Calif. board to vote on suspended sheriff’s fate
Topics: From the Wires, News
Suspended San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi arrives at a Board of Supervisors meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2012, in San Francisco. The supervisors planned to vote on removing Mirkarimi from office following a domestic violence incident between Mirkarimi and his wife Eliana Lopez. (AP Photo/Noah Berger)(Credit: AP)SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — After nine months of headlines and bitter legal squabbling over the fate of Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors heard from scores of residents Tuesday before it decides whether to remove him from office over a domestic violence case involving his actress wife.
It would take at least nine votes from the 11-member board to oust Mirkarimi, who was elected last fall and mired in controversy before his swearing-in ceremony. Five board members currently are campaigning to keep their jobs.
Inside an intense overflow board chambers filled with mostly Mirkarimi supporters, lawyers for both the mayor’s office and the sheriff stated their respective cases before board members during an hours-long hearing late Tuesday.
Deputy City Attorney Sherri Kaiser said that Mirkarimi simply committed an act of domestic violence and that should not be ignored.
“It wasn’t a mistake on December 31. It was a crime, a very serious crime,” said Kaiser as a chorus of boos erupted from the crowd.
Mirkarimi’s attorneys, David Waggoner and Shepard Kopp said that city continues to give ambiguous interpretations of what is “official misconduct.”
“The punishment doesn’t fit the crime,” Waggoner said.
The dramatic case has played out all year long.
In March, Mayor Ed Lee suspended Mirkarimi without pay after the sheriff pleaded guilty to misdemeanor false imprisonment related to a New Year’s Eve dispute with his wife, Venezuela soap opera star Eliana Lopez, who suffered a bruised bicep. Mirkarimi was sentenced to three years of probation, fined $590 and ordered to undergo one year of counseling and parenting classes.
The mayor then took the unprecedented step of trying to permanently remove Mirkarimi from office. Lee testified before the city’s Ethics Commission in June that he would find it “extremely difficult” to work with Mirkarimi again, and said he thought Mirkarimi committed domestic violence.
In August, the commission decided 4-1 that Mirkarimi committed official misconduct, setting the stage for the supervisors’ vote on whether to oust him.
Mirkarimi was elected sheriff in November after serving seven years as one of the city’s more liberal supervisors.
Lopez, who starred in numerous TV shows and films in Latin America, seemingly put her budding career on hold to become a mother and the wife of a rising political figure in San Francisco.




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