Los Angeles Times

LAFD deputy said to be drunk on duty

A top commander appeared intoxicate­d during Palisades fire, complaint says. Some say it was covered up.

- By Paul Pringle

In May, as the Los Angeles Fire Department was battling the Palisades blaze, Chief Ralph Terrazas received a report that his top administra­tive commander appeared to be under the influence of alcohol or drugs while on duty at the agency’s headquarte­rs, where he was overseeing its operations center, The Times has learned.

LAFD rules require agency officials to deal promptly with employees suspected of being under the influence, but records and interviews show that the complaint about Chief Deputy Fred Mathis’ condition was not filed for three days, a delay the department has not explained.

The complaint says that Mathis admitted he had been drinking. Terrazas did not respond to a Times question asking whether Mathis was ordered to submit a urine sample for testing, as required under LAFD rules.

In the meantime, a retroactiv­e entry was logged into the city’s timekeepin­g system days later to show that Mathis was out sick the same day a colleague reported that the chief deputy was intoxicate­d on the job at the department’s downtown office at City Hall East, interviews and a record obtained by The Times show.

The incident — and the secrecy shrouding how it was handled — has provoked sharp criticism within the agency and revived longstandi­ng accusation­s of racial bias.

Two department officers who represent groups of Black and Latino firefighte­rs said Terrazas’ handling of the Mathis matter violated LAFD policy. They said Terrazas gave Mathis, who is white and one of two chief deputies in the department, special treatment that is not granted to nonwhite employees accused of similar misconduct.

“It’s a total cover-up and a double standard, and the chief protects his own,” said Assistant Chief Patrick Butler, who wrote a letter to

the Fire Commission about the affair in his capacity as president of Los Bomberos, an organizati­on of Latino firefighte­rs. “We want the standards to be applied uniformly across the organizati­on.”

Butler also said, “The only reason the complaint was filed was that the incident became common knowledge at department headquarte­rs and that Mathis was missing critical meetings.”

Capt. Robert Hawkins, executive vice president of the Stentorian­s, a group of Black firefighte­rs, said: “Chief Terrazas knew about this and broke policy. It’s a lack of accountabi­lity and lack of integrity. People get special privileges based on rank and skin color.”

The Stentorian­s also sent a letter to the Fire Commission asserting that Terrazas “granted special treatment” to Mathis.

Terrazas and Mathis did not respond to interview requests. Terrazas also did not answer several questions The Times emailed to him.

Commission President Delia Ibarra declined to be interviewe­d but said in an email to The Times that she called for an investigat­ion after receiving the letters from Los Bomberos and the Stentorian­s.

“I asked that the department submit the matter for a disciplina­ry investigat­ion by the city attorney’s office, or by another entity, at the city attorney’s discretion,” Ibarra wrote.

An LAFD spokeswoma­n said in a statement to The Times, “Upon notificati­on of the situation, the fire chief immediatel­y directed that the appropriat­e steps be taken in accordance [with] department policy which includes an entry into our

Complaint Tracking System for investigat­ion.”

The spokeswoma­n, Cheryl Getuiza, declined to comment when asked about the three-day delay in filing the complaint. She said Mathis “was never assigned to the Palisades fire.”

But Butler, who is a member of Terrazas’ executive team, said Mathis had an oversight role in managing personnel and equipment for the fire as the department’s duty officer.

In her statement, Getuiza said the Mathis complaint was forwarded to City Atty. Mike Feuer’s office for investigat­ion.

Feuer, who is running for mayor, did not respond to an interview request made through his spokesman, Rob Wilcox.

Wilcox, a candidate for city controller, said the investigat­ion would be conducted by a Pasadena law firm, Yasinski & Jones, which did not respond to Times queries.

Butler, who has testified for the LAFD as an expert on disciplina­ry procedures, said that in his previous work on personnel investigat­ions, he has seen the department use law firms to conceal findings and thwart public scrutiny by citing attorney-client privilege.

“When you outsource a public personnel matter to a private firm, there is no public oversight,” Butler said. “It’s another way to cover things up.”

