Los Angeles Times

Ex-cop gets jail in gun case

- By James Queally james.queally@latimes.com

A former Los Angeles police officer accused of sexually abusing a 15-year-old cadet last year pleaded no contest Friday to illegal weapons charges in San Bernardino County.

Robert Cain, 31, entered the pleas to manufactur­ing an assault weapon and possession of a “bump stock” and was immediatel­y sentenced to two years in county jail as part of a plea agreement with prosecutor­s.

The plea clears the way for the sex-crime case against Cain to proceed in Los Angeles. Those charges had been in limbo while Cain was in custody in San Bernardino.

Cain was arrested in June as part of a wide-ranging scandal involving the LAPD’s cadet program. An investigat­ion into the theft of police vehicles and other department equipment by teenage cadets revealed allegation­s that Cain engaged in unlawful sex with a 15-yearold girl who was also implicated in the taking of LAPD property, authoritie­s said last year.

In July, Cain was charged with two counts each of oral copulation of a person under the age of 16, lewd acts on a child and unlawful sexual intercours­e. During the sex abuse investigat­ion, police searched Cain’s Rancho Cucamonga home and found nearly 100 firearms.

Cain was initially charged with 10 felony weapons offenses. At a preliminar­y hearing last October, an LAPD detective testified that five rifles had been modified with flash suppressor­s — which make it harder to detect a weapon’s muzzle flare — pistol grips and other items that would cause them to be classified as illegal assault weapons under California law.

Police also recovered two bump stocks at Cain’s home, devices that can increase a gun’s rate of fire and allow it to function similar to an automatic weapon.

Bump stocks, which are illegal to possess in California, became a topic of national conversati­on last year when investigat­ors revealed that a gunman used the devices during a shooting rampage that left 58 people dead at a Las Vegas music festival. The devices are legal to own under federal law, but the Las Vegas attacks have led some lawmakers to reconsider the danger they pose.

It was not immediatel­y clear when Cain would appear in Los Angeles court to answer the sex abuse charges. He has yet to enter a plea.

Cain’s attorney, Bill Seki, said he did not know when his client would be transferre­d to the custody of the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department.

“Mr. Cain definitely wanted to resolve this matter here,” Seki said of the weapons charges. “He’s looking forward to getting the opportunit­y to resolve the issues in Los Angeles.”

A 10-year veteran of the department, Cain was last assigned to the equipment room in the LAPD’s 77th Street Division, the epicenter of the cadets’ alleged misdeeds. Police have said they suspect Cain, who resigned after his arrest, may have helped the cadets gain access to the LAPD cruisers they allegedly stole and later crashed during a pursuit with city police officers.

Cain allegedly had sex with the 15-year-old three times on June 14, and also took her on a trip to Six Flags Magic Mountain theme park in Valencia, sources told The Times last year.

None of the cadets have been criminally charged.

Cain was arrested in June as part of a scandal involving the LAPD’s cadet program.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? LAPD Chief Charlie Beck, right, at a 2017 news conference after then-Officer Robert Cain, pictured at rear, was arrested on suspicion of sex crimes involving a 15-year-old cadet. Charges in that case can now proceed.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times LAPD Chief Charlie Beck, right, at a 2017 news conference after then-Officer Robert Cain, pictured at rear, was arrested on suspicion of sex crimes involving a 15-year-old cadet. Charges in that case can now proceed.

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