A former spokeswoman for Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti is demanding the mayor be charged with perjury for denying that he knew of another former aide’s alleged sexual misconduct.
In the letter, Seligman accused Garcetti of committing perjury and conspiring with staff to cover up more than a dozen instances of sexual misconduct by his chief of staff and close advisor, Rick Jacobs.
“Senators should be outraged that someone nominated to represent our country in a key diplomatic post would lie to their faces so brazenly,” Seligman said in a statement. “It’s time for them to take a serious look at the evidence that I and others have presented and live up to the commitment that many of them have made to protect victims of predatory behavior in the workplace.”
Garcetti declined to respond to reporters’ questions about Seligman’s complaint during a press conference on Feb. 7, but the mayor’s office released a statement denying the allegations.
“There is nothing new here—and these false claims about the mayor are just as ridiculous now as they were when they were first made,” the statement read. “The mayor stands by his testimony unequivocally, and more than a dozen witnesses have testified under oath that he was never made aware of any improper behavior.”
According to the letter, the mayor sent an email to staff in 2016 announcing that Jacobs would be placed on a leave of absence to work on political and civic matters, but that he would continue to “be a dear friend, and one of [his] most trusted advisers.”
In 2020, LA Police Department officer Matthew Garza accused Jacobs of sexual harassment and claimed Garcetti witnessed the encounter but ignored it.
During his deposition for the lawsuit in February 2021, Garcetti denied knowledge of the incident and of Garza’s accusation, claiming he was unaware of the allegations until the suit became public in July 2020.
President Joe Biden nominated Garcetti to be the U.S. ambassador to India last July and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee confirmed the nomination after a hearing in December; during the hearing, the mayor again denied his knowledge of Garza’s accusation.
Seligman’s letter includes several other instances which claim the mayor was present for Jacobs’ misconduct.
In 2017, Jacobs, Garcetti, and Garcetti’s then-chief counsel Julie Ciardullo were in an elevator when Jacobs allegedly began blocking Ciardullo into a corner. According to the letter, Jacobs allegedly continued pushing Ciardullo into the corner despite Ciardullo’s pleas for him to stop until the mayor intervened.
“A picture is worth a thousand words,” the complaint said of the photo, though the letter notes that Garcetti denied having seen Jacobs’ pose while the photo was taken.
The complaint was also sent to more than half of the members of the U.S. Senate, as well as the California State Personnel Board, the Los Angeles City Ethics Commission, and the California State Auditor’s Office.
Mayor Garcetti’s office, as well as U.S. Department of Justice, California Attorney General, and LA County District Attorney, did not respond to requests for comment by press deadline.
A spokesperson for the city of Los Angeles was not immediately available for comment.