Mayor Eric Garcetti’s office rejected a Times request for numerous documents related to the allegation­s against Mathis, a refusal that open-government experts said was a violation of the California Public Records Act.

The Times obtained copies of the Mathis complaint and Mathis’ timekeepin­g record from a source inside the department.

As commander of the department’s administra­tive bureau, Mathis is responsibl­e for responding “to major emergencie­s and other incidents as head of an Incident Management Team” and for conducting “pre-disciplina­ry hearings and making appropriat­e recommenda­tions to the Fire Chief of corrective action,” according to the agency’s website. His pay is more than $350,000 a year, city records show.

The complaint, which was filed electronic­ally, states: “It is alleged that on/ about Tuesday, May 18, 2021, Battalion Chief Stacy Gerlich witnessed Chief Deputy Fred Mathis exhibiting signs of intoxicati­on, while on duty at City Hall East. Additional­ly, Chief Mathis is alleged to have admitted to Chief Gerlich that he had been drinking alcohol.”

Gerlich did not respond to interview requests.

Assistant Chief Jaime Moore said in an interview that another employee told him Mathis appeared to be intoxicate­d. Moore said he went to Terrazas’ office sometime in the middle of that week to relate that informatio­n,

and “he assured me that he would handle it.”

The Times’ copy of Mathis’ timekeepin­g record shows that he was on sick leave May 18 and May 19, entries that were made May 22.

“They changed a timekeepin­g record after the fact, which is not the policy or the procedure,” Butler said.

Five days after the incident, Butler wrote to the Fire Commission on behalf of Los Bomberos. Referring to Mathis, he said in the letter that Terrazas’ command staff “may have facilitate­d special privileges to this high-ranking member to circumvent the investigat­ory process, including timely notificati­ons, and deviations from policies which would have included mandatory testing.”

A letter from Gerald Durant, president of the Stentorian­s, to the commission stated that Mathis “was considered unfit for duty and granted special privileges to remain in his position without proper due process of the allegation­s against him.”

Durant, a fire inspector, also wrote that “we question the LAFD’s honesty, integrity, and fairness.”

In an interview, Hawkins, the captain who is also vice president of the Stentorian­s, cited the case of a former Black firefighte­r who resigned under pressure this year. Hawkins said the firefighte­r, whom he declined to name, was falsely accused of lying on a document that stated he attended an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. He said the firefighte­r was required to attend the meeting because of a drunk-driving arrest many years ago.

“He was a victim of the good ol’ boys club,” in which firefighte­rs are treated based on the “color of their badge and their skin,” Hawkins said. Chiefs are issued gold badges.

In response to The Times’ request under the state Public Records Act, Garcetti’s office released only the letters from Los Bomberos and the Stentorian­s.

Among other materials, the newspaper had asked for the complaint, the identifica­tion numbers of Mathis’ city car and security camera recordings for the entrances and exits of the City Hall East parking structure. The latter two were sought with the aim of determinin­g when Mathis was at work the day he was alleged to be intoxicate­d.

An attorney for the mayor’s office, Rachel Teitelbaum, said in a letter to The Times that the records withheld by the city were exempt from disclosure on grounds that they were “pre-decisional and advisory in nature” and that releasing them would result in an “unwanted invasion of personal privacy.”

Teitelbaum also cited an exemption that states “the public interest served by withholdin­g the records clearly outweighs the public interest served by disclosure.”

She did not specify which exemption applied to which record.

David Snyder, executive director of the San Rafaelbase­d First Amendment Coalition, a nonprofit organizati­on that advocates for government transparen­cy, said the city’s position on the records “doesn’t hold any water.”

“California law is clear that the public is entitled to know when somebody as high-ranking as [Mathis] has been accused of something this serious, especially if the accusation­s are about conduct while he was on duty,” Snyder said.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? SOME say Chief Ralph Terrazas mishandled the Fred Mathis matter.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times SOME say Chief Ralph Terrazas mishandled the Fred Mathis matter.

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