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Tag: Michael Moore

  • Former LAPD Captain Cory Palka Will Not Face Prosecution

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    A veteran Los Angeles Police Captain who was accused of leaking information about women who filed sexual abuse allegations against ex-CBS President Les Moonves – will not be prosecuted because the statute of limitations had run out connected to his alleged crimes, according to court records released by Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman’s office Friday.

    Retired LAPD Captain Cory Palka was accused by New York Attorney General Leticia James of tipping off executives at CBS about a confidential sexual assault complaint against Moonves that was filed on Nov. 10, 2017. The alleged victim told a female LAPD officer “she had been sexually assaulted by Moonves” and pleaded with the investigators to keep the report confidential, Leticia said in a 2023 complaint.

    But on that same day, James alleged, Palka called CBS’s Senior Vice President of Talent Relations and Special Events Ian Metrose and left a voicemail regarding the confidential complaint. 

    “Somebody walked in the station about a couple hours ago and made allegations against your boss regarding a sexual assault. It’s confidential, as you know, but call me, and I can give you some of the details and let you know what the allegation is before it goes to the media or gets out,” Palka said on the call, according to the AG’s office. According to James, Palka then shared the report, which had been marked confidential three times.

    Metrose had worked with the Hollywood Division’s top officer after Palka had been hired for outside employment to work for CBS at the Grammy Awards ceremony from 2004 to 2008.

    Text messages that were recovered by investigators between the LAPD captain, a CBS executive, and Moonves reveal that the captain had not only shared confidential information; he also “worked with CBS executives for months to prevent the complaint from becoming public,” James said.

    Several CBS executives then began circulating the report, which contained the accuser’s name, and started to investigate the “victim’s personal circumstances and that of her family, including her children, her brother, and her former spouse,” James said. They went as far as to see if the neighborhood in which she resides would indicate a need for money, according to the report.

    Former LAPD Chief Michael Moore called Palka’s alleged behavior a breach of trust and vowed to launch an investigation into whether any other active or former officers may have been involved in the cover-up. When the accusations against the LAPD captain were made public in 2023, Palka had been retired for two years. Still, his case was referred by the LAPD’s Internal Affairs unit to the Justice System Integrity Division within the L.A. District Attorney’s office in 2023, recommending charges for Penal Code charges of soliciting a bribe, disclosure of confidential information for a financial gain, and obstructing a police investigation.

    “What is most appalling is the alleged breach of trust of a victim of sexual assault, who is among the most vulnerable, by a member of the LAPD,” Moore said at the time. “This erodes the public trust and is not reflective of our values as an organization.”

    But, according to court records, the alleged breach cannot be prosecuted because of “insufficient evidence,” and the filing of the complaint to the Los Angeles District Attorney in 2023, when the crime occurred in 2017.

    The court records pertaining to Palka’s case were first reported by the Los Angeles Times.

    Palka has steadfastly denied any wrongdoing and was well known in the entertainment industry. He was nicknamed Captain Hollywood, and he fit the image. Tall and swarthy with wavy dark hair and a toothy white smile, he got small roles in TV series like Bosch, playing a police commander, and moved about his celebrity-choked division like a diplomat. He was behind the velvet rope at Hollywood star unveilings, an LAPD commander who could speed-dial celebrities and corporate titans alike.

    The allegations against him arose during James’s investigation into insider trading at CBS under Moonves’s tenure. The New York case was sparked when the late Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Communication Officer Gil Schwartz, who knew about the allegations against Moonves, dumped 160,700 shares of CBS stock six weeks before the allegations swirling around Moonves became public. In making that move, which netted Schwartz close to $9 million, the executive “intentionally concealed those allegations from regulators, shareholders, and the public for months.” Schwartz died in 2020 of natural causes. That investigation uncovered Palka’s troubling behavior.

    “CBS and Leslie Moonves’s attempts to silence victims, lie to the public, and mislead investors can only be described as reprehensible,” James said of the interactions between Palka and CBS.

    As the #MeToo movement grew over the next few months, Palka actively worked with CBS to contain the woman’s allegation from both the media and fellow LAPD investigators, James said. Palka went as far as to provide “status updates” on the woman’s accusation, she added.

    “He assured CBS executives that he had spoken to his contacts within the LAPD and implemented controls to prevent news of the police report from leaking to the press from the LAPD,” James said.

    As the #MeToo movement spread, Palka reassured his contacts, writing: “I think at this point CBS should feel better than they did last week. The key is that NO other accusers come forward.” James added that Palka told the detective assigned to the woman’s complaint to admonish her against talking to the press, according to the report; the woman complied with this advice from authorities.

