WAILUKU, Maui 鈥 Maui County鈥檚 former top prosecutor is suing the county and the mayor for firing him last year after an employee complained he acted violently toward her at work.
Don Guzman, a former County Council member who had been Maui鈥檚 prosecuting attorney since April 2019, was terminated after an investigation found he violated the Violence in the Workplace Action Plan last September. Guzman grabbed a copy of an email from Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Leslee Matthews during a meeting, according to the lawsuit filed last week by Guzman.
Guzman, who acknowledges the behavior in the lawsuit, says he suffers from diabetes that can lead to 鈥渞age鈥 and 鈥渕ood swings.鈥
Guzman now says that complications with his diabetes, medication and the stress of dealing with the pandemic while managing employees led to the incident with Matthews.
According to the lawsuit, the prosecuting attorney was 鈥渟uffering from diabetic neuropathy and other negative impacts from Type II Diabetes, such as diabetic rage, which is a result of fluctuating glucose levels鈥 as well as 鈥渕ore drastic diabetic-related mood swings.鈥
In September, Maui County Mayor Michael Victorino placed Guzman on administrative leave without pay, then terminated him in October. The Maui County Council approved the decision in December, according to the lawsuit.
But Guzman says he had raised the issue of his health with Victorino, and told the mayor he might need reasonable accommodation, the lawsuit says.
For its part, the council took testimony from employees who shared their negative experiences with Guzman.
The Maui County Council voted unanimously to confirm Victorino鈥檚 removal of Guzman as prosecuting attorney. After six years on the council himself, Guzman had run unsuccessfully against Victorino in the 2018 mayoral campaign.
, council member Kelly Takaya King said voting against Guzman was 鈥渙ne of the most gut-wrenching things that we鈥檝e ever had to do.鈥
Having worked on the council with Guzman for years, King considered him a friend but still found it 鈥渟cary and intimidating, and shocking because Don had always been so friendly up til鈥 he 鈥測elled at me the first time,鈥 King wrote in a text to Civil Beat.
Before the committee hearings, King started getting calls from people who had similar experiences with Guzman.
鈥淎nd they were women in tears,鈥 King told Civil Beat this week. 鈥淲omen don鈥檛 make those kinds of accusations for anything but the truth.鈥
Guzman鈥檚 lawyer, Roman Amaguin, said the investigation into the workplace incident was handled in a way that protected Guzman’s privacy but the council hearing on it was flawed.
鈥淵ou could have done it in private,” he said, adding that Guzman should have been allowed to refute the testimony.
鈥淲e had at least nine witnesses from the community that came forward and basically disparaged Don without his having an ability to address what was said at the hearing,鈥 Amaguin said.
Amaguin says that the county council鈥檚 eventual vote to remove Guzman was colored by testimony that was 鈥渦nfounded and unsupported鈥 and denied the former prosecutor 鈥渢he due process protections that were in place for the investigation.鈥
Brian Perry, communications director for Maui County, said he has not yet seen the litigation and couldn鈥檛 comment for this story.
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About the Author
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Jack Truesdale is a freelance writer and Civil Beat contributor on Maui. You can email him at jtruesdale@civilbeat.org.