Taxpayers on Hook for $2.75 Million to Pay Victims of Molesting “Hero”

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Taxpayers in Irwindale, California are on the hook for $2.75 million after a lawsuit brought by a young woman molested by a “hero” was settled last Thursday.

The “hero” himself will, of course, not have to open his wallet. This being among the reasons why these problems wax rather than wane. If “heroes” were held personally (as well as criminally) liable for harm they cause – you know, like the rest of us – they’d probably be less inclined to cause harm.

Ah well.

The “hero” in this instance is Daniel R. Camerano, who was initially charged with six felony counts for his sexual abuse of underage females following allegations he began a relationship with a then-14-year-old girl in May 2009 that lasted until December 2010.

Identified only as Jane Doe, the girl attended the department’s Youth Explorer Program where Camerano was an advisor. The eight year member of the force also admitted to sending sexually suggestive text messages to a 17-year-old female Explorer Program member in November 2012.

After the allegations came to light, Camerano was placed on leave and then resigned before deputies arrested him on June 11, 2014. He was charged with using a minor for sex acts, sending harmful matter, oral copulation of a person under 16, sexual penetration by a foreign object and two counts of contact with a minor for sexual offense.

Unbelievably, Camerano faced a maximum sentence of only five years and four months in prison for the six felony charges. More unbelievable still, he was offered a plea bargain, which he took at the end of 2014.

The deal allowed Camerano to plead no contest to counts of using a minor for sex acts, oral copulation of a person under 16 and contact with a minor for sexual offense. He was sentenced to two years and eight months in state prison. Part of the deal stipulated that he register for life as a sex offender.

Prior to Camerano’s conviction, Jane Doe filed a lawsuit against the city of Irwindale and the police department. A settlement was reached before the trail began in 2015. Is was signed last month and finally finalized on Thursday.

Jane Doe’s attorney, Anthony DeMarco, said that police officials refused to intervene after learning of his client’s sexual abuse, which reportedly took place during “ride-alongs” with Camerano. Following the “hero’s” arrest, the department’s Explorer Program was ended.

“Evidence was uncovered that police department officials were aware of complaints that Camerano was sexually abusing the underage female Explorer, but did not stop his access to and, thus, continued abuse of the girl,” Demarco said.

Investigators have also divulged that other girls have alleged abuse by Camerano, but no criminal cases have been filed in connection with the additional incidents. There is one other civil lawsuit involving a victim of Cameranos that is set to go to trial in early 2018 however.

 

This isn’t the first time police have used a Youth Explorer Program to sexually assault underage victims. Just last week, a Jefferson County, Kentucky grand jury indicted one former and one current Louisville Metro police officer for the sexual assault of minors at that department’s Youth Explorer Program.

A lawsuit brought forth on behalf of multiple alleged victims asserted that officers Brandon Wood and Kenneth Betts sodomized a male teen in homes, vehicles and at other locations between 2011 and 2013. It also claimed that the duo recorded the sexual acts and that their department attempted to cover up the case.

DeMarco said the abuse suffered by Jane Doe at the hands of Camerano will continue to “have effects on almost all aspects of her life going forward.” He maintained that she is a “resilient person” that “will accomplish great things in life.”

“The abuse of my client occurred because of a culture of acceptance of sexual abuse and harassment of girls and women that was allowed to persist in the Irwindale police department,” DeMarco said. “She, like others, was forced to endure sexual abuse and harassment in silence or risk losing her dream of a career in law enforcement.”

3 COMMENTS

  1. I bet the costs to taxpayers are way higher. That’s just the settlement. The legal bills are probably way more then the two point seven five million. The legal costs of the incident my folks and our neighbors were involved in, cost taxpayers more then two million, and that was 1980’s money. Had we gone for damages it would have bankrupted the village (the lawyers basically did on their own). Looking back we should have gone for damages, they don’t learn a d*mn thing.

    But its taxpayers that pay, never the “public” servants that break the law.

  2. The “phero” gets a discount, while the community that employed him gets the bill.

    Similar to going shopping on another person’s dime. You get the “perks/benefits” while some else gets (and pays) the bill.

    • Dear Mith,

      Textbook case of “moral hazard”.

      Moral hazard is a situation in which one party gets involved in a risky event knowing that it is protected against the risk and the other party will incur the cost.

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