'You have to do what the police tell you to do,' the teenager claimed she was told.
Another woman, also working as a drug informant, said Nichols and Valenzuela each forced her to have sex with them twice after threatening her with jail time. Two other women told eerily similar stories.
As of when the alleged assaults occurred, the victims were 19, 24, 25 and 34. Most, but not all, of the alleged incidents occurred while the officers were on duty.
The charges against Nichols and Valenzuela include rape under color of authority and oral copulation by force. Valenzuela also is charged with pointing a gun at one of the women.
They could face life in prison if convicted.
Attorneys representing the officers in civil litigation filed by the women did not return messages seeking comment Wednesday. The officers, who have denied all the claims in court records, were set to be arraigned on Thursday.
Prosecutors are asking that they each be held on bail of more than $3.5million.
Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck said at a news conference on Wednesday that both officers have been suspended without pay since 2013.
Their employment status is pending an administrative hearing that would follow their criminal case, he said.
'These two officers have disgraced themselves, they disgraced this badge, they disgraced their oaths of office,' Beck said. 'It's a violation of public trust.'
He said investigators are actively seeking other potential victims.
Prosecutors said the rapes began in December 2008 after Nichols and Valenzuela became partners in the department's Hollywood Division. They were working as narcotics investigators.
All four women assaulted had been arrested on drug-related charges at various times by the officers, prosecutors said, and court records show at least two had been recruited by the officers to work as drug informants.
Those women have filed civil rights lawsuits against the officers. The Los Angeles City Council settled one case last year after agreeing to pay one woman $575,000, while the other case is still being litigated.
A third lawsuit is expected to be filed.
Beck said the department's internal affairs bureau began investigating the officers after the first woman complained of being raped 2010. In 2014, the department's elite Robbery Homicide Division took over.
Asked why it took so long for the charges to filed against the officers, Beck said the investigation was complicated and involved reluctant witnesses who were difficult to find.
Dennis Chang, an attorney who represents two of the women in the case, said the officers took advantage of the women's positions and threatened them with jail time or outing them as informants.
'These women were drug users, they're primarily arrested and in custody, in an extremely vulnerable state,' Chang said. 'They were afraid.'
The charges come after former Oklahoma City Police Officer Daniel Holtzclaw was sentenced to 263 years in jail for raping women he targeted while on duty.
The 29-year-old cried in court after he was convicted on multiple charges, including first-degree rape, sexual battery, stalking and forcible oral sodomy in December last year.
His trial heard that Holtzclaw deliberately targeted victims who had been in trouble with the law and who were from a poorer, mostly black area of Oklahoma City.
Posted by Kris Akudo at 1:40 PM
News, Events, Entertainment, Lifestyle, Fashion, Beauty, Inspiration and yes... Gossip!
Thursday, February 18, 2016
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Georgia Rapper T-Hood Fatally Shot at Home
Georgia rapper T-Hood, real name Tevin Hood, has died at age 33 after being shot during a dispute at his Snellville residence on Friday. Kno...
-
Swedish rapper Ninos Khouri, popularly known as Gaboro, was tragically killed in a car park shooting on Thursday night, December 19. The 2...
-
Shocking footage has surfaced showing two office workers engaging in an explicit act in clear view of a busy London street. The scene, fil...
-
Photos from one of Sean "Diddy" Combs' extravagant 34th birthday parties, held in 2004, have recently emerged online. The ev...
No comments:
Post a Comment