Hawaii鈥檚 new attorney general, who may only hold on to that post for eight more months, found herself in the hot seat before a panel of state senators Tuesday morning.
The lawmakers questioned Holly Shikada, Gov. David Ige鈥檚 nominee for the state鈥檚 top lawyer, over personnel issues facing the department, including allegations from a top state investigator who said Shikada contributed to a hostile work environment at the office.
Ige appointed Shikada to take over as attorney general in December after Clare Connors left to become Hawaii鈥檚 U.S. attorney.
The Senate Judiciary Committee, which is vetting Shikada鈥檚 nomination, asked the AG鈥檚 office and Daniel Hanagami, the disgruntled state investigator, for documents related to complaints Hanagami made against the department and Connors.
Sen. Karl Rhoads, the committee chairman, said his staff was still trying to obtain those documents Tuesday afternoon. A preliminary vote on Shikada鈥檚 nomination is expected Friday. Rhoads said he is not sure how the committee members might vote, or if the documents could raise new concerns over the nominee.
Hanagami, 71, told lawmakers that he filed a complaint with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission last year, claiming that Connors and other department officials discriminated against him because of his age.
That civil rights investigation is still ongoing. Hanagami also told the senators that he feels as though he works in a hostile environment. He said the AG鈥檚 office asked the state Department of Public Safety to investigate him after he used pepper spray to detain a homeless man who had attacked him.
He feels that those episodes, as well as the department鈥檚 support of a bill that would have created a new fraud unit in the AG鈥檚 office are systematic attempts to strip him of his authority. The AG鈥檚 office has previously said that is not the case.
Shikada said the public safety investigation is ongoing and that she took part in the 鈥渄ecision making process鈥 to refer the case to another department. She said there would be a conflict if an employee in the AG鈥檚 office was asked to investigate Hanagami, who is the head investigator in the office.
Shikada declined to speak further about ongoing investigations during the committee hearing.
Hanagami had filed other complaints internally with the AG鈥檚 office, but Shikada said those complaints did not result in any findings. She said she isn鈥檛 aware of other state investigators filing similar complaints.
鈥淎 hostile work environment is not acceptable,鈥 she said. 鈥淩etaliation is not acceptable, we have done everything that we can to ensure that does not occur.鈥
Rhoads also asked about another issue Hanagami raised: the firing of a deputy attorney general who filed suit against the department last year.
The most recent employment lawsuit involving the AG鈥檚 office was filed by Dawn Shigezawa, the former director of the office鈥檚 Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. She was accused of unethical behavior in a handful of cases by Renee Sonobe-Hong, the administrator of the criminal justice division.
Shigezawa rebutted those allegations in a wrongful termination lawsuit filed in November.
Though Shikada is not named in the lawsuit, the complaint describes a June 2021 meeting between Shigezawa and the 鈥淔irst Deputy Attorney General,鈥 who at the time was Shikada.
During that meeting, the lawsuit says, Shikada gave Shigezawa the option to resign or take a demotion to an entry-level position.
During the hearing Tuesday, Rhoads said nominees answer a Senate questionnaire that asks if anything in their past could bring embarrassment to the governor, the department or the Legislature. Shikada did not believe there is anything in her background that could bring embarrassment to the state, Rhoads said while reading from her written answer.
鈥淵ou didn鈥檛 think being sued by a disgruntled employee would qualify as something that would be a negative or an embarrassment?鈥 Rhoads asked Shikada.
Shikada said she did not think it would be since that lawsuit concerned Shigezawa鈥檚 direct supervisor.
鈥淭here wasn鈥檛 anything I thought would be of embarrassment. There are always personnel issues occurring within our department,鈥 Shikada said. 鈥淪o there are personnel issues we need to deal with.鈥
who spoke at the committee hearing on Tuesday supported Shikada鈥檚 nomination.
Attorney Lyle Hosoda said he and Shikada have been friends since law school. He described her as strong and committed.
鈥淲e鈥檒l only waste our breath talking about how she鈥檒l defend our constitution, defend our rights, and defend our community 鈥 she鈥檒l do all of that for us,鈥 Hosoda said.
On Friday, the Senate Judiciary Committee will decide whether to recommend Shikada鈥檚 nomination to the full Senate. No matter what the committee vote is, Shikada will still face a final vote by the full 25-member Senate.
Sign up for our FREE morning newsletter and face each day more informed.
Support Independent, Unbiased News
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.
About the Author
-
Blaze Lovell is a reporter for Civil Beat. Born and raised on Oahu, Lovell is a graduate of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. You can reach him at blovell@civilbeat.org.