Rumors the Trial of Kevin Murray Was Derailed by Victim’s Unwillingness to Testify Are Unfounded, Says Her Attorney

Kevin Murray

Kevin Murray [Photo from Ukiah Police Department’s 2019 Annual Report]

Mendocino County prosecutors are privately claiming a key witness’ unwillingness to testify and an inability to locate her led to the dismissal of the most serious sex charges against Ukiah Police Sergeant Kevin Murray.

But the woman’s Oakland attorney says that is false.

“My client was hesitant but prepared to testify,” said Panos Lagos, a noted civil attorney who is experienced in police misconduct cases across Northern California. 

Lago said, “She hasn’t gone anywhere. She is in Sacramento where she has always been.”

District Attorney David Eyster and his deputy prosecutor Heidi Larson have repeatedly declined to comment on the reasoning behind the sweetheart plea bargain they struck with Murray and his lawyers. Privately, they have been telling people the case collapsed after the City of Ukiah agreed to pay the victim a settlement. They have been saying that since receiving the settlement, the victim since was unable to be located and relied upon for trial.

Lagos said he is in a state of disbelief. “I thought the District Attorney and his investigators had this case dialed in.”

“The DA had the evidence to win this case decisively,” said Lagos.

Lagos said he inquired about the status of the case but did not receive any call back from the DA’s Office. “That’s not typical,’ he said.

“My client received a call, but she was under the impression Murray would be forever barred from being a police officer again, and that he would have to register as a sex offender. She had no idea until now that it was being suggested she was the reason prosecution efforts collapsed.”

Eyster and Larson did not respond Friday to questions about Lagos’ assertions. In the month, they have not responded to two separate letters asking specific questions about the plea deal.

Lagos said prosecutors were provided with supporting statements, videotapes, and text messages involving Murray and the Sacramento woman who first encountered each other during a routine traffic stop in Ukiah. The woman was a passenger in the car and provided her identification and where she was staying. Later she discovered the officer took the key card to her room at the Super 8 Motel on Orchard Street. At around 6 a.m. the next morning, he showed up and forced his way into her room. She had barricaded the door with a chest because she feared he might show up. When he did, Murray exposed himself and demanded she sexually stimulate him, according to the original charges.

Murray’s case has become embroiled in controversy since District Attorney David Eyster’s decision to drop three felony charges and misdemeanor possession of methamphetamine charge against the Ukiah cop and agree to a plea deal. Murray is being represented by a high-powered team of defense lawyers from Sonoma County, led by Chris Andrian and Stephen Gallenson.

The deal the Santa Rosa lawyers reached with Eyster calls for no further jail time, and probation in return for no contest pleas to a felony charge of intimidating a witness and a misdemeanor false imprisonment charge relating to a second woman who accused the cop of sexual assault.

The felony conviction by plea might prevent Murray from being a cop again, but the deal apparently allows him to avoid having to register as a sex offender.

In the Sacramento woman’s case, attorney Lagos described the available evidence as ‘decisive.’

Known only as ‘S.Y.’ in court documents, Lagos said she has a corroborating witness to her story: an aunt whom she called following her encounter with Murray after the traffic stop in Ukiah. The family member advised the woman to barricade the door to her Orchard Street motel because she was fearful Murray would show up after he told her he was coming back. The woman moved furniture to block the motel door from the inside. Investigators found that Murray, however, had obtained the key card to the room, and when he returned about 6 a.m. the next morning he forced his way into the room and demanded sex.

“My client feared this man,” said Lagos. “He was a police sergeant, a man in a position of authority.”

A second woman, after reading of the motel encounter following Murray’s firing, called investigators and told them that the officer had twice forced her to perform oral sex on him in 2014. She was a friend of a former wife of Murray’s.

A third woman, a former Ukiah police officer who is now a Mendocino County sheriff’s deputy, contends in a pending civil lawsuit that Murray sexually accosted her in an out-of-town motel room while both were attending a training session in 2012. The officer said she locked herself in the bathroom of her room after Murray fondled her breasts, stripped, and confronted her with his erect penis. Her lawsuit contends her superiors at the police department later ignored her formal complaints to them.

At one point, she said Murray whispered in her ear in front of other officers: “Nothing happened. No one will believe you.”

Later, when the woman officer went to work in the department’s detective unit, she said she learned of Murray’s past history, including internal affairs probes, his pulling a gun at a party, other sexual escapades, and reported drug use. When investigators confronted Murray at the police station when first looking into the Sacramento woman’s complaint, they found two packs of meth in his police locker.

That officer alleges that while she worked with Murray at the police department, she was “repeatedly subjected to harassment, discrimination, hostile work environment, and retaliatory adverse actions in response to reporting the unlawful conduct.”

Her civil lawsuit is still pending.

In the Sacramento woman’s case, attorney Lagos said she eventually received a $250,000 settlement from the city of Ukiah.

“We didn’t even have to formally file a lawsuit. The city’s attorney understood the gravity of the situation,” said Lagos.

Lagos said at the time he found the city police command staff and its legal representatives “very responsive” to what was presented to them about Murray.

“He was summarily dismissed, and he didn’t appeal,” said Lagos.

Lagos acknowledged his client has been the subject of whispers about her past sexual conduct.

“But her sexual practices are not the issue here. What is at play is a police sergeant breaking into a room and forcing the occupant to sexually gratify him. That’s the crime,” said Lagos.

Lagos, a veteran law graduate from the University of California, Berkeley, specializes in police misconduct. He has for three decades or more assisted victims of police brutality and civil rights violations in winning settlements in state and federal courts in the Bay Area and the Central Valley.

“My client was prepared to testify. She is aghast to learn that she is being blamed for the lack of prosecution of Murray,” said Lagos.

Murray’s rescheduled sentencing is now set for 3 p.m. Tuesday in front of Superior Court Judge Ann Moorman. 

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19 Comments
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Hebilla Cinturón de Rodeo
Guest
Hebilla Cinturón de Rodeo
1 year ago

What the hell is wrong with Eyster? Too busy chasing chicken crimes?

Cetan Bluesky
Guest
Cetan Bluesky
1 year ago

Another cover up to protect a dirty cop by very dirty accomplices.

NOYB
Guest
NOYB
1 year ago

Thankful for attorneys like Lagos and we need more of them.
EPD has horrible problems with abusive officers on staff and nothing done.

Farce
Guest
Farce
1 year ago

The corruption extends into the District Attorneys office. But we knew that.

guest`
Guest
guest`
1 year ago

Sounds rather bad and cover-uppy. Remember, the DA is also a cop.

SICKTODEATH OFITALL
Guest
SICKTODEATH OFITALL
1 year ago

CAN YOU BELIEVE THIS PIECE OF SHIT COP IS STILL BEING HELD UNACCOUNTABLE? ANYONE ELSE WOULD BE IN PRISON….PULLING A GUN AT A PARTY>! ALL HIS COERCED SEX? JUST GOES TO PROVE …AGAIN…THERE IS NO REAL JUSTICE SYSTEM THAT IS FAIR TO ALL…..TWO DIFFERENT JUSTICE SYSTEMS….JUST LIKE IN THE BIG LEAGUE POLITICS…BIDEN AND HIS TREASONOUS BUNCH OF TRAITORS, SELL OUT OUR NATION….TAKE BRIBES….DESTROY THE HONEST, AND WORSE AND GET AWAY WITH IT ALL

where does the corruption in MC end?
Guest
where does the corruption in MC end?
1 year ago

Why is it that in every single criminal case of police corruption in this county, there is entanglement with the DA Dave Eyster?

Woman voter
Guest
Woman voter
1 year ago

Why is the DA Eyster so soft on crimes against women? Eyster destroyed the career of a female domestic violence victim for making a police report and then not wanting to go forward with it. Good ole boy Eyster thinks we are second class citizens but the women of this county make up more than 50% of the voters. Ladies, it’s time to clean house in this county and it starts at the ballot box.

Jen
Member
Jen
1 year ago
Reply to  Woman voter

Agreed. Sadly, he just got re’elected again for another 4 years so we have to wait.

Last edited 1 year ago
Hebilla Cinturón de Rodeo
Guest
Hebilla Cinturón de Rodeo
1 year ago
Reply to  Jen

Well. That’s a reasonable time to dig in on the chicken abuse issues plaguing Brooktrails. Give him time.

Liberty Biberty
Guest
Liberty Biberty
1 year ago
Reply to  Woman voter

It starts at the sanitary napkin receptacle.

Jake
Guest
Jake
1 year ago

I just hope that people realize this is not how the people of Mendocino county feel about this coverup .maybe it’s time to recall our”DA”.

yuck
Guest
yuck
1 year ago

So… Ukiah PD AND the city knowingly hires and retains a repeat tweeker kidnapping rapist who makes random armed threats in public. Eew. Gross. What’s next? What could be worse? Child porn? Organized highway robbery?
This isn’t dirty. This is FILTHY. This is garbage. Unless you throw that filthy jackass in jail you’re all guilty on some level in the public’s eye. Every last one of you. Nasty little downward spiral going down the drain. What good cop in their right mind would be happy about working for you? No wonder you get nasty inappropriate applicants. Have some self respect for God’s sake.
This trial process sounds highly irregular and should be appealed by the victim’s attorneys. The FBI should get involved in this.

Last edited 1 year ago
izzy
Guest
izzy
1 year ago
Reply to  yuck

The FBI? Maybe in theory, but once again the bureau is demonstrating a slimy political bias and agenda at the national level. Are there any truly honest agencies left?

Tom
Guest
Tom
1 year ago
Reply to  izzy

Are they not getting involved because Eyster and the cops have a certain political party?

Hebilla Cinturón de Rodeo
Guest
Hebilla Cinturón de Rodeo
1 year ago
Reply to  izzy

Didn’t Chris Wray get appointed by Trump?
Here’s a test: would you rather..
Have Bernie Sanders be your new Stepdad?
Or Donald Trump be your new Son in law?
Cuz that’s how it’s going to go.

eyeheartD
Member
1 year ago

Aw no doxxing? Guess you all will just have to do your own research.

Kym Kemp
Admin
1 year ago
Reply to  eyeheart

No doxing

John Adams
Guest
John Adams
1 year ago

It appears that the relationship between Murray and the DA isn’t exactly platonic.

Last edited 1 year ago