WeHo’s Mitchell Grobeson, First Openly Gay LAPD Officer, Pleads No Contest to Assault Charges

ADVERTISEMENT

Mitchell Grobeson, known for launching a lengthy battle in 1988 to force the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) to end discrimination against gay officers, has been sentenced to 36 months of probation after pleading no contest to misdemeanor charges involving assault of his husband and resisting Sheriff’s deputies.

Grobeson, 59, entered the plea on Thursday. In addition to the probation he was ordered to surrender his weapons for 10 years and to continue mental health counseling.

Old photo of Mitchell Grobeson, left, with then-LAPD Chief Darryl Gates.

Grobeson, a former LAPD sergeant, was arrested in March 2016 after the L.A. Sheriff’s Department SWAT team responded to a call that he was assaulting his longtime partner. The SWAT team showed up at his apartment at 800 West Knoll Drive around 10 a.m. that day along with a crisis negotiation team. The situation led to the blocking of West Knoll and the eastbound lanes of Santa Monica Boulevard until about 2 p.m., when the crisis negotiation team talked Grobeson into surrendering. He was booked into jail in protective custody.

Grobeson, said to have been the first openly gay officer in the L.A. Police Department, sued the department in 1988, alleging discrimination against gay and lesbian employees. He resigned after filing the suit and took a job with the San Francisco State University Police Department and the San Francisco Police Department. In a 1993 settlement of his lawsuit, the LAPD was required to end discrimination against gay and lesbian employees and job applicants.

Grobeson returned to the LAPD and retired in 1995, claiming a mental disability. However, he filed a second lawsuit in 1996, alleging the City of Los Angeles and the LAPD had failed to take the steps required in the 1993 settlement to eliminate discriminatory practices and that he had been discriminated against by the police department. Grobeson sought $636,000 to pay his legal fees and up to $4.4 million in back pay and compensation for emotional distress.

In 2007, Los Angeles and Grobeson agreed to settle that lawsuit. The city agreed to strengthen its policies against LGBT discrimination and pay Grobeson’s legal fees. However, the two parties were unable to reach agreement on Grobeson’s request for back pay.

ADVERTISEMENT

That spurred another trial in December 2007, which Grobeson lost. A judge ruled that one of the jurors was biased. That prompted another trial, which Grobeson and the LAPD settled in 2013 without disclosing the terms.”

Grobeson’s fight against the LAPD made him somewhat of a gay icon, with appearances on “60 Minutes” and the Phil Donahue show. He also was the recipient of West Hollywood’s Rainbow Key Award in 2008. After his retirement, Grobeson has worked as a private security officer for various celebrities and for LGBT events such as the 20th anniversary of The Wall-Las Memorias, an organization that provides services to Latino people affected by HIV, substance abuse and other issues. Grobeson also is the author of “Outside the Badge,” published in 1999, a novel about a police officer trying to solve the murders of male street prostitutes in Hollywood. Grobeson has chronicled his own career on a website titled SgtMitch.com.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

1 Comment
Newest
Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
kab1200
kab1200
5 years ago

I have seen him at the gym with a companion service dog.

1
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x