LOS ANGELES – A judge ruled Tuesday that portions of a lawsuit a sheriff’s deputy filed against Los Angeles County will have to be shored up for the allegations to remain part of the complaint, but the judge also dismissed Sheriff Alex Villanueva’s wife as a defendant.
Plaintiff Lina Pimentel alleges her career has been derailed because a recruit the deputy found to be physically unfit for hiring was a friend of the sheriff’s spouse, Vivian Villanueva.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Terry Green ruled that Pimentel needs more details to support her two allegations for retaliation and her claims for disability discrimination and violation of the California Family Rights Act as they pertain to the county. Green said Pimentel’s claim against the county for breach of a mandatory duty not to discriminate can move forward.
The judge dismissed the one claim against Vivian Villanueva, which alleged retaliation.
In her suit filed Jan. 12, Pimentel says she was hired in January 2007, served as a patrol deputy and in August 2019 and was given a highly regarded recruit training officer job at the Sheriff’s Academy. She later took part in the decision to dismiss recruit Natalie Garcia, a close, personal friend of Vivian Villanueva, the spouse of the current sheriff and a retired LASD sergeant, the suit states.
“Vivian Villanueva was acting as a supervisor during all relevant periods of time … and had an office at plaintiff’s worksite,” the suit alleges.
Garcia, a longtime LASD custody assistant, was making her second attempt to complete the academy, but Pimentel, Garcia’s drill instructor, determined that she was physically unable to complete the course, the suit states.
“Garcia falsely claimed to plaintiff’s superiors that plaintiff had forced her to do additional physical training requirements in violation of her medical restrictions,” the suit alleges.
In retaliation for plaintiff dismissing her friend as unqualified, Vivian Villanueva “reported” to the academy and called the plaintiff two obscene names reserved for females, the suit alleges. Vivian Villanueva also warned others to keep Pimentel away from her because, “I will go off on that (epithet),” the suit states.
“This gross example of nepotism, abuse of office and workplace harassment has been ratified by current Sheriff Alex Villanueva, who allows his wife to call female deputies names … in the workplace,” the suit states.
Pimentel’s career progression “has now been effectively terminated” because of Vivian Villanueva’s personal attacks on her, according to the suit, which further alleges the sheriff’ spouse is “misusing her husband’s position as the apex employee of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department to do illegal favors for her friends and punish those who do not do favors for her friends.”
Garcia, upset because she was unable to meet the minimum physical standards for a deputy, filed a complaint against Pimentel because the plaintiff had told her, “The sheriff is not here to save you,” the suit states.
“Plaintiff expressed this to Garcia because (Pimentel) believed that Garcia would seek to abuse her influence with Sheriff Alex Villanueva, by and through his spouse Vivian Villanueva,” the suit states.
Contrary to what Pimentel alleges in her lawsuit, Vivian Villanueva does not have an office at any county building, has not supervised or reprimanded any county employees and does not have a county vehicle, lawyers for the sheriff’s spouse stated in their court papers filed ahead of Tuesday’s hearing.
“(Pimentel) appears to have added these knowingly false allegations to publicly embarrass Sheriff Villanueva,” Vivian Villanueva’s lawyers stated in their court papers.
Lawyers for the county were similarly critical of Pimentel’s claims against their client.
“The allegations in plaintiff’s complaint are boilerplate, illusory and conclusory,” county attorneys stated in their court papers. “Yet, none of these is supported by any facts in the complaint, other than plaintiff’s misperception of the reality caused by the strong dislike she has towards her co-workers.”