Current:Home > reviewsEx-Oakland police chief sues city and mayor to get his job back -ThriveEdge Finance
Ex-Oakland police chief sues city and mayor to get his job back
View
Date:2025-04-14 00:31:03
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — A former California police chief fired from his post last year has sued the city of Oakland and its mayor, saying he was unlawfully terminated in retaliation for criticizing the federal court-appointed monitor overseeing the department.
LeRonne Armstrong filed his lawsuit in Alameda County Superior Court on Monday. He seeks reinstatement as police chief, the post Mayor Sheng Thao fired him from in February 2023 after a probe ordered by the oversight monitor found he mishandled two misconduct cases.
Oakland has been without a permanent police chief since, even as violent crime, robbery and vehicle theft climbed in the city of 400,000 across the bay from San Francisco. On Tuesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced he will deploy 120 California Highway Patrol officers to Oakland to assist with targeted crackdowns on criminal activity, including vehicle and retail theft.
Preliminary data shows that crime rose in Oakland last year, despite falling in other California urban centers, Newsom’s office said. Last month, In-N-Out Burger announced it will close its first location in its 75-year history due to car break-ins, property damage, theft and robberies at its only restaurant in Oakland.
Oakland’s police department has been under federal oversight since 2003 after a rookie officer came forward to report abuse of power by a group of officers known as the Oakland “Riders.” The case resulted in the department being required to enact more than four dozen reform measures and report its progress to an outside monitor and a federal judge.
The mayor said in firing Armstrong last February that she had lost confidence in the police chief after he and the department failed to properly investigate and discipline a sergeant who was involved in a hit-and-run with his patrol car and who, in a separate incident, fired his service weapon inside an elevator at police headquarters.
In his complaint, Armstrong says the department had made great strides and was on track to regain its independence when the federal monitor said there were problems with police leadership and ordered the outside investigation into the sergeant. Armstrong says the monitor and his team “transformed routine instances of lower-level misconduct into a complete indictment” of the department and chief.
Armstrong said in his complaint that the mayor, who was newly elected at the time, was intimidated by the oversight monitor and buckled to pressure.
Thao’s office on Wednesday referred requests for comment to the city attorney’s office, which said in a statement that it had not been served with the complaint.
veryGood! (39379)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Joe Flacco beats out Damar Hamlin in NFL Comeback Player of the Year surprise
- Search resumes at charred home after shootout and fire left 2 officers hurt and 6 people missing
- Wisconsin Elections Commission votes to tell clerks to accept partial addresses on absentee ballots
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Kobe Bryant immortalized with a 19-foot bronze statue outside the Lakers’ downtown arena
- Climate scientist Michael Mann wins defamation suit over comparison to molester, jury decides
- Inert 1,000-pound bomb from World War II era dug up near Florida airport
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Thank goodness 'Abbott Elementary' is back
Ranking
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- New Hampshire House rejects broad expansion of school choice program but OK’s income cap increase
- AP Week in Pictures: North America
- A criminal actor is to blame for a dayslong cyberattack on a Chicago hospital, officials say
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Faced with wave of hostile bills, transgender rights leaders are playing “a defense game”
- Disney buys stake in Fortnite-maker Epic Games with $1.5 billion investment
- Alabama bill that would allow lottery, casinos and sports betting headed to first test
Recommendation
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Michael Strahan's daughter Isabella, 19, shares 'not fun' health update ahead of chemotherapy
A year after Ohio derailment, U.S. freight trains remain largely unregulated
Man accused of torching police motorcycles in attack authorities have linked to ‘Cop City’ protests
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
US military drills in Philippines unaffected by America’s focus on Ukraine and Gaza, US general says
Kentucky House passes bill to bolster disclosure of sexual misconduct allegations against teachers
Enbridge appeals to vacate an order that would shut down its pipeline