07-13-09

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LOS ANGELES

DOWNTOWN

NEWS

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Murder arrests, watery moves, and other happenings Around Town.

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New city fees raise issues for those with Downtown projects and buildings.

W W W. D O W N T O W N N E W S . C O M

July 13, 2009

Volume 38, Number 28

INSIDE

Goodbye Michael Jackson

Golden Memories Athletes, Organizers and Others Affiliated With the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics Remember the Games

Reaction to the El Pueblo audit.

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‘Grease’ and the river with Tom LaBonge.

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Meet the Dodgers’ top chef.

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photo by Gary Leonard

(l to r) Diver Greg Louganis, boxer Paul Gonzalez and sprinter Evelyn Ashford, who all won gold medals in the 1984 Summer Olympics, will attend this week’s gala celebrating the 25th anniversary of the Los Angeles games. by Ryan VaillancouRt staff wRiteR

The full summer swim lineup.

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Pershing Square’s packed schedule.

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T

he 1984 Summer Olympics meant different things to different people. To boxer Paul Gonzalez, the Los Angeles games meant proving his doubters wrong. For Greg Louganis, it was a chance for his family in San Diego to see him dive on a world stage. For some Angelenos, the games are best remembered as two weeks of miraculously light traffic.

Although the games took place from Aug. 28-Sept. 12, 1984, the celebration of the silver anniversary begins this week. On Saturday, July 18, the Los Angeles Sports Council and the Southern California Committee for the Olympic Games will host approximately 1,000 athletes, event organizers and members of the general public at a gala celebration that includes drinks at the peristyle of the Coliseum, dinner on the field and an Olympic-themed show created by

Incident Related to Controversial Fingerprint Case Called ‘Outrageous’ staff wRiteR

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17 CALENDAR LISTINGS 20 MAP 21 CLASSIFIEDS

Paul Gonzalez, Gold Medal Boxer: “It was a great feeling to have the games in Los Angeles. It was in my hometown, because I’m from East Los Angeles. I could have taken a

bus to the L.A. Coliseum or the L.A. Sports Arena to compete. Now not only my family but my friends were able to see me display my talent. Finally after so many years of telling people, who didn’t believe me, that I was going to get there and win a gold medal, I was there. “I grew up in the Aliso Village housing project in East Los Angeles as a ghetto kid, so it was like, how was I supposed to get there? Whoever see Olympics, page 10

Commissioner Slams LAPD Over Suspension by anna scott

Rabbits, Frenchmen and ‘Spamalot.’

David Wolper, the producer of the 1984 Olympic Games Opening and Closing Ceremonies. Here, in their own words, seven people, from athletes to a police officer, reflect on their Olympic memories.

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he Los Angeles Police Department was harshly rebuked recently by a city commissioner over its handling of a personnel case tied to a larger controversy. The commissioner blasted the department for its treatment of an employee who accused the LAPD of retaliation. Forensic Print Specialist Cathleen Rogde, a 34year civilian employee of the LAPD, was suspended for seven days in 2007, ostensibly because of her role in a high-profile 2006 case in which a suspect was wrongly accused of burglary based on a misread fingerprint. Rogde, who declined to comment for this article, subsequently filed a grievance with the city Personnel Department challenging the suspension, according to documents obtained by Los Angeles

Downtown News. Rogde also filed a complaint alleging that her suspension was in fact retaliation for an earlier discrimination complaint she filed against the LAPD. The Personnel Department’s Office of Discrimination Complaint Resolution investigated Rogde’s charges. Based on its findings, the city’s Civil Service Commission in September 2008 decided that Rogde’s suspension was not warranted and overturned the punishment, ordering the LAPD to reimburse her for the lost days. Months later, the ODCR issued another report supporting Rogde’s claim that retaliation could have been the motive behind her suspension. The LAPD appealed that decision. The Civil Service Commission, however, voted 4-1 against the LAPD on the retaliation issue on June 25 of this year. During the hearing, commissioner John

Perez called the department’s handling of the Rogde case “outrageous.” “The LAPD’s claim that ODCR is wrong is so over the top, that in this case they [LAPD] have not shown any honesty, they have not shown any integrity, and they have not shown any trustworthiness,” said Perez. In a later interview, he called the Rogde case “one of the most egregious that I have seen in my three and a half years as a commissioner.” LAPD officials said that they stand behind their reports on the matter and declined to comment further. Misprints Rogde’s suspension stemmed from a heavily publicized case in which the LAPD falsely accused hospital technician Maria Maldonado of a burglary based on a faulty analysis of fingerprints from see LAPD, page 9

Since 1972, an independent, locally owned and edited newspaper, go figure.


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07-13-09 by Los Angeles Downtown News - Issuu