























Mayor Karen Bass allegedly went scorched earth on the LAFD Union President — launching a smear campaign after he publicly blasted the city’s lack of resources during the devastating Los Angeles wildfires, according to a new lawsuit.
Freddy Escobar, a 36-year veteran of the LAFD and the elected president of United Firefighters of Los Angeles Local 112 (UFLAC), filed the federal lawsuit against Bass and the City of Los Angeles Tuesday.
Escobar claims the mayor and her senior staff directed fire department officials to issue misleading statements to the media suggesting he was under scrutiny for overtime abuses — part of what the complaint describes as a coordinated effort to silence his criticism of Bass and the fire budget.
A heated clash between Escobar and Bass went down in her office in the days after the devastating January 2025 Palisades Fire, when questions swirled over whether the city’s fire department was adequately prepared, according to the documents.
Escobar, on numerous occasions had backed then-Fire Chief Kristin Crowley, and repeatedly warned that years of budget cuts had left the department stretched thin. After she was fired, Escobar continued to publicly support Crowley, saying she was telling the truth when it came to reduced resources.
Crowley also sued Bass in February, The Post reported, alleging that the mayor “sought to avoid accountability by shifting blame and lying.”
Tensions boiled over during a closed-door meeting at City Hall, where Bass confronted the union boss over his public criticism and demanded to know: “When are you going to stop?,” according to the complaint.
Escobar claims he refused to back down, telling the mayor directly that Crowley had “told the truth” about the department’s lack of resources — a stance that, the lawsuit claims, triggered a campaign of retaliation from the highest levels of City Hall.
After Crowley was fired weeks later, Escobar and his union publicly blasted the decision, declaring: “Chief Crowley is being fired for telling the truth… we are understaffed and under-budgeted and we cannot do more with less.”
From there, Escobar claims city officials went to work “fabricating a sham ‘comprehensive review’” into his overtime and “leaking distorted information to the press” to suggest wrongdoing where none existed, according to the lawsuit.
“The Mayor’s actions (directing the LAFD to issue such a statement regarding Escobar’s overtime) constituted municipal policy because they were the result of a decision made by an official with final policymaking authority – the Mayor of the City herself. It was not rogue misconduct. It was official municipal action. The retaliation was the policy, in this case,” the lawsuit said.
After a review, Escobar’s overtime was found to be “ordinary and fully consistent with department policy in a chronically understaffed agency. The directive from the Mayor’s Office was carefully crafted and designed to portray Escobar’s overtime earnings as potentially corrupt and undermine his credibility as a union leader,” according to the documents.
Separately, Escobar was suspended from the union in May 2025 over allegations of financial malpractice with union money. The International Association of Fire Fighters claimed Escobar spent more than $265,000 without proper receipts. The suspension was not mentioned in the lawsuit.
Escobar is seeking damages and a jury trial, accusing the city and its top officials of violating his constitutional rights and waging a campaign to silence dissent at a time when public safety was on the line.
The alleged campaign caused “significant reputational damage, emotional distress, and professional harm,” and was intended not only to target Escobar but to deter other firefighters from speaking out, the lawsuit claims.
Mayor Bass did not respond to a request for comment.
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。