Judge orders Rooney to pay city’s legal fees
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Sue Doyle
NEWPORT BEACH -- Laura Rooney, the daughter-in-law of actor Mickey
Rooney, was ordered Thursday to pay the city of Newport Beach $123,792 --
the cost of defense fees for an officer and two jailers sued by Rooney in
an excessive force lawsuit.
In addition, Orange County Superior Court Judge Tam Schumann determined
that Rooney filed her lawsuit in bad faith. On March 30, a jury rejected
Rooney’s excessive force claim against Newport Beach Police Officer
Spencer Arnold and jailers Timothy Steward and Troy Long.
Rooney, 53, of Hemet, claimed that the city employees broke her arm Sept.
2, 1997, when they allegedly pushed her against a wall in the Newport
Beach city jail.
Under federal law, if a person loses a lawsuit -- and a judge determines
that the lawsuit was filed in bad faith -- that person can be forced to
pay the legal costs for the defense, said attorney Bruce Praet, who
represented the city of Newport Beach.
Praet said the judge’s decision contained a message about perjury.
“I think this shows there are people out there who are willing to lie
about the police,” Praet said. “When you do that, it will cost you.”
Rooney in 1997 was arrested for drug possession after police found one
gram of crack cocaine in her trailer home. She later pleaded guilty to
the charges and was sentenced to 90 days in jail, plus three years
probation, but claimed the drugs weren’t hers.
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