Costa Mesa Mayor Suing Police Association, Labor Law Firm for Alleged Intimidation, Harassment
Big bullies


Costa Mesa, California mayor Jim Righeimer was visited in his house last August, when he was still a councilman, after someone called the police to report him for DUI. Righeimer hadn't been drinking, and had the receipt from the pub to prove it. The "concerned citizen" who reported Righeimer was actually a private investigator hired by a labor law firm in California that represented dozens of police unions—Righeimer has helped lead the battle in Costa Mesa to rein in public union costs and other municipal spending and that made him an apparent target of the police union.
Now Righeimer has filed suit against the Costa Mesa police association and its former legal firm (they were dismissed shortly after the private investigator was exposed as having filed a false police report) in what some local legal experts called a "very unusual" move. But the treatment Righeimer alleges in his lawsuit isn't. As Steven Greenhut reported when the DUI incident first happened last August:
Recently, the Orange County Register's Tony Saavedra reported on the "playbook" used by that Upland firm [that represented the Costa Mesa police association] in its negotiations, and until recently published on the firm's Web site. These lawyers represent 120 police associations across California, so these are typical tactics.
The fake-DUI call took place soon after Righeimer publicly criticized the firm.
"Its primer for police negotiations is part swagger, part braggadocio and all insult in its portrayal of the public and the budget-conscious officials elected to represent them," Saavedra reported. He gave this example from the playbook text: "The association should be like a quiet giant in the position of 'do as I ask and don't (expletive) me off.'"
The playback calls for work slowdowns, for mobbing council meetings with calls for higher police funding, for scaring neighborhoods about crime problems by going to as many houses as possible looking for suspects for minor crimes. It calls for putting the pressure on officials, gaining their loyalty and then moving on to the "next victim." This treatment of Righeimer takes a page out of the book.
In a follow up last October, Greenhut goes into more detail on similar bully tactics employed in Fullerton, where a pair of fiscally conservative councilmen who pressed for reforms after the killing of Kelly Thomas were also targeted, and elsewhere in California.
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Alt-text needs work. Suggestions:
Hates the children
Loves terrorists
FYTW
...in what some local legal experts called a "very unusual" move.
I wonder why that is.
Totality of circs!
also
"Give us the money Lebowski!"
SHUT THE FUCK UP, DONNY.
These thugs really have no shame at all, do they?
They're a gang, Hugh. A huge gang that gets off on their power. Or even more so, they're the new mafia. A legally enshrined mafia.
They believe in nothing. Nothing!
And thugs don't back down until attacked by a superior force.
Hope he takes them for everything they've got.
"do as I ask and don't (expietive) me off"?
"piss" is an expletive to the OCR?
Imagine, for a moment, a union and all of its concomitant thuggery. Now imagine that union's members' primary occupation is to carry guns and arrest people.
Yeah, imagine it.
"The association should be like a quiet giant in the position of 'do as I ask and don't (expletive) me off.'"
Don't fuck me off?
Don't shit me off?
Don't cunt me off?
I've never heard it phrased like that before.
I would have thought it was more like: "Do as I ask, suck me off".
They're like a noble class of selfless protectors.
Kelly Thomas link is pointing to someone's c drive.