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Prosecutor sues Los Angeles DA for retaliation after he was punished for 'misgendering' child predator
FIRST ON FOX: A deputy district attorney in Los Angeles has filed a complaint against his bosses for an alleged “extensive retaliation campaign” that derailed his career and saw him suspended without pay and punished further for “misgendering” a convicted child predator and killer – the latest in roughly two dozen whistleblower lawsuits.
“For the past two years, Gascon has tried to silence me,” Shea Sanna, the prosecutor, told Fox News Digital. “He has suspended me without pay, threatened my livelihood, attacked my credibility, tarnished my reputation, demoted me, investigated me, and harassed me, all so I would obey him; so I would stay quiet; so I wouldn’t speak up on behalf of those most affected by his misguided political policies.”
Sanna is accusing Los Angeles District Attorney George Gascon, the county and other officials of whistleblower retaliation and the intentional infliction of emotional distress, according to court filings obtained by Fox News Digital.
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Deputy District Attorney Shea Sanna at the Hannah Tubbs hearing in Antelope Valley Juvenile Court, California, Jan. 27, 2022. (Dave Buchan)
In one instance, Gascon’s office sought to investigate him for “insubordination” while he was away on an approved vacation, the filing alleges.
But much of the conflict stems from Gascon’s handling of James “Hannah” Tubbs, a convicted child molester who also bashed his own friend’s skull in with a rock in Kern County.
“Since publicly opposing Gascón’s mishandling of the Tubbs case, Gascón has set his sights on Sanna, looking to manufacture any conceivable reason to make an example of his perceived disloyalty and ultimately, terminate him,” Sanna’s attorneys at the Dhillon Law Group said in a statement.
Tubbs was about to be paroled from an adult men’s prison on assault charges in 2021, but Los Angeles prosecutors asked for a custody transfer so he could face justice in connection with a 2014 attack on a 10-year-old girl.
WOKE CALIFORNIA PROSECUTOR ‘IRONICALLY IN CHARGE OF ETHICS’ CHARGED WITH FELONIES
Hannah Tubbs appears in court for sentencing in Bakersfield, California, on Nov. 7, 2023. Tubbs was sentenced to 15 years in prison for the 2019 murder of Michael Clark, after pleading guilty. (Splash News for Fox News Digital)
The complaint alleges that Gascon had Sanna taken off of the case and prevented him from presenting evidence – then targeted him with “sham investigations” when he blew the whistle on policy and ethics violations.
Sanna raised other ethics issues, including a potential violation of Marsy’s law, which protects victims’ rights, and saw additional retaliation, according to the complaint. He was later ordered to drive 70 miles from his office in Antelope Valley to meet with top Gascon aide Joseph Iniguez and suspended for “misgendering” Tubbs. He was ordered to make the same drive at least two more times, in what the complaint alleges was an “intentionally abusive and malicious manner.”
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“In early 2022, Sanna’s once promising career trajectory was derailed when he publicly revealed how Gascon’s policies had led to a miscarriage of justice in the Tubbs case, nearly resulting in the release of a highly dangerous and violent sexual predator,” the complaint reads. “Sanna also exposed how the Gascón Administration had suppressed evidence and directed Sanna not to oppose defense counsel’s arguments in order to secure Tubbs’s release.”
The Tubbs case garnered national attention because even though he was in his 20s, he was prosecuted as a juvenile in Los Angeles under Gascon, because the perpetrator was only 17 at the time of the crime.
Hannah Tubbs began identifying as female after being arrested in connection with a 2014 child molestation case in Los Angeles County. (Los Angeles County)
Jailhouse phone calls obtained by Fox News in 2022 appeared to show Tubbs and his father hatch a plan to identify as female, seeking to be housed in a girls’ facility or released outright. After the calls came out, the lawsuit alleges that Sanna was told Gascon’s administration was “coming for him.”
Tubbs has a history of convictions of violent crimes and drug offenses in California, Washington and Idaho and has been accused of at least two other attacks on girls, in addition to the one in Los Angeles. His plan for a light sentence in a juvenile facility that kept him off the state’s sex offender registry fell apart, however, when Kern County prosecutors had him extradited to face manslaughter charges.
Tubbs, now 28 and using the name Hannah, is being housed in the California Institution for Men, prison records show. That decision was up to state officials.
Joseph Iniguez, left, and George Gascon at the Reform L.A. Jails Summit + Day Party: Mental Health Matters on Nov. 9, 2019 in Pasadena, California. (Jesse Grant/Getty Images for Patrisse Cullors)
“In the Tubbs case, Deputy District Attorney Shea Sanna did nothing but seek to uphold his ethical and legal duties to present all relevant evidence to the court,” his attorney, Anthony Fusaro, told Fox News Digital. “Yet because this evidence conflicted with D.A. Gascon’s recently enacted policies and public statements, Gascon sought to suppress it. When Mr. Sanna informed his supervisors and the public of Gascon’s suppression efforts, Gascon responded with a relentless retaliation campaign against Mr. Sanna that persists to this day.”
Other high-profile cases that Sanna prosecuted include the wrong-way driving teen who mowed down a mother and her baby in a stroller in Venice Beach in 2021.
Although that case is not part of the retaliation lawsuit, he blew the whistle again on the teen suspect’s lenient punishment. Kristopher Baca was released after just a few months – and murdered in a drive-by shooting before his 18th birthday.
Gascon is facing roughly two dozen retaliation lawsuits from prosecutors in his office.
He’s up for re-election in November, facing a challenge from independent Nathan Hochman. A spokesperson for Gascon’s office said it does not comment on pending litigation or personnel matters.
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Utah mom in upscale ski community killed husband to fund romance and lavish lifestyle, DA says
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Text messages about marriage, money and a “fresh start” took center stage in the murder trial of Utah author Kouri Richins, as prosecutors laid out what they say was her plan to move on from her husband and profit from his death.
Richins, 35, is charged with aggravated murder, attempted aggravated murder and multiple financial crimes in the March 3, 2022, death of her husband, Eric Richins. Prosecutors allege she poisoned him with a fentanyl-laced Moscow mule so she could collect life insurance money and begin a new life with her boyfriend. She has pleaded not guilty.
During opening statements, Summit County Deputy Attorney Brad Bloodworth read aloud a series of text messages he said were exchanged between Richins and a man identified in court as her boyfriend.
In one message sent the day before Eric’s death, Richