Los Angeles Times - 26.11.2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

B4 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2019 S LATIMES.COM


In-N-Out Burger and the
California Department of
Forestry and Fire Protection
have settled a lawsuit alleg-
ing the restaurant company
sparked a 2017 brush fire.
The Huasna fire started
the afternoon of Sept. 20,
2017, at 9815 Huasna Road in
Arroyo Grande — more than
20 miles from the nearest In-
N-Out restaurant — and
burned 244 acres before fire-
fighters were able to fully
contain it.
In a lawsuit filed in Sep-
tember, Cal Fire said it
wanted In-N-Out to pay the
agency $1.2 million for the
costs it incurred in respond-
ing to and investigating the
fire, in addition to covering
attorney fees.
“In-N-Out Burger and
Cal-Fire have amicably
agreed to settle a lawsuit in-
volving a fire that occurred
over two years ago in Sep-
tember 2017,” In-N-Out said
in a statement. “The terms
of the settlement are not
public and due to litigation
the parties do not expect
to have any further com-
ment.”
According to the lawsuit,
a man employed by In-N-
Out was mowing the lawn on
company-owned property
the day the fire broke out.
The property was cov-
ered in dry grass and brush,
and the weather was windy
and warm, Cal Fire said in
the lawsuit. As the employee
was mowing the lawn, chaff
built up on the mower’s deck
and the tractor’s “power
take off clutch” failed, caus-
ing it to ignite the chaff,
which blew off the mower
deck.
The In-N-Out employee
“smelled smoke and saw a
fire burning on the tractor’s
mower deck before watching
that fire spread to the sur-
rounding dry annual grasses
and scattered brush,” the
lawsuit states.
Cal Fire alleges In-N-Out
and the employee should
have known the risks of op-
erating the tractor under the
warm, windy conditions and
should have taken the neces-
sary precautions.
“Wildland fires such as
the Huasna fire ordinarily
do not happen unless some-
one was negligent,” Cal Fire
said in the lawsuit.
According to the lawsuit,
health and safety codes al-
low the agency to recover fire
suppression, investigation,
accounting and other costs if
someone allows a fire to be
ignited due to negligence.
Cal Fire demanded pay-
ment from the restaurant on
March 13 and Aug. 30, but did
not receive any, according to
the lawsuit. Neither attor-
neys for Cal Fire nor In-N-
Out would disclose the set-
tlement amount.


Burger


chain


settles


over fire


In-N-Out agrees with


state claim that spark


from a lawnmower


caused a 2017 blaze.


By Alejandra
Reyes-Velarde


Huizar staffer Pauline Me-
dina filed a lawsuit contain-
ing similar claims. Medina,
who has a son with one of
Huizar’s brothers, also al-
leged that staffers were in-
structed to raise money for
Salesian High School, where
the councilman’s wife spent
several years working as a
paid fundraiser.
Huizar previously called
Alvarez’s allegations “com-
pletely false” and referred to
Medina’s claims as “crazy.”
The councilman also de-
scribed Medina as a disgrun-
tled former employee who
“left on her own accord after
being confronted with an in-
vestigation that revealed her
misconduct.”
Leon, Medina and Alva-
rez are all represented by
Terrence Jones, a Whittier-
based attorney.
In his claim, Leon said
Huizar also retaliated
against him for meeting with
City Atty. Mike Feuer’s office
to discuss the Alvarez and
Medina lawsuits.
Jones declined to directly
address Huizar’s conflict-of-
interest allegations, saying

instead that “the public
should be leery of Huizar’s
hyperbole and spin.”
“The council member
knows quite well that Mr.
Leon, having served as
Huizar’s campaign manager
for his reelection bid against
former Los Angeles County
Supervisor Gloria Molina, is
in a better position than
most to credibly speak
about the goings on in that
office. I can see how that
would make him nervous,”
Jones said in an email.
Leon has worked off and
on for Huizar over the last 12
years. According to his
LinkedIn page, he was a
staffer for the councilman
from 2007 to 2011, then did
stints with the city attor-
ney’s office and the district
attorney’s office.
After working on
Huizar’s reelection cam-
paign, he returned as a
Huizar staffer, becoming di-
rector of external affairs, the
website says.