    Moonves stepped down from the helm of CBS on Sept. 9, 2018. 

    Palka sent a text message to Metrose that same day, writing: “I’m so sorry to hear this news Ian. Sickens me. We worked so hard to try to avoid this day. I am so completely sad.” He also reached out to Moonves that week, writing: “Les–I’m deeply sorry that this has happened. I will always stand with, by and [sic] pledge my allegiance to you. You have embodied leadership, class and the highest of character through all of this. With utmost respect…”

    But Moonves was not the only man in Hollywood Palka was accused of working to protect, and CBS was not the only entity he enjoyed questionable relationships with, a Los Angeles investigation uncovered. The Hollywood Division also covers the Church of Scientology’s Celebrity Center, and they donated extensively to various activities run by the LAPD’s Hollywood Division. When accusers went to the LAPD with allegations against Scientologist Danny Masterson, one woman testified, those accusations were immediately relayed to church officials.

    Danny Masterson mugshot released on Dec. 27
    Danny Masterson wants out of prison and has filed a habeas corpus
    Credit: Courtesy California Dept. of Corrections and Rehabilitation

    One accuser, Jenn B., testified that she walked into the Hollywood Division on June 6, 2004, to report that Hollywood star Danny Masterson had drugged and raped her. And within minutes, the Church had been notified by someone in the LAPD, and many, including former Scientologist Leah Remini, pointed to Palka. He denied interfering in the case.

    But the accuser testified, she had barely made it out of the building when her phone rang. It was a church ethics officer telling her that “police officers from the Hollywood Division had just called.” Not only had she gone outside the church to make an accusation against a prominent Scientologist, but she had also given up the names of the high-ranking Church leaders whom she went to for help. And someone at the Hollywood Division dropped a dime to the very people she says were protecting Masterson.

    Masterson wouldn’t be arrested until June 2020 – sixteen years later. It remains unclear who in the LAPD called the Church. A Scientology spokesperson declined to answer questions about the Church’s long relationship with the LAPD’s Palka. He was found guilty on rape charges in 2023 and is serving a 30-year sentence.

    He continues to insist on his innocence on the decades-old rape claims, and last month, he filed a writ of habeas corpus saying his attorneys provided ineffectual counsel.

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    Michele McPhee

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  • Connected States: How the Hell Did I End Up in Michigan?

    Connected States: How the Hell Did I End Up in Michigan?

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    Welcome back to the Connected States, the project that involves me living in a van for a year, driving around and telling stories. After going live last week I was absolutely overwhelmed by the positive response. I received so many tips, well-wishes, and offers of help that I haven’t been able to respond to them all yet. It was truly moving,

    When we last left off I was in Iowa City, Iowa, which is not a very creative name for a city, so I moved on. By that point, though I’d left myself very little time. I needed to be in Detroit by 9:30am the next day so I could finally do my TSA Pre-check interview, and Detroit was 490 miles away. I drove until I got very tired, whereupon I pulled into yet another Walmart parking lot and slept for 2.5 hours, and then kept going. My dad had recommended The Burning Room, a book by Michael Connelly, so I downloaded it on Audible and that did a good job of keeping me alert.

    Photo: Brent Rose

    The real reason I was heading to Michigan was to see one of my oldest and best friends get married. David and I go back to 7th grade, but many of the guests would be people we had gone to high school with. It’s still a pretty tight-knit crew, as, for various reasons, many of us had left our small California town for Brooklyn during the last decade, and so we’d formed a sort of “I miss real burritos” support group. Anyway, the wedding would be a couple hours north but first we decided to explore Detroit proper a little. We met up with David’s old roommate Blair who grew up in the area and had since returned, prodigal son style.

    If I had to pick one word to describe Detroit it would be “powder keg,” which is two words, so I would have lost that game. But that’s what it is. There is so much potential energy in that city, and it’s just waiting for something to set it off. It’s also volatile as hell. I’ve never seen a place that had been so obviously fucked by a single industry. Big auto burned these people, and these people are pissed.

    Image for article titled Connected States: How the Hell Did I End Up in Michigan?

    Photo: Brent Rose

    Much of what you see on the news is true. There are rows upon rows of abandoned houses. Some houses—and not just a couple—have been burned to the ground. Everywhere you go you see desperate people. But Detroit is on the cusp of major changes. Real estate is so cheap that a lot of rich, white tech-industry type folks are buying up massive amounts of property, just because it’s cheap and they can. The artists have already moved in, and just like in any other city, once the artists move in they yuppies aren’t far behind.

