Advertisement

Police Set Up Interviews in Probe of Bradley Staff : City Hall: Detectives also will question Rita Walters and her political aides after disclosures that city offices and equipment were used to aid her council campaign.

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITERS

Los Angeles police detectives began arranging interviews Friday with City Council candidate Rita Walters, her campaign staff and aides to Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley after disclosures that mayoral staff members used city offices and equipment to assist the Walters campaign.

Detectives began “knocking on doors,” Lt. Fred Reno said, but he declined to say who had been approached or whether anyone had been interviewed by Friday afternoon. He said a search warrant to retrieve computer data from the mayor’s office “could be forthcoming,” but he stressed that such action is not certain and could be weeks off.

Walters’ campaign manager, Felicia Bragg, said she was contacted by police investigators on Friday and agreed to meet with them, but no date has been set.

Advertisement

Meanwhile, in a highly charged political atmosphere at City Hall, several council members criticized Bradley for not being more open about the matter and two members called for the resignation of Deputy Mayor Mark Fabiani, the mayor’s chief of staff.

Fabiani was one of six Bradley aides reprimanded Wednesday by the mayor for creating “the perception” that they used taxpayer resources to help Walters in her bid for the 9th District City Council seat. The Times reported Thursday that Fabiani sent a computer message to mayoral aides last week soliciting volunteers to “boost the crowd” at a weekend fund-raiser for Walters.

The story also reported that over the past five months Bradley aides wrote briefing papers for Walters, provided her with materials from City Hall files and met with her to discuss city issues. After inquiries from The Times, Bradley reprimanded the six staffers and ordered two of them to reimburse the city a total of $37 for “staff time and computer time” spent on the campaign.

“We’ve been on notice for a long time that our offices aren’t to be used for political purposes,” said Councilwoman Joy Picus, one of those who said Fabiani should step down. “It would be terrible if a low-level employee did it, but a chief deputy? . . . There is no excuse for not knowing better than that.”

Councilman Ernani Bernardi called Fabiani’s role in the Walters campaign the “last straw” for the deputy mayor, whom Bernardi and others have blamed for worsening relations between the council and mayor’s office over the handling of the controversy surrounding the police beating of Rodney G. King. Fabiani has angered some council members by orchestrating efforts to oust Police Chief Daryl F. Gates.

“I think he should resign,” Bernardi said. “I don’t know why he gets involved in so many kinds of these very damaging things in respect to the image that people perceive of the mayor and the City Council.”

Advertisement

Councilman Richard Alatorre, generally an ally of the mayor, said Fabiani and the five other staff members should be fired if investigators determine they assisted Walters at City Hall.

“The allegations are serious enough that their continued tenure in office wouldn’t be appropriate,” he said.

Fabiani, who is vacationing in Hawaii, could not be reached for comment, but Bradley spokesman Bill Chandler defended Fabiani as a “hard-working deputy mayor.”

“Some council members have shown an affinity for lashing out at the chief of staff,” Chandler said. “The comments today are nothing more than typical, off-the-cuff rhetoric by two council members.”

Bradley, described by Alatorre as “very unhappy,” refused Friday to answer questions about his office’s involvement in the Walters campaign. The mayor pushed his way through a crowd of reporters at a groundbreaking ceremony near downtown Los Angeles when they asked about the matter, and earlier in the day he told reporters the matter was closed.

“I took the disciplinary action. That’s it,” Bradley said before posing for photographs at City Hall with the president of Hungary. “I am finished with it.”

Advertisement

Several council members, however, criticized Bradley for refusing to discuss his staff’s conduct or his responsibility, saying the mayor’s silence has led to public distrust in his office.

“I think what the public would like to see is some assurance that this isn’t going to happen again,” said Councilwoman Joan Milke Flores. “And I don’t think a $26 or $35 or $100 fine, or a couple days off, or a call to the beach at Waikiki saying, ‘I am not happy that you did this,’ assures the people that this kind of thing won’t happen again.”

In the police investigation, detectives are seeking out potential witnesses, which is normal in such inquiries, Reno said. “We would like to do (this investigation) in a good, traditional way,” he said.

Reno said Walters and her campaign aides were potential witnesses whom investigators were trying to interview Friday afternoon.

“Somebody from the Police Department did call and say they wanted to meet with me,” said Walters campaign manager Bragg, adding that she did not know whether Walters had been contacted.

Bradley spokesman Chandler said he knew of no staff members who had been contacted by the police. “We would cooperate, certainly,” Chandler said.

Advertisement

Reno acknowledged that the investigation is occurring in a tense atmosphere as the furor over the King beating continues and Bradley and his police commissioners seek the resignation and temporary removal of Gates.

But, Reno said, “It doesn’t impact us. I won’t let it.”

Also Friday, the City Clerk’s office released reports showing that Bob Gay, Walters’ opponent in the 9th District runoff election, has raised $375,922 in campaign funds since January, far surpassing Walters’ total of $252,520.

Gay has gathered the money from a wide range of business and private interests throughout Southern California and the nation, the reports show, but in numerous instances the reports fail to disclose the occupation and employer of individual donors. State law requires that the information be included on campaign statements. The information is essential to identifying money from special interest groups.

“We’ve noticed that he didn’t disclose a lot of information and it suggests to us that there is something he might be trying to hide,” said Bragg.

David Gould, a campaign accountant hired by Gay, said campaign officials have failed over the last four months to give him sufficient information to complete the forms.

“They’re one of the most difficult campaigns to work with because they have too many people involved,” Gould said. “Of all the reports I’ve done, theirs had the most problems. They like to pass the buck to me, but they have to accept their share of the responsibility.”

Advertisement

Gould estimated that one-third to one-half of the entries on Gay’s reports are incomplete and said he is attempting to gather the missing information so that he can file an amended statement with the city clerk’s office.

Chris Hammond, Gay’s campaign manager, said, “We’ve turned in as much information as we have. Sometimes there is a problem with getting information. . . . Our intent is to try to amend them as soon as possible.”

Times staff writer Jane Fritsch contributed to this story.

Advertisement