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Resolution Delayed on Mayor’s Suit

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A court delay will postpone resolution of Thousand Oaks Mayor Mike Markey’s disability lawsuit against his former employer.

The retired Compton police officer reached an out-of-court settlement in December 1997, after the city had denied his claim for disability retirement.

State workers’ compensation regulations allow an employee to penalize the employer as much as 10% of the total award if it can be proven that the employer refused to honor a claim knowing that it was legitimate.

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Markey said the exact amount remains uncertain because of a complicated retirement formula that will determine the specific value of his claim.

“I’m going after them for what they did,” he said. “It’s the principle of the thing, even if I don’t win a dollar.”

The new court date is Dec. 2.

Markey was wounded by a shotgun during the 1992 riots following the first Rodney G. King trial. He had previously injured his back in an on-the-job car accident that eventually forced him onto painkillers and into a desk job.

Compton officials later questioned whether Markey could properly work a desk job while on medication, and his doctor soon ordered him to permanently retire after prescribing even stronger painkillers.

That triggered a two-year legal dispute during which Markey lived off his accumulated vacation pay, and Compton officials refused to honor his disability claim, arguing that he could still work in a limited capacity.

Compton officials declined to comment on the case, citing state laws that make personnel files confidential. However, they disputed Markey’s accusation that the city had acted inappropriately.

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“There is no misconduct on the part of the city, but that is all we are allowed to say,” said Steve Okonta, a city administrator.

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