City hires attorneys to represent subpoenaed workers
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Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The city has appointed attorneys to represent two
employees and a former city official involved in the Orange County Grand
Jury’s investigation of allegations surrounding sewer leaks running under
Downtown during the 1990s.
Legal counsel has been hired for Public Works Director Robert
Beardsley; the city’s maintenance supervisor, Don Noble; and Les Jones, a
former director of public works who now works for the city of Garden
Grove.
In a report released last week, City Atty. Gail Hutton stated that the
City Council unanimously approved hiring Orange-based attorney Julian
Bailey to represent Beardsley, Costa Mesa attorney Paul Meyer for Noble
and Barry Groveman, based in Los Angeles, to advise and represent Jones.
The three men comprise half of a group subpoenaed by the grand jury
last month as it investigates whether the city failed to properly report
massive sewer leaks running beneath the Downtown and Old Town sections in
1996. City officials said City Administrator Ray Silver and Public Works
Department crew leader Jerry Dilks were two of the the other three
subpoenaed. The identity of the sixth person and whether legal counsel
has also been arranged for Silver and Dilks, was not confirmed Tuesday.
Hutton and attorneys for Beardsley, Noble and Jones did not return
repeated phone calls.
The attorney appointments come as the grand jury is looking into
claims that the city failed to properly report the 1996 sewage leaks,
which have since been sealed through repair projects. The leaks,
speculated by some to have allowed more than 70,000 gallons of sewage to
seep from leaky pipes, were found using video cameras to survey Downtown
and Old Town sewer lines. Officials with the local branch of the
California Regional Water Quality Control Board have said they weren’t
aware of the problem at the time.
Repair projects began in Old Town in October 1998, with similar ones
completed recently in Downtown. City officials have developed new
protocols to report sewage leaks and spills in the future.
Councilwoman Debbie Cook said hiring outside counsel to represent city
officials is a standard operating procedure in handling an investigation
such as the one facing Huntington Beach.
The attorneys “may or may not be needed, depending on whether the
[Orange County] district attorney’s office offers a settlement,” she
added.
Officials with the district attorney’s office did not comment on the
case or whether a settlement proposal was in the works Tuesday.
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