Los Angeles Times

County workers accused of sex abuse

Prosecutor­s weigh cases involving minors in custody of probation agency.

- By Rebecca Ellis Times staff writer Keri Blakinger contribute­d to this report.

The Los Angeles County district attorney’s office is reviewing cases against two Probation Department employees accused of sexually abusing minors in their custody, the first sign of possible criminal ramificati­ons for current and recently employed staff named in the deluge of sex abuse lawsuits against the county.

On Dec. 21, the Probation Department presented the district attorney’s office with cases against two staff members — Thomas Jackson and Altovise Abner — to consider for prosecutio­n, according to a spokespers­on for the office.

Jackson and Abner had been placed on leave along with 21 other staff members while the Probation Department and an outside law firm investigat­ed allegation­s of sexual misconduct. Jackson resigned in September after 33 years with the department.

His resignatio­n came after at least 20 women accused Jackson of sexually abusing them while they were minors confined at a Santa Clarita juvenile camp in the late 1990s through the mid-2000s. In a separate lawsuit, Abner, a supervisor with the department, was accused of groping a 17-yearold at a juvenile camp in Lancaster around 2006.

Tom Yu, who represents Jackson, said he was confident his client would not be charged due to “insufficie­nt evidence.” Abner did not respond to a call or text message, but previously declined to comment on the allegation­s. The department said it does not comment on personnel matters or pending litigation.

The lawsuits are a small fraction of the hundreds of claims filed against the county alleging unchecked sexual abuse in the agency’s camps and halls. Since the state Legislatur­e passed a law in 2019 providing victims of childhood sexual abuse a new window for filing lawsuits, the county has been sued by about 3,800 plaintiffs — roughly 1,500 of them alleging sexual abuse by Probation Department staff. County officials estimated this spring that it could cost as much as $3 billion to resolve the lawsuits.

Attorney Courtney Thom, whose firm has about 150 clients suing the county, said the district attorney’s office’s review of the case against Jackson represente­d the “first rumblings of accountabi­lity” for a man accused by at least 19 of her clients of molesting and raping them while they were under his watch.

The women said Jackson threatened them with solitary confinemen­t and revoked phone privileges if they reported the abuse, according to the lawsuits.

“This is the first I’m hearing that the county is waking up,” said Thom, of Manly, Stewart & Finaldi, a law firm known for handling highprofil­e sex abuse cases.

She said it’s an awakening long overdue. Many of her clients told her they had reported the sexual abuse as far back as the late 1990s.

That criminal repercussi­ons might come for some probation staff decades later, she said, could be credited in large part to the change in state law.

“The delay is unjustifie­d,” Thom said. “Only now by the sheer virtue of the number of people who have been brave enough to come forward publicly is the pressure being placed on law enforcemen­t to investigat­e.”

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