Times staff writer Emily
Alpert Reyes contributed to
this report.

been confronted with con-
flict-of-interest questions,
Huizar said. “This is an obvi-
ous attempt by Jesse to de-
flect from his unethical be-
havior,” he said.
At City Hall, submitting a
claim is a step that fre-
quently leads to the filing of
a lawsuit.
Leon has been earning
more than $101,000 annually
as a council aide, according
to a spokesman for the city’s
personnel department, and
is still on the payroll, city offi-
cials said.
Leon submitted an appli-
cation to the Department of
Cannabis Regulation to be
vetted as a “social equity”
applicant, a key step in be-
coming eligible to apply for
the latest round of licensing,
according to agency records.
The social equity program
aims to assist marijuana
entrepreneurs from commu-
nities disproportionately af-
fected by the war on drugs.
Leon did not ultimately
file an application to run a
cannabis business, accord-
ing to department records.


The dispute between
Huizar and his aide comes
roughly a year after FBI
agents raided Huizar’s
home and offices.
Investigators issued sub-
poenas to real estate devel-
opers seeking information
on contributions made to
Huizar’s reelection bid, his
officeholder committee, any
legal defense fund, his alma
mater, Bishop Mora Sale-
sian High School, and two
political committees with
ties to the councilman.
Huizar’s name also ap-
peared in a search warrant
filed last year by investiga-
tors seeking possible evi-
dence of bribery, kickbacks,
extortion and money laun-
dering. The warrant named
12 others, including Council-
man Curren Price, Council
President Herb Wesson’s
chief of staff and two Huizar
aides.
Leon is the third Huizar
staffer since last year to
accuse the councilman of en-
gaging in retaliation.
In October 2018, former
Huizar aide Mayra Alvarez
filed a lawsuit alleging she

was punished for voicing
concerns that her boss was
having an affair with an aide

and committing “potential
legal and ethical violations.”
A week later, former

Third aide accuses city councilman of retaliation


[Huizar, from B1]


JOSE HUIZAR calls a retaliation claim by an aide
“absolutely false.” Huizar’s home and officers were
raided last year by the FBI as part of an investigation.

Katie FalkenbergLos Angeles Times

MEXICALI, Mexico —
Plans to open a federal shel-
ter for migrants here have
stalled after neighbors vehe-
mently protested and suc-
cessfully convinced Baja
California’s new governor to
shelve it.
According to human
rights workers on both sides
of the border, the change
calls into question what
Mexico is actually doing to
protect asylum seekers re-
turned to border regions
under a program called the
Migrant Protection Proto-
cols.
Baja California Gov.
Jaime Bonilla said last week
that the federal shelter
might not open at all be-
cause residents are opposed
to it and because “it might
not be needed.”
Human rights advocates
say a lack of public support
and no government over-
sight of private shelters in
Mexicali has caused danger-
ous living conditions for asy-
lum seekers that allows shel-
ters to exploit the vulnerable
people they are meant to
protect.
The majority of residents
in the neighborhood in cen-
tral Mexicali where the fed-
eral shelter was slated to
open said they are ada-
mantly opposed to it. A few
people who work or go to the
gym near the location said
they supported the idea.
Margarita Rubio, 53, has
lived in the Conjunto Ur-
bano Universitario neigh-
borhood in Mexicali for 20
years. Her home on Avenida
Bachilleres is one street
north of the planned shelter

site, which is a shuttered
grocery store.
“We already have enough
problems with the high
crime that is here. We don’t
need other types of prob-
lems that will come with this
magnitude of people,” said
Rubio, adding that though
her specific neighborhood is
quiet and tranquil, the re-
gion, in general, is strug-
gling.
Rubio said she under-
stands most immigrants are
fleeing violence in their
home countries, but added
that Mexico has many mi-
grants who come north to
Baja California for the same
reasons.
“The majority are looking
for better lives. It is under-
standable. In fact, even from
here, from the same country,
Mexico, they also come
here,” she said.
Carlos Alberto Flores, 25,
who goes to the Ultra Fit-
ness Gym on Calle Heroico
Colegio Militar next door to
the proposed shelter site
said he thinks the neighbors
are overreacting.
“I think everyone de-
serves an opportunity, espe-
cially when they arrive in a
new place. The majority
come here to work,” said Flo-
res, who said, unlike many of
his neighbors, he didn’t be-
lieve the migrants would
cause problems.
“If they cause problems,
then they can just take the
individuals who do out of
here,” Flores said.
In October, nearly 200
people protested outside the
now empty building, a for-
mer Soriana grocery store
that is now shuttered.
At the protest, children
and adults waved yellow “No
Albergue” (“No Shelter”)
signs, chanting “No to the
shelter” and “We don’t want
it,” according to neighbors
who attended and posted
videos to Facebook and the
Desert Sun.
The shelter was planned
as a response to shifts in U.S.

