Officer, jailers cleared of using force
Greg Risling
Two jailers and a Newport Beach police officer were cleared of wrongdoing
late Thursday when a civil jury decided they did not break the arm of a
53-year-old woman.
It took less than six hours for the 12-member panel to vindicate the
three Newport Beach employees. The jury voted 9-3 in favor of the
officers, who were being sued by Laura Rooney, daughter-in-law of actor
Mickey Rooney.
Rooney claimed police pushed her against a wall and broke her arm during
a Sept. 2, 1997, narcotics-related arrest.
Called to testify in the trial, Rooney sobbed when she watched a
videotape of the confrontation where it appears she resisted the
officers’ attempts to handcuff her. The three men, Officer Spencer Arnold
and jailers Troy Long and Tim Stewart, refuted her claims that they used
excessive force while attempting to take her to Orange County Jail.
“The jury found she had zero credibility,” said defense attorney Bruce
Praet. “There is no question there was a serious broken bone. But the
question is, how it was broken?”
Rooney contended that she didn’t go quietly because her wrists were
swollen from previously being placed in handcuffs. Her attorney, Garo
Mardirossian, said his client was cornered in a waiting room by the
officers, who pinned her arm behind her back and lifted it upward.
The officers maintain they followed standard procedures and that Rooney
broke her arm while she was resisting arrest.
Perhaps the most damaging evidence against Rooney was herself. In a sworn
deposition, Rooney told attorneys she had trouble moving her arm and had
permanent nerve damage from the injury. Although graphic photos showing
her badly bruised arm were displayed in court, Rooney was not aware that
she was under surveillance after the incident.
A handful of videotapes show Rooney brushing her hair, stuffing envelopes
and opening a mailbox with her left arm. When confronted in court, she
said her arm was better when she received her medication.
“She thought she could scam some money out of the city of Newport Beach,”
Praet said. “But the jury wasn’t going to let that happen.”
Mardirossian couldn’t be reached for comment late Thursday. He said
previously that Rooney could seek up to six figures in compensation for
loss of employment, medical bills and emotional distress.
Rooney was arrested by Newport Beach police when they found one gram of
crack cocaine in the trailer home where she lived. She pleaded guilty and
was sentenced to 90 days in jail and three years’ probation, although she
maintains the drugs weren’t hers.
Thursday’s decision was the second time in recent weeks in which the
police department has claimed victory in abuse cases. The city agreed to
pay $10,000 earlier this month to an Orange County prosecutor who claimed
he was assaulted by police officers after leaving a Newport Boulevard
bar. The plaintiff originally sought $600,000, but settled for the lesser
amount.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.