The investigation, which was released yesterday and conducted by outside lawyers at the Senate's request, found Democratic Senator Tony Mendoza "more likely than not" engaged in behavior such as offering a 19-year-old intern alcohol in a hotel suite at a Democratic Party event, suggesting a young woman in a Senate fellowship take a vacation with him and rent a room in his house, and asked several of the women invasive questions about their dating lives.
The Los Angeles-area senator's colleagues will vote as soon as tomorrow on whether to censure, suspend, expel or reinstate him. Mendoza will be allowed to defend himself on the Senate floor.
Mendoza, who has been out on suspension, called the investigation "unfair and secret."
He warned action against him by his colleagues could set a "dangerous precedent." Several accusations against Mendoza first became public last fall in a report by the Sacramento Bee as the #MeToo movement took hold in California's Capitol. The investigation outlines three other cases that weren't publicly known.
The investigation was conducted over two months, with lawyers interviewing 47 witnesses, including Mendoza, and reviewing available documents.
It found no instances of Mendoza being 'physically aggressive' or 'sexually crude.' But the women "understood that Mendoza was suggesting sexual contact," the report said.
"Although none of the women reported that Mendoza explicitly threatened them or offered career benefits in exchange for sexual favors, the subordinate employees believed that complaining about his conduct could put their careers at risk," said a three-page summary released by the Senate Rules Committee.
De Leon moved out shortly after the allegations became public and has previously said he was unaware Mendoza invited her to the home.
In the Assembly, meanwhile, Democratic Assemblywoman Cristina Garcia said yesterday that allegations of groping and other misconduct against her are a political smear designed to discredit her record.
She alleged a private investigator began interviewing her former staff members and tenants in the properties she owns last fall attempting to find compromising information. She did not specify who is targeting her.
Daniel Fierro, the staff member who accused her of groping, says he has "no idea" about involvement from private investigators. Dan Gilleon, a lawyer representing several former staff members alleging inappropriate office behaviour, said he routinely uses investigators but did not say if he used any to look into Garcia.
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