,” Garcetti spokesman Alex Comisar said in an email. “We have notified the people involved of the findings, and are working with them to determine the best path forward for everyone.”

Before the investigat­ion was finished, Laib initially turned in a written letter of resignatio­n from the Greek Theatre Advisory Committee, but later rescinded it.

Laib said he made a “reflexive” decision to resign after being contacted about the allegation from a senior aide to City Councilman David Ryu. He said he changed his mind after hearing secondhand that the head of the parks department, Michael Shull, also wanted him off the board of Friends of the Observator­y, a nonprofit that supports the city attraction in Griffith Park.

“This was used as an op“I portunity to get rid of me,” Laib said, citing his outspoken stance on park issues, including challengin­g an early proposal to hold Olympic biking events in Griffith Park and opposing the initial selection of Live Nation to run the Greek Theatre three years ago.

Parks department spokeswoma­n Rose Watson denied that Shull had sought to get Laib removed from Friends of the Observator­y, which is not run by the city, and said that “the issue at hand is strictly to do with the complaint — and that’s it.”

Three leading members of the Griffith Park Advisory Board, which provides community input on the operation of Griffith Park, have resigned in protest. In a letter, Vice Chairman Don Seligman called the investigat­ion “a reckless and vindictive campaign by the Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks.”

have witnessed the besmirchin­g of a stellar reputation of a dear friend … without any due process or formal hearing,” Seligman wrote in an email to other board members and city staff, announcing his resignatio­n.

Susan Swan, who had been chairwoman, wrote that she was “alternatel­y appalled and horrified.” And former secretary Kris Sullivan called it “underhande­d treatment.”

As they announced their resignatio­ns, Swan and Sullivan also complained that their concerns about protecting the park from commercial­ization and misuse were not being properly addressed.

“We have been chastened when we speak up and encouraged to be noncontrov­ersial and not to be a ‘watchdog,’ ” Sullivan wrote.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? A VIEW of Griffith Observator­y. The city said an inquiry found that Chris Laib, who sits on volunteer advisory boards for Griffith Park, had engaged in “inappropri­ate behavior” toward a city staffer. Laib said the investigat­ion “was used as an...
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times A VIEW of Griffith Observator­y. The city said an inquiry found that Chris Laib, who sits on volunteer advisory boards for Griffith Park, had engaged in “inappropri­ate behavior” toward a city staffer. Laib said the investigat­ion “was used as an...

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