Activists seek answers in case
Relatives of teen at center of Oakland police sex scandal want charges filed
OAKLAND (AP) — Activists and relatives of a teenage woman at the center of a San Francisco Bay Area police sex scandal say they want to know if any of the more than two dozen law enforcement officials implicated earlier this year will face criminal charges.
The woman, who turned 19 on Thursday and says she works as a prostitute, told The Associated Press that she informed internal affairs investigators months ago that she had sex with three Oakland police officers and a Contra Costa County deputy before her 18th birthday.
In all, she said she has had sex with about 30 law enforcement officials, mostly during the past year. She said she received money during a few encounters and often traded sex for protection from arrest and tips on prostitution stings.
“The law is not being applied equally,” said Leigh Davenport, a spokeswoman for the activist organization Anti Police-Terror Project. “If these guys weren’t cops, they would have been charged.”
The teen’s grandmother and father also said they are frustrated that no charges have been filed.
The Associated Press generally doesn’t identify people who say they are victims of sex crimes or their families.
The woman has retained text messages that appear to discuss sexual encounters with officers and has shared them with investigators and the media, including the AP.
Her allegations were widely reported more than three months ago.
The teen lives with her mother, an Oakland police dispatcher, who has not returned numerous phone and email inquiries seeking comment. The teen said she is enrolling Friday