California in Brief

May 9, 2008

LOS ANGELES

Mayor vetoes law firm hires

Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa on Thursday vetoed a City Council plan to spend $210,000 for nine outside law firms to defend the city against nearly two dozen lawsuits stemming from the MacArthur Park police melee on May 1, 2007.

In a letter to council members, Villaraigosa called the number of law firms "excessive," saying he would support the hiring of just two in the midst of a budget crunch.

He argued that the majority of 21 lawsuits and hundreds of claims filed against the city could be resolved through mediation, reducing the need for outside legal help.

But the council's expenditure last month may represent only a fraction of the city's potential legal costs over the litigation.

City Administrative Officer Karen Sisson said the city attorney has estimated the cost of outside legal fees for the litigation at $5 million to $10 million in the next three years.

Sisson recommended that the city hire more in-house attorneys to save money.

In a statement Thursday, a spokesman for City Atty. Rocky Delgadillo said the office agreed with the mayor's effort to reduce the number of outside firms, as long as additional resources are added..

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Duke Helfand

LOS ANGELES COUNTY

Business group endorses Parks

The Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce announced its endorsement Thursday of Los Angeles City Councilman Bernard C. Parks in his race against State Sen. Mark Ridley-Thomas for county supervisor.

"Bernard Parks' steadfast commitment to business retention, economic development and promoting fiscal responsibility in government tipped the scales to his advantage," Chamber President Gary Toebben said in a statement.

Ridley-Thomas has taken nearly all the key endorsements from labor organizations.

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Steve Hymon

SACRAMENTO

20-year sentence for ecoterrorist

A federal judge Thursday sentenced a Northern California man to nearly 20 years in prison for waging a failed eco-terrorism bombing campaign that targeted a dam and a plant genetics lab.

Eric McDavid, 29, of Forest- hill, Calif., was convicted in March after his two co-conspirators pleaded guilty and assisted prosecutors in the case against him.

U.S. Atty. McGregor Scott said McDavid's sentence should serve as "a cautionary tale" to other extremists.





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