Source: Orange County Register (CA) Contact: http://www.ocregister.com/ Copyright: 1998 The Orange County Register Pubdate: Sun, 04 Oct 1998 Author:Stuart Pfeifer and Mark Katches-OCR TROUBLE SEIZES STATE DRUG BUREAU-PART 1 Law Enforcement: Low pay, lawsuits and managerial tactics contribute to low moral and unfilled positions at the agency. California's drug enforcement agency has been hit by costly sexual harassment lawsuits, reduced its hiring standards and faced accusations of mismanagement during the seven-year administration of Attorney General Dan Lungren. The Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement also has sought criminal charges against workers who complain about their supervisors, a Register review shows. Bureau agents have gone years without a raise and now rank among the lowest-paid law-enforcement officers in the state. With recruitment a problem, the agency - which manages dozens of anti-drug task forces statewide - has lowered its previous education and law-enforcement experience requirements. Lungren attributes the problems to "some bad apples." "But if you look overall at the people at the BNE, we have a very good record for the quality of people we have," he said. California is the center of the nation's methamphetamine trade. And consequently, methamphetamine is a target of bureau agents, particularly in recent years. Lungren says his agents have seized more than $7 billion in narcotics, closed 4,300 drug labs and made more than 60,000 arrests since he took over in 1991. "Our BNE agents are involved in taking down more, or about the same number, of clandestine labs in California as the DEA takes down in the entire country outside of California," said Lungren, who is running for governor. Internally, Lungren's agency has been doling out hundreds of thousands of dollars to deal with complaints of sexual harassment - including one against bureau Chief George J. Doane. The state has paid $521,000 to settle three lawsuits accusing the bureau of harassment and retaliation in the past four years, according to records obtained under the California Public Records Act. An analysis of those cases found that: The male-dominated drug agency-25 of its 336 agents are female - has been labeled a hostile workplace in lawsuits. The agency has countered two complaints by asking local prosecutors to file criminal charges against the workers. Both times, prosecutors declined. Doane said none of the male employees named in sexual harassment cases, including himself, were disciplined. Two of the men later retired. Michelle Reinglass, a Laguna Hills lawyer who has extensive experience in sexual-harassment cases, said the drug agency's handling of cases seems to represent "pretty outrageous" examples of retaliation. "It makes the cases far more egregious," said Reinglass, who has no connection with any past or pending suits against the agency. "More often than not, the sexual harassment was not the most devastating aspect of a situation. It's the repercussions that follow." Doane disputed in an interview that the agency has retaliated against employees who complained. "I know what it looks like, but you can't allow process to be governed by what things look like," Doane said. "If in the course of investigating your complaint, we find out you, too, did wrong things, we're going to do what the situation mandates." The drug agency's 336 sworn agents would make it the fourth-largest agency in Orange County. No comparably sized police agency in Orange County has had as much legal trouble with sexual harassment as Lungren's drug-enforcement agency. The Anaheim police, with 389 sworn police officers, and Santa Ana police, with 406 officers, have paid no sexual harassment damates in the past five years, officials in those cities said. The Orange County Sheriff's Department, whose 1,459 deputies make it more than four times the size of the state anti-drug agency, has been sued seven times for sexual harassment in the past five years and paid one settlement. Special Agent Richard Wayne Parker of San Juan Capistrano is awaiting trial at the federal court in Los Angeles for allegedly trafficking cocaine. Perhaps even more embarrassing, the Lungren administration also has had to deal with the disappearance of 650 pounds of cocaine from a poorly guarded Riverside office - a theft Lungren described as a "gut punch." The state agency also has been questioned for some of its tactics in the war on drugs. It has given known drug dealers a key ingredient in the making of methamphetamine. The dealers are then followed and arrested in these "reverse stings." In one case, 57 pounds of methamphetamine was sold to the public and went unrecovered, according to court documents filed in a criminal case. State officials say they stand by their reverse stings, noting that agents have recovered far larger quantities of methamphetamine in these operations. The agency also has dealt with less serious disciplinary issues and abuses of state equipment. Special Agent Rolando Garcia resigned in 1996 after he was caught running license plates through the Department of Motor Vehicles database to find addresses of women he considered attractive. Supervising Special Agent Don Rominger, who manages the bureau's aviation unit, was reprimanded in the same year for flying his daughter from Los Angeles to Sacramento in a narcotics-surveillance plane, Doane said. In the past four years, task forces run by the agency have paid $812,000 in civil damages and settlements for bad search warrants, civil-rights violations and property damage. These task forces typically involve several police agencies, under the state bureau's supervision. The state's share has been $212,000 in these cases. Claims filed against the agency have increased in each of the last three years, rising from five in 1996 to 14 so far this year. Union officials representing the agents say they believe the rise in claims is related to the low pay. That, in turn, has made it difficult to hire quality agents. The agents are paid less than patrol officers in many police agencies in the state. "We're having a terrible time getting anybody with good backgrounds," said Christy McCampbell, the special agent in charge of the agency's San Jose office. "Some agencies are making about double what our agents are making." The highest special-agent salary - $4,695 a month or $56,340 annually - is less than the amount the Los Angeles Police Department pays a rookie detective. Small departments such as the Palo Alto, Mountain View and Berkeley police pay as much as $800 more a month. A Santa Ana detective can earn $1,000 a month more than a special agent with the same experience level, agency records show. Doane said 27 special agents have resigned this year - most taking higher-paying jobs at the Department of Corrections. All told, the agency now has about 90 jobs vacant, Doane said. As recently as five years ago, the agency lost only a handful of agents each year, mostly to retirement, Doane said. Because the agency has had trouble recruiting, the state lowered its hiring standards last year. Before October 1997, the agency hired only peace officers with investigative experience and a four-year college degree. Now, it has dropped the education level to two years of college with prior law-enforcement experience, and eliminated investigative experience as a requirement for new recruits. "This used to be the leading, exemplary agency," said Sam McCall, chief legal counsel for the California Union of Safety Employees, which represents the special agents at the bargaining table. "Law enforcement officers were champing at the bit to move to it. It was the leader. Now they're having trouble recruiting competent, qualified people." McCall said Gov. Pete Wilson's negotiators have been largely to blame for denying pay raises to special agents. But he also blamed Lungren. "I have not seen any attempt on his part to do anything for the agents to keep them as a premier law-enforcement agency," McCall said. Lungren, who is trying to succeed fellow Republican Wilson as governor, said he has tried to persuade Wilson to increase the pay of the state's special agents at a critical time in California's war on drugs. But Wilson, who negotiates collective bargaining agreements with state workers, hasn't budged. Doane acknowledged having trouble hiring top-quality agents, but he attributed the rising number of claims and lawsuits to "an increasingly litigious society." "A lot more people used to want this job," Doane said. "Not only was it a respected job in law enforcement, the cream of the crop, but the pay was good. The pay package has diminished, but I don't believe the esteem of the agency has gone down." The agency recently mailed out 2,500 examinations to job candidates who had expressed interest in becoming special agents. Just half of the tests were returned, Doane said. Lungren said he considers the problems at the agency to be "isolated" cases. "I would never say they're minor," Lungren said. "If we have a problem, I wouldn't consider it minor. If you look at the work we do overall, we're recognized around the country." But the low pay, the lawsuits, the embarrassing scandals and the alleged retaliation have led to morale problems, says Special Agent Jesse Reyes of the Sacramento office. "I want to feel like I work for a credible law-enforcement agency," said Reyes, a 24-year law-enforcement veteran. "Right now I don't." - --- Checked-by: Don Beck