Fired Fort Bragg Sergeant Chris Awad, the Agency’s Rep to Local Gang Task Force, Had a Tryst With the Sister of a Norteños Gang Member

Former Fort Bragg Police Sgt. Christopher Awad. [Image from police body cam]
A new state law that went into effect January 1 disqualifies former law enforcement officers from working in the field again if they are found to have committed significant misconduct. But as of the end of February, the only person on the list is former Fort Bragg Police Sergeant Christopher Awad. In September of last year, Governor Gavin Newsom signed SB2, and now, law enforcement agencies have to report to the Peace Officers Standards and Training Commission when they fire someone. If the commission finds the former officer unfit to serve because they perjured themselves or committed certain violent crimes, they will be permanently barred from working in law enforcement in the state. Former officers who have been found guilty of felonies are already prohibited from working as cops again.
Last month, Awad voluntarily gave up his certification. He was fired in 2020 after District Attorney Dave Eyster placed him on the Brady list for withholding information about his involvement with a DUI defendant who was closely connected to a notorious street gang–the . Awad represented Fort Bragg on the county’s Multi-Agency Gang Suppression Unit, or MAGSU. He admitted that he failed to inform the court that he had had intimate contact with the defendant prior to testifying against her. The prosecuting attorney accused him of trying to “tank the case” by downplaying the extent of the defendant’s culpability. She said it was obvious to jurors and attorneys alike that he was concealing a relationship with the defendant. The DA requested an internal affairs investigation.
In April of 2019, then-acting Sergeant Christopher Awad pulled over a woman near the Harbor Lite Lodge in Fort Bragg and administered a field sobriety test. He arrested her and she pled guilty to driving under the influence. Both of them told investigators that they thought her case was over and done with when they started flirting on Snapchat. She sent him suggestive pictures, and he told her that anytime she needed a ride, he would provide one, rather than let her drive after drinking again. In an interview with now-retired District Attorney investigator Kevin Bailey, Awad made a point of saying that this offer extended to anyone, male or female, who was too impaired to drive safely. On Sunday, Matt LaFever reported that in 2014, another woman has come forward with a story alleging that Awad arrested her for a DUI and then tried to establish a dating relationship with her.
In the case that resulted in Awad’s firing, misunderstandings about the legal process ensued when the woman’s DUI case moved to trial and she feared her DACA status was threatened.

Police body cam shows the woman who was stopped for a DUI and former Sgt. Chris Awad.
As the case moved towards trial, Awad told the DA’s office he thought the charge should be reduced to a so-called “wet and reckless.” He told investigators he interpreted ambiguous statements from a Deputy District Attorney to mean that the lesser charge was a certainty. He said his intent at that point was not to get the case thrown out; “To just tell the DA all the good reasons why she doesn’t need to get deported.”
However, the DA’s office did not offer the woman a “wet and reckless.” Instead, she was prosecuted for a DUI. Awad, as the arresting officer, was a key witness for the prosecution. Shortly before the trial, he and the defendant had a sexual encounter in a motel room in the Bay Area. He did not disclose the incident to the court, and according to the prosecuting attorney, even jurors suspected that there was a relationship between them. Awad insisted that none of their interactions played a role in his advocacy for her or his testimony against her; and indeed, she was found guilty of the DUI.
But the prosecuting attorney was so unhappy with his testimony that District Attorney Dave Eyster requested that then-Fort Bragg Police Chief Fabian Lizzaraga conduct an internal affairs investigation into Awad’s actions and “any possible relationship he may have had” with the defendant. This was followed by an investigation by the DA’s office to make a Brady List determination.
Awad told the two investigators slightly different versions of what happened. He told Sergeant Jon McLaughlin, who conducted the police department internal affairs investigation, that when he had the encounter with the defendant in the motel room, “I was under the impression during this time that this case was done and pled out.”
But two months after the interview with McLaughlin, Awad admitted to Bailey, from the DA’s office, that he knew the case was “still a live case;” and that she was still technically a defendant, but he was sure it was “going to resolve.” He said she was also useful to him professionally, as an informant providing intelligence on gangs.
