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Spitzer abused authority, made staff cry, DA says (OC Reg)
Former assistant district attorney Todd Spitzer, whose ambitions to become the next district attorney have never been kept quiet, repeatedly abused his authority, campaigned on county time, using county resources and county staff, and created a hostile working environment that left at least one staffer in tears, District Attorney Tony Rackauckas and his senior staff said.
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… What was supposed to be a handful of reporters invited to an intimate sit down with Rackauckas and his senior staff Wednesday blossomed into a crowd of reporters, bloggers and cameramen clamoring to learn why Spitzer was fired from a job that was designed to propel him into being the next district attorney.
In a nearly 2 1/2 hour sit-down, Rackauckas and three of his senior district attorneys detailed the last two years of Spitzer’s career at the District Attorney’s Office, accusing him of abusing his power, disclosing confidential DA investigations for political gain, and bullying staff members because he believed–-and repeatedly told—people he was going to be the next district attorney.
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Spitzer fired back. Calling the District Attorney’s Office desperate and corrupt, Spitzer held his own two-hour press conference at the headquarters of the Orange County Employees Association along with special guest James Ochoa who was released from prison after he was wrongly convicted by the District Attorney’s Office in a carjacking case.
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[Spitzer] claims he was never made aware of complaints from staffers about his work behavior – a claim denied by Rackauckas .
Spitzer was fired Aug. 27 after he made a phone call to Public Administrator/Guardian after being asked by a citizen alleged a domestic abuse victim was being improperly investigated.
The call to the PA/PG’s office was the last straw, Rackauckas said….
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Public Administrator/Public Guardian John S. Williams issued a statement the following day – on a Saturday – which did not name Spitzer but said that an assistant district attorney who had been a former county supervisor and state assemblyman – had tried to obtain information to which he was not entitled.
“He tried to get the information by claiming there was a legitimate law-enforcement purpose, using his current title as prosecutor, stating he was a former assemblyman and a county supervisor, and saying he knew me personally,” Williams said. “This conduct is unacceptable and cannot be tolerated.”
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Since being fired Spitzer, a longtime public servant who has never shied away from media attention, has welcomed reporters questions, even hand-delivering his personnel file to a reporter at the Register to prove it held nothing disciplinary in nature.
The certified copy of the file contained nothing disciplinary in nature. Spitzer was an at-will employee, Rackauckas explained. The purpose was to mentor Spitzer, not to document ways to fire him….
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