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    Photo: Brent Rose

    And so you see the original Detroiters in a hard spot. They want Detroit to keep its identity and so change is fearsome, but they also realize that what the city needs more than anything is jobs. And so there’s a precarious acceptance of the new wave pushing in. Tech is being welcomed in, as long as it doesn’t overstep its bounds. But it will. It always does. And I don’t know what the aftermath to that will be.

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    Photo: Brent Rose

    What I found to be most inspiring, though, is the creative response Detroit has had to all of this change. Take, for example, Tyree Guyton’s Heidelberg Project on the East Side, which has been around for 29 years now. It takes found objects, rubble, and abandoned houses and transforms them into something beautiful and inspiring.

    Image for article titled Connected States: How the Hell Did I End Up in Michigan?

    Photo: Brent Rose

    Image for article titled Connected States: How the Hell Did I End Up in Michigan?

    Photo: Brent Rose

    [More from the Heidelberg Project]

    Image for article titled Connected States: How the Hell Did I End Up in Michigan?

    Photo: Brent Rose

    [Gabby in front of the MBAD African Bead Museum]

    The same could be said of MBAD African Bead Museum. Not only does this shop, inside of a highly decorated but otherwise unassuming house, have the most amazing collection of beads I’ve ever seen, but it serves as a conduit for the community. There I spoke with a woman named Gabby, of the Detroit Poetry Society, whose greeting for everyone was “Peace,” a sort of mantra she hoped would come true. She talked of the changes she’s seen, and of the importance of finding common ground among all people, which isn’t so unlike the goal of Connected States.

    Image for article titled Connected States: How the Hell Did I End Up in Michigan?

    Photo: Brent Rose

    Image for article titled Connected States: How the Hell Did I End Up in Michigan?

    Photo: Brent Rose

    The area around the MBAD Museum hosts an incredible array of open-air art, similar to the Heidelberg Project, but this is mostly made by the artist Olayami Dabls, who owns the museum as well. It’s at once breathtaking and heartbreaking.

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    Photo: Brent Rose

    [Wedding backdrop]

    But Michigan isn’t just Detroit. We left the city for Saginaw, a couple hours north, where my friend Leila, the bride, grew up. I kept my van (Ashley, “The Beast”) parked either at her parents beautiful home, where the wedding took place, or in the hotel parking lot where some other weddings guests were staying. The wedding was a three-day Bangladeshi affair, but I stayed for five. I think I needed the peace and quiet, and I’ll forever be grateful for the hospitality Leila’s family showed me.

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    Photo: Brent Rose

    [Late night hangs in the van with some of my favorite people in the world.]

    I have to say, taking the van to a wedding is kind of the best. This is the third one I’ve brought it to, and aside from the fact that you don’t have to pay for a potentially expensive hotel room, you can park it pretty much wherever you want and set up camp. It ended up being a sweet spot for after-partying, but it served an even more useful purpose.

    Just before the wedding was set to begin, the sky opened up and the rain came pouring down in buckets. This was just before the groom’s family and friends were supposed to parade to the house and strike a deal to gain entry (a really fun tradition). There were dozens of us standing in a field and getting absolutely soaked. So we piled into the van. Not everyone, of course, but we managed to get 14 people in there, including the groom, who stayed dry for the 15 or so minutes before the storm passed. It was clutch. I even broadcast my first Periscope video from the middle of the chaos.

    Saginaw hosted another first for me. The bride’s family had an old Sea-Doo jet ski in the garage, and we busted it out on the small lake there. We tied a rope to the back of it and I pulled my trusty surfboard out of the trunk, a 5’ 8” Rusty DWART made with Varial foam. Making the transition from prone to standing was extremely tricky. You have to get dragged on your belly fast enough so the board starts planing. Then you wedge your back foot against the traction pad, and slide your front knee up underneath you. Then you need to take the rope with your back hand, so you’re reaching across your body, and use your front hand to stabilize the nose of the board as you pop up.

    It took about six tries before I got it, but once I did, it was unbelievably satisfying. I’ve never gone anywhere near that fast on a surfboard, and the lake was so glassy it was like carving through a mirror. Also, falling really hurts at that speed. I had a good bellyflop dismount and it felt like the entire lake punched me in the gut.

