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A former California police sergeant has been charged with more than a dozen counts of sexual assault and other crimes after misconduct allegations by multiple people spurred an internal affairs investigation at the Stockton Police Department.

Former Stockton Police Sgt. Nicholas Bloed was arrested Wednesday morning and charged with 15 counts, including assault while serving as an officer, forcible oral copulation, the pursuit of bribes and prostitution. The San Joaquin County District Attorney’s Office filed the charges with the Superior Court of the State of California.

“Officers have the ability to take your liberty, and when they threaten to use that power to force vulnerable victims to cooperate for their own devious purposes, it castes a long shadow over the entire profession,” said Tori Verber Salazar, the county’s district attorney, in a statement Thursday.

Bloed was at the San Joaquin County Jail as of Thursday. His next scheduled court date is Monday. His bail was set at $4 million, reports CBS Sacramento’s Steve Large.

The 14-year veteran of the Stockton Police Department had just been promoted to sergeant in February, Large says, adding that Bloed was named employee of the month in 2014, with the police department boasting that he’d helped train 145 new officers.

Bloed, who graduated from the Ray Simon Police Academy in 2002, was hired by the Stockton Police Department in 2008 after serving as an officer in Modesto, California. He’s worked as a patrol officer, motor officer and field training officer.  

Bloed was placed on administrative leave in May and hasn’t been working for the police department since last month, said department spokesman Joe Silva. The department wouldn’t disclose results of its investigation or whether he was fired. Silva declined to comment on Bloed’s arrest since he’s no longer with the department.

According to CBS Sacramento’s Large, the criminal complaint came after three women filed a lawsuit asserting that Bloed forced them into various sex acts while on duty.

In one incident, he allegedly forced himself on a woman in a room at a Stockton Motel 6.

A court document read, in part: “Sergeant Bloed stripped down to his socks and a blue Stockton Police Department undershirt. The undershirt had a collar on it with ‘SPD’ printed in white letters. He put his gun belt and radio on the desk, but did not turn the radio off.”

Allen Sawyer, a lawyer representing Bloed, told The Associated Press his client resigned from the police department after making a “lapse in judgement” by engaging in what Bloed contends was consensual sexual activity with people he met through his role as an officer.

“It may have been a horrible lapse of judgment. But it was not the criminal act that you see now,” Sawyer said of the charges.  

He said Bloed resigned from the department after going through an internal investigation.

“We’re very disappointed with the way this case has been brought forward,” Large quotes Sawyer as saying. “Whether or not what acts occurred while he was on duty is yet to be determined. We will be exploring that.”

The AP says at least three women made sexual misconduct claims against Bloed this spring alleging he abused his power as an officer to take advantage of them. In one case, a woman is alleging Bloed pulled her vehicle over, later made her pose for photographs and eventually had unprotected sexual intercourse with her. The other two women also allege he raped them while he was still with the police department, said Dan Gilleon, a lawyer representing the three women.

The AP generally doesn’t name people who say they’ve been sexually assaulted unless they come forward publicly.

Gilleon said he hadn’t seen the charging document as of Thursday morning and therefore couldn’t confirm whether any of the confidential victims mentioned refer to his clients. The document mentions eight victims of the various crimes Bloed is being charged with.

It wasn’t clear  whether the three women Large gave details on are the same three the AP refers to.

Gilleon described the case as a “system-wide failure” by the police department. He said if any officials within the police department are found to have ignored knowledge of accusations against Bloed, they should be fired.

Sexual misconduct is one of the most prevalent complaints against law enforcement officials. In a 2015 investigation, the Associated Press discovered that about 1,000 officers lost their licenses in a six-year period for various sex crimes or sexual misconduct, including rape, possession of child pornography and having on-duty intercourse.

In a statement Wednesday, the Stockton Police Officers Association said the group was “extremely disappointed” to hear about Bloed’s arrest.

“The charges and allegations against him, if proven true, are abhorrent and reprehensible,” the group said. “These accusations in no way reflect the high standards and values of this association and the profession of law enforcement.” 

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A former gynecologist at the University of California, Los Angeles, was found guilty on five counts in a sexual abuse case Thursday in a Los Angeles court. The jury found Dr. James Heaps not guilty on seven of the 21 counts, and were deadlocked on the remaining charges.

Heaps, a longtime campus gynecologist at UCLA, had pleaded not guilty to 21 felony counts in the sexual assaults of seven women between 2009 and 2018. He has denied wrongdoing.

Heaps was indicted last year on multiple counts each of sexual battery by fraud, sexual exploitation of a patient and sexual penetration of an unconscious person by fraudulent representation.

UCLA has agreed to pay nearly $700 million in lawsuit settlements to hundreds of Heaps’ patients, who said he groped them, made suggestive comments or conducted unnecessarily invasive exams during his 35-year career.

Women who brought the lawsuits said the university ignored their complaints and deliberately concealed abuse that happened for decades during examinations at the UCLA student health center, the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center or in Heaps’ campus office.

UCLA acknowledged it received a sex abuse complaint against Heaps from a patient in December 2017 and it launched an investigation the following month that concluded she was sexually assaulted and harassed, attorneys said.

Heaps, however, continued to practice until his retirement in June 2018 amid the scandal. The university did not release its findings in the investigation until November 2019 — months after Heaps was arrested.

Heaps’ attorney and UCLA did not immediately return requests for comment Thursday.

The verdict comes as the former campus gynecologist for the University of Southern California awaits trial on charges of sexual misconduct. USC last year agreed to pay more than $1 billion to settle lawsuits from hundreds of former patients of ex-campus gynecologist George Tyndall, the largest sex abuse payout in higher education history. Tyndall served as the only full-time gynecologist at USC’s student health clinic for three decades until his departure in 2016. He has pleaded not guilty to dozens of sexual assault charges.

That scandal prompted then-USC president Max Nikias to resign in May of 2018. 

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