Former Honolulu police officer Nelson Tamayori says he is looking for a fair shake, and this week he sued the city he once worked for in an attempt to get it.

Tamayori worked for a Honolulu Police Department crime reduction unit as a plainclothes officer, conducting in-depth investigations and surveillance.

On Sept. 5, 2014, Tamayori was searching for a fugitive with his partner, Vincent Morre, and reserve officer Joseph Becera inside a game room on Hopaka Street near Ala Moana.

Former HPD officer Vincent Morre, in the white shirt, was caught on surveillance video attacking two men while searching for a fugitive. Screen shot from KITV

Morre lost his temper and roughed up two men inside the game room as Tamayori and Becera stood by and watched. The entire incident was .

The three officers eventually pleaded guilty to federal crimes. Morre admitted to civil rights violations while Tamayori and Becera pleaded to felony charges for not immediately reporting the crime to the proper authorities.

Becera had also been charged with making a false statement after he told FBI investigators that he didn鈥檛 actually witness the attack at the game room.

In 2016, the two men Morre attacked, Francisco Franson and Jordan Topinio, filed a lawsuit in federal court against the three officers and the city.

Tamayori and Becera asked the Honolulu Police Commission to pick up their legal tabs, which is a benefit allowed to police officers under Hawaii state law.

But while the commission approved footing Becera鈥檚 legal bills, the agency denied Tamayori鈥檚 request despite the fact the two former officers were in the same place at the same time.

Tamayori鈥檚 lawsuit, filed in Hawaii Circuit Court, is now challenging that decision, arguing that he is just as entitled to taxpayer-funded legal counsel as Becera.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a big deal,鈥 said Roy Epstein, the attorney who filed the lawsuit on Tamayori鈥檚 behalf. 鈥淎ny lawsuit is a big deal, but here there鈥檚 no coverage.鈥

Epstein said that the commission鈥檚 decision to deny his client legal representation has already cost the former officer and his family thousands of dollars in legal expenses.

The costs will increase as the case approaches trial and more motions are filed, Epstein said.

The city has approved spending on Becera鈥檚 defense in the lawsuit.

Epstein said he鈥檚 interested to see how the city defends the commission鈥檚 decision to deny Tamayori鈥檚 request for legal counsel, since the two officers are alleged in the lawsuit to have committed identical offenses.

鈥淚鈥檓 curious to see what their response is going to be,鈥 Epstein said. 鈥淚f you look at the complaint, both of their names (Tamayori and Becera) are in the exact same place.鈥

According to Franson and Topinio鈥檚 lawsuit, Tamayori and Becera were accomplices in the assault because they were 鈥済uarding the door, preventing other patrons from leaving, and further intimidating the Plaintiffs.鈥

 

HPD Commissioner Loretta Sheehan Judge Steven Levinson outside Federal Court. 16 dec 2016
Police commissioners Steven Levinson and Loretta Sheehan said the commission has not been following the law when it comes to approving or denying legal counsel for police officers who are accused of crimes or sued. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

The lawsuit also stated that Tamayori and Becera were negligent because they had a duty as police officers to intervene when the attack occurred.

After Tamayori and Becera both asked the Honolulu Police Commission to approve having taxpayers foot their legal bills in the lawsuit, city attorneys recommended that the commission deny both requests. But the commission split its decisions, voting 聽4-3 to deny Tamayori鈥檚 request and 7-0 in favor of Becera.

Why was there disparate treatment?

That鈥檚 a question that鈥檚 been asked by at least two police commissioners, Loretta Sheehan and Steven Levinson, both of whom have law degrees and significant experience in the legal field.

Sheehan, a former assistant U.S. attorney, and Levinson, a retired Hawaii Supreme Court associate justice, both think the commission has been applying the wrong legal standard when reviewing officers鈥 requests to have their attorneys fees paid for by taxpayers.

Even more concerning to them has been the fact that city attorneys have been supporting that misinterpretation and misapplication of the law for years, possibly resulting in several officers getting short-changed.

Sheehan and Levinson weren鈥檛 on the commission when it denied legal counsel to Tamayori. But they did vote for Becera to have his legal fees covered.

They both use the same word when describing Tamayori鈥檚 case: “unfortunate.”

While they both believe he has a strong argument to have his legal fees paid for, they note that he missed a key deadline to appeal the police commission鈥檚 ruling to the state court.

鈥淚t makes sense that he would file a lawsuit that would seek to have the city and county pay for his lawyer given that the Police Commission voted to provide a lawyer to a co-defendant, Mr. Joseph Becera, under identical circumstances,鈥 Sheehan said.

鈥淭he question is did Mr. Tamayori, unfortunately, waive his rights by failing to appeal the police commission鈥檚 decision in a timely manner.鈥

Levinson takes a similar view on the matter. He said Tamayori might have a difficult time convincing a judge that he still has standing because of the missed deadline.

But, Levinson added, 鈥淗e鈥檚 got nothing to lose.鈥

You can read Tamayori鈥檚 lawsuit here:

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