    Leaving Saginaw, I stopped to get an oil change, and then I just sat there for an hour, unsure of which way to go. This was the first time this trip that I could really pick any direction I wanted. I’d originally thought I’d head back through Detroit and spend some time with friends and family in Chicago, but people kept speaking with reverence of the Upper Peninsula (“the UP”) of Michigan. So I put the question to Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. It was time to see if the social experiment part of this project had any legs.

    Within half an hour I had almost 50 responses, most of them saying to go north, citing reasons like they’ve seen Chicago a million times, and they wanted something less explored. I took this all in. I knew there would be better opportunities for tech stories in Detroit and Chicago, but I’d probably be passing through that way in the early fall anyway… Screw it, I’m going north!

    A gentleman named Ben pointed me toward the Traverse City Film Festival, which is Michael Moore’s baby. I got word that the opening night party would be that night, so I quickly reached out to them, said I was with Gizmodo, and could I have press credentials. Five minutes later I was set and driving thataway.

    Image for article titled Connected States: How the Hell Did I End Up in Michigan?

    Photo: Brent Rose

    [Top of the Park Place Hotel, with an abomination of a “Manhattan”]

    Nick didn’t live in TC, but he had a friend there named Phil who he linked me up with. Phil recommended I check out the Park Place Hotel which would provide a view of the whole town. It was beautiful up there, but I ordered a Manhattan and it was served on the rocks, so the whole place should probably be burnt to the ground. I did meet a lovely woman named Wendy who was there with her whole family. She’d lived in Traverse City most of her life, and made me feel very welcome.

    From there, Phil advised me to check out a Cider House. I’ll be damned if it wasn’t the best cider I’ve ever had in my life. It was so perfectly balanced and it didn’t have any of that cloying sweetness. The lavender and elderberry were especially good. Really nice and dry. I spoke to Karen who runs and/or owns the place (forgive me for being unsure, but I was drinking cider), who told me all about their organic process. I highly recommend quaffing it out if you can find it.

    Image for article titled Connected States: How the Hell Did I End Up in Michigan?

    Photo: Brent Rose

    Image for article titled Connected States: How the Hell Did I End Up in Michigan?

    Photo: Brent Rose

    [These people randomly came up to me and insisted on taking a photo together.]

    From there I found the the Traverse City Film Festival party. An open-air deal that took over two city blocks. It was there that I finally met Phil, who was there with his friends. We gorged on the local foods on offer, which were absolutely amazing. The whole food scene in Traverse City is insane. I’ve never seen a U.S. town so small with so much good grub. Definitely a foodie haven. We spend the rest of the party listening to the lyrical stylings of Rick Chyme, which I really enjoyed.

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    Photo: Brent Rose

    [Rick Chyme on the mic]

    It turned out that Phil’s girlfriend Emily is good friends with Karen, so we ended up after-partying in the closed-up pub. The after-after party was in the van, where Phil, Rick, and I ended up lounging as I made maple old fashioneds and sazeracs.

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    Photo: Brent Rose

    In the morning, Phil came through and showed me the project he’s been working on, a book for the 50th anniversary of the Super Bowl. The foreword was by Dwight Clark, so I was sold. I flipped through the book and said I’d get one for my dad for Christmas, which is true. You can check it out here. Plug alert over.

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    Photo: Brent Rose

    Basically, I couldn’t imagine a better beginning to the social experiment element of this trip. The very first try found me good people, good food, good cider, and good times in a place I wouldn’t have known about otherwise. Truly incredible.

    Today I’ll be continuing north to the Upper Peninsula. Maybe to Pictured Rocks, which I hear is incredible. Giz’s Andrew Liszewski made me promise I’d eat some fudge in Mackinac, and well, a promise is a promise. If you’ve got good people or places or things up north, let me know, would you? I hope to be updating from the road more regularly, so I hope you’ll follow along. You can find more photos from this leg in a gallery at ConnectedStates.com. Thanks for reading.

    -Brent Rose 7.30.15 Traverse City, MI

    Image for article titled Connected States: How the Hell Did I End Up in Michigan?

    Photo: Brent Rose


    Connected States is a new series from Brent Rose in collaboration with Gizmodo about living a truly mobile life. Brent will be traveling the U.S. in a high-tech van, telling stories from the road. New episodes will appear every week on Gizmodo, with more content being released in between. He is currently soliciting ideas for places to go, things to see, and people to talk to. Follow him on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, and ConnectedStates.com

    All photos in this entry were taken with a Sony A7s. The video was shot with a GoPro Hero4 Black, and the Instagram shots came from my LG G4.



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    Brent Rose

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