immigration policy under
the Trump administration,
specifically for migrants
who have been returned to
Mexicali under the United
States’ “Remain in Mexico”
program, also known as Mi-
grant Protection Protocols,
or MPP.
Under the program, mi-
grants are sent back to Mexi-
co to await the outcomes of
their U.S. asylum cases.
Human rights workers
and attorneys dispute the
U.S. government’s name for
the program because they
say it gives the false impres-
sion that migrants are being
protected in Mexico. In-
stead, some call it the “Mi-
grant Persecution Proto-
cols.”
Margaret Cargioli, a
managing attorney for the
Immigrant Defenders Law
Center, is among those who
believe the government’s
name for the program is mis-
leading.
“Under the Remain in
Mexico program, which is
also referred to as the Mi-
grant Persecution Protocol,
I have met many honest and
genuinely afraid men, wom-
en and children,” Cargioli
said this month at a news
conference about MPP.
“While in Mexico, they’re
living in shelters in deplor-
able conditions. Many don’t
have the right to work. They
have no access to social serv-
ices. Children have prob-
lems to attend school, for ex-
ample,” Cargioli added.
This year, the Trump ad-
ministration began return-
ing asylum seekers to Mexi-
co, rolling out the program
in Tijuana and then expand-
ing it along the southwest-
ern border. The U.S. Depart-
ment of Homeland Security
said the policy change was
aimed at deterring migrants
from seeking U.S. asylum
and weeding out those who
did not have valid asylum
claims. Officials said the
program has been success-
ful.

Monika Langarica, an
immigrant rights staff attor-
ney at the American Civil
Liberties Union of San Diego
and Imperial Counties,
spoke recently about it at a
news conference announc-
ing a lawsuit against the U.S.
government for not allowing
asylum seekers adequate ac-
cess to legal counsel.
“MPP or Remain in Mexi-
co exposes vulnerable mi-
grants to danger and hor-
rible conditions in a country
that is not their own. In
Mexico, many of the fears
that drove people like our
plaintiffs to flee their coun-
tries and their homes with
their children — those
fears, including rape, extor-
tion, kidnapping — come to
life once more,” Langarica
said.
Human Rights First, an
international human rights
organization, has docu-
mented at least 110 publicly
reported cases of rape, kid-
napping, sexual exploita-
tion, assault and other vi-
olent crimes against asylum
seekers returned to Mexico
since MPP began.
While campaigning for
office, Mexican President
Andrés Manuel López
Obrador vowed he would
not do the United States’
“dirty work” by stopping
Central American migrants
intent on crossing Mexico to
reach the U.S. Instead, he
promised to support mi-
grants in Mexico with refuge,
jobs and respect for their hu-
man rights.
The first few months of
his presidency seemed to re-
flect that goal with humani-
tarian visas issued to mi-
grants, a program that con-
nected them with jobs and a
federal shelter for migrants
set up on the eastern out-
skirts of Tijuana, which has
since been closed.
Then, President Trump
threatened in May to impose
punishing and escalating
tariffs on Mexico if the coun-
try did not drastically re-

duce the number of mi-
grants arriving at the U.S.-
Mexico border.
López Obrador appeared
to reverse course.
He deployed military
troops throughout the coun-
try aimed at stopping mi-
grants at Mexico’s southern
border and stopped issuing
visas that allowed migrants
to cross Mexico without fear
of deportation.
Like López Obrador, Bo-
nilla has also promised to
protect migrants.
“I come from a family of
migrants,” the governor said
in his inauguration speech
this month in Tijuana.
He did not respond to fol-
low-up questions about why
the shelter in Mexicali might
not be needed.
Human rights advocates
say there is a need for a
publicly run shelter in Mexi-
cali.
Kennji Kizuka, a senior
policy analyst of refugee pro-
tection for Human Rights
First, said he visited Mexi-
cali several months ago, dur-
ing the summer when many
migrants were suffering in
the sweltering heat of the
Sonoran Desert.
Kizuka said there were
“really awful conditions”
such as migrants who told
them their “kids were faint-
ing from heat and from a
lack of food and water.”
“The U.S. government
has repeatedly represented
that Mexico had agreed to
protect the humanitarian
rights of the people returned
under this program,” but
that has not been the case,
he said, because shelter,
food, education and health-
care have not been provided
in Mexico.
“We know the U.S. pro-
vided some funds to Mexico
to provide shelter, but it’s
questionable how those
funds have been used,”
Kizuka said.

Fry writes for the San Diego
Union-Tribune.

CLEMENTA PEREZholds her youngest, Jaily, 2, at the Hijo Prodigo shelter in Mexicali, Mexico. The facility used to be a movie theater.

Nelvin C. CepedaSan Diego Union-Tribune

Mexicali rejects migrant shelter


As plans stall, activists


question what Mexico


is actually doing to


protect returned


asylum seekers.


By Wendy Fry
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