The Mercury News Weekend

Report: Ex-Assemblyma­n likely engaged in harassment

- By Kathleen Ronayne The Associated Press

SACRAMENTO » Former Assemblyma­n Raul Bocanegra and one of his staffers, Gerardo Guzman, both likely engaged in sexual harassment while working for a different San Fernando Valley lawmaker, an investigat­ion released Thursday found.

Guzman was fired last month following the investigat­ion while Bocanegra, who won an Assembly seat in 2012, resigned in December. The investigat­ion examined their behavior while working for former Assemblyma­n Felipe Fuentes, who held office between 2007 and 2012.

Bocenegra’s likely sexual misconduct included putting a female subordinat­e’s bracelet down his pants and asking her to retrieve it, stroking a female employee’s hair and repeatedly asking another on dates, the investigat­ion found. Guzman, meanwhile, likely engaged in behavior such as showing and talking about sex toys with female employees.

Bocenegra was Fuentes’ chief of staff and Guzman was his district director. Bocanegra was elected in 2012, lost his seat in 2014, and was re- elected in 2016.

Bocanegra was the first California lawmaker publicly hit with allegation­s of sexual misconduct after nearly 150 women published a letter in October calling out a “pervasive” culture of harassment in the Capitol.

He asked the Assembly to fully investigat­e claims against him, published by the Los Angeles Times, on Nov. 20, but declined to co- operate with investigat­ors after he resigned a week later, according to the investigat­ion.

The Assembly informed Guzman on Feb. 5 of the investigat­ion’s results and fired him effective Feb. 21.

Neither could be reached for comment by The Associated Press. But Guzman told the Times on Wednesday he was “deeply regretful” for the incidents and that they occurred before he quit drinking alcohol. Bocanegra told the Times he has done his best to be accountabl­e for “any alleged actions prior to ever serving in office.”

Guzman was supporting Luz Rivas, a non-profit head, in the race to succeed Bocanegra. Rivas said she cut ties with Guzman on Wednesday after reading about his firing in the Times.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States