Los Angeles Times

Judge allows second Huizar suit to proceed

Councilman can be questioned under oath despite FBI inquiry.

- By David Zahniser

A judge Monday delivered a courtroom victory to an ex-staffer for Los Angeles Councilman Jose Huizar, denying the councilman’s request to put the case on hold while he deals with a federal criminal investigat­ion.

In a three-page ruling, Superior Court Judge Richard E. Rico said the discrimina­tion, workplace harassment and wrongful terminatio­n suit filed by former staffer Mayra Alvarez can proceed — a move that would allow Huizar to face questions under oath about her allegation­s.

Alvarez alleged in her lawsuit that she faced retaliatio­n after complainin­g to her superiors that Huizar was engaged in an extramarit­al affair with a co-worker and had given that coworker preferenti­al treatment. She also alleged that Huizar was involved in illegal activities, such as assigning staffers to work on political campaigns on government time.

Huizar has called the allegation­s “completely false.” His lawyers argued that a delay in the Alvarez case would preserve Huizar’s 5th Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion.

FBI agents searched Huizar’s home and offices last year. Huizar’s lawyers said that if he responds to the accusation­s in the Alvarez lawsuit, he could end up underminin­g his defense in the criminal investigat­ion.

In his ruling, Rico said Huizar’s legal team had failed to show the allegation­s in Alvarez’s lawsuit are similar to alleged violations of law “for which Huizar is being investigat­ed.” Still, the judge left open the possibilit­y he could change course if more informatio­n emerges.

“If the obvious happens, you can come back here,” he told Huizar’s lawyers.

The ruling in the Alvarez case came less than a week after a different judge denied a request from the councilman to delay proceeding­s in another workplace harassment and wrongful terminatio­n lawsuit — that one filed by former Huizar staffer Pauline Medina.

In that case, the judge said Huizar cannot be questioned under oath by Medina’s attorney until the FBI investigat­ion is resolved.

Rico’s ruling in the Alvarez case is more far-reaching, said Terrence Jones, the lawyer representi­ng Alvarez.

In the Alvarez case, “I can depose whoever I want, including the councilman,” said Jones, who also represents Medina.

Alvarez filed her lawsuit in October, claiming that Huizar had instructed her to alter appointmen­t calendars from 2015 and 2016 that had been requested by The Times under the California Public Records Act. She said Huizar did not want the public to know about meetings with lobbyists and developers. Alvarez also alleged that staffers were assigned to perform personal tasks for the councilman.

A lawyer for Huizar declined to comment on the case on his way out of the courtroom on Monday. But previously, Huizar has called Alvarez’s allegation­s “absolute nonsense.”

“It is nothing more than a hit piece orchestrat­ed by political operatives who seek to undermine all the good work I’ve accomplish­ed on behalf of my constituen­ts,” he said in a statement last year.

 ?? Katie Falkenberg L.A. Times ?? COUNCILMAN Jose Huizar denies allegation­s by two former staffers.
Katie Falkenberg L.A. Times COUNCILMAN Jose Huizar denies allegation­s by two former staffers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States