Retired LAPD officer charged with pointing gun at husband

ByABC7.com staff KABC logo
Wednesday, March 9, 2016
Retired Los Angeles police Sgt. Mitchell Grobeson, pictured here at a 1994 press conference, was charged on Tuesday, March 8, 2016 with pointing a gun at his husband.
Retired Los Angeles police Sgt. Mitchell Grobeson, pictured here at a 1994 press conference, was charged on Tuesday, March 8, 2016 with pointing a gun at his husband.
AP-AP

WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (KABC) -- A retired police sergeant who had fought lengthy legal battles with the LAPD over its treatment of gay officers was charged Tuesday with pointing a handgun at his husband during an argument in their West Hollywood home, the District Attorney's Office said.

Retired Sgt. Mitchell Grobeson, 57, was arrested Friday after he barricaded himself inside his home for several hours, before surrendering to a Los Angeles Sheriff's Department SWAT team, officials said.

Grobeson was scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday afternoon in Los Angeles Superior Court.

Prosecutors allege he pointed a handgun at his husband to force him to leave the home. The alleged victim contacted the Sheriff's Department to seek help in getting his personal possessions from the home, according to the DA's office. When deputies arrived, they said Grobeson barricaded himself inside the home for about three hours before surrendering.

Grobeson faces one felony count of assault with a firearm and a count of criminal threats, according to Deputy District Attorney Jessica Kronstadt.

If convicted, Grobeson faces up to 14 years in state prison. The District Attorney's Office plans to ask for $100,000 bail.

As the city's first openly gay officer, Grobeson sued the city of Los Angeles in 1988 over its treatment of gay and lesbian officers, claiming that he was forced to resign because of harassment. He won damages and reinstatement, as well as pledges by the department to improve its treatment of gay officers.

He sued again in 1996, claiming the department was not living up to its commitments. That second lawsuit was not settled until 2013.

City News Service contributed to this report.