Compton: White deputy sues for racial discrimination

From wire service reports
Posted: 03/23/2010 07:31:25 AM PDT

A white sheriff's deputy suing the county for racial discrimination testified today that he could not count on any of his Latino colleagues from the Compton station to come to his aid in the field, while at the station he was generally ostracized and considered a snitch.

"I felt like I could clear a room when I walked in," Deputy Richard Wade told a Los Angeles Superior Court jury. "People didn't want anything to do with me because they thought I was a rat."

Richard Wade and his twin Ryan Wade, both 33, sued the county in July 2008, alleging harassment, retaliation, discrimination and a failure of the Sheriff's Department to correct the problem.

The two say their mistreatment was partly due to being white. The brothers also say the harassers resented their close association with two non- Latino lieutenants, Seiko Tokuda, who is Japanese, and Ernie Booker, who is black and has since retired.

The two also say they were disliked because their father, retired South Gate police Sgt. Richard Wade Sr., complained about mistreatment of all minorities at the Compton station and testified on behalf of those suing SGPD for discrimination. When the news reached the Compton station, it led to the Wades being labeled snitches, according to the lawsuit.

The brothers maintain the harassment ranged from threatening remarks to putting cheese on Ryan Wade's private car, suggesting he was a "rat" or a snitch.

Ryan Wade maintains that Deputy Edward Clark, who is half Latino and half white, told him: "I hope you don't have to catch a bullet before you get the message. Compton is a dangerous place. You never know where it will come from."

Richard Wade testified he expected Clark to come to his aid while answering a 911 call, which the witness said are "inherently dangerous."

The deputy said Clark never showed up, so he confronted him about it.

"He told me he didn't know there was a call," Richard Wade said.

The deputy said he had to fight to get extensive time off to be with his daughter after she was born with hip dysplasia.

According to the suit, Deputy Sam Orozco, a Latino who had been an Explorer with South Gate police as a teenager, hated the Wades' father. Once while in the field with Richard Wade, he grabbed the latter's shooting hand after he had drawn his gun and told him he should point it at the deputy in front of him, exposing the other deputy to possible injury or death from an accidental discharge, according to the suit.

The Wades' attorneys maintain that despite good performance ratings, they were transferred from the Compton station to the Community College Bureau, a less prestigious posting where promotions are more difficult to obtain.

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