Bailey established that the woman’s brother was a member of the Norteños gang, while the information she provided was on the rival Sureños gang. Bailey asked Awad if she also provided information against the Norteños, and Awad admitted that they hadn’t talked about the Norteños yet, adding, “Not to say that she would or wouldn’t. I don’t know.” Bailey told him that the woman was “not a small player,” and Awad protested that, “I don’t think she herself is involved in the gang. Her brother is.”
Bailey told him, “You can’t be having sexual contact with somebody whose brother is a player in the Norteños street gang and you’re the MAGSU officer.” (The Multi-Agency Gang Suppression Unit is led by the DA’s office, and includes members of other law enforcement agencies in Mendocino County.)
Awad and the woman saw each other at least one more time, shortly before the day Bailey spoke to both of them separately. She had come into the station to get pictures taken of bruises from a beating she accused her brother of giving her.
In August of last year, she and a man with the same last name were arrested after the man jumped out of a car that she was driving to stab another man, who is suspected of being a member of the rival gang. Both family members were initially charged with felony assault, but charges against her were dismissed, while the man was sentenced to four years in state prison.
Awad maintains to this day that he was wrongfully terminated. He has spoken extensively about his position on the matter during the course of three interviews with former Mendocino County Sheriff candidate Trent James on his YouTube channel Confessions of an Ex-Cop.
Earlier:
- Former Cop Fired by Fort Bragg Becomes California’s First Officer to Lose Certification
- ‘I Knew It Felt Wrong’: Woman Alleges Fired Fort Bragg Police Sergeant Chris Awad Used Her Arrest as a Pick-Up Strategy
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I’m sorry but I just can’t stand dirty cops, and I’m glad to hear there might be some accountability for their behavior. My thoughts are still on the Eureka Police Department’s dirty text cops like Sanchez! They just moved that psychopath somewhere else. We’re playing Russian roulette moving dirty cops through out our state. EPD kills, I know I have watched them in action!
Which is worse, drunk driving (DUI) or cops who have sex with persons they arrest?
A tawdry tale, which needs to be put to rest.
“Well, there’s yer problem…” When “DACA” includes KNOWN gang members who aren’t arrested and deported, you are not helping the people here legally. *sigh*
This story looks worse every time more information is revealed.
Why no name for the drunk driving, illegal immigrant, gang associate?
Was this an under cover job?
Well at least this article finally provided some information that explained why he was sanctioned. Apparently his questionable behavior with women he met on the job ceased being just unpleasant and became a liability when he formed a liaison with a woman closely connected with gangs and he perturbed himself to help her. If TPTB got it right as reported.
That’s perturbed, not perturbed.
Once more into the breach .. that’s perjured, not peturbed.
But perjury is always perturbing! Can’t we just make them both into the same word? keep it simple?
Perjurbing?
perturjing!
This ex cop lets his dick do his thinking for him.
Simply but accurately put.
In my younger years we had a term for guys who were real a-holes. This guy’s name should have been Dick so we could officially call him a Dick aWad!
Obsessed much. Instead of spending so much time on a cop who hasn’t been employed in years maybe you should write about currently employed coos behaving badly. Like the married MCSO deputy who’s been seen making out with young girls on duty under the Noyo bridge. Or how about the FBPD officers who are known to party and drink with underage females . There’s a lot going on currently that should be more concerning than old cops that are old news.
Probably because all that stuff is hearsay. If you would have mentioned the city of ukiah police i would agree with you because there is proof against them
You are not wrong with the fact of the other officers in the county. Kevin Murray didn’t get slammed as much as this guy and the same with Noble or Derek Hendry. Rapists and woman beaters I guess aren’t as important .
Fun fact – 40% of Cops are Domestic Abusers!
https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/data-suggests-40-percent-cops-145601125.html
ACAB
Treat them as individuals. Treating them as a group in no different than “all Blacks/Hispanics/LGBTQ/etc. are …”
One way or another, we’re gonna find ya, we’re gonna getcha getcha getcha getcha ya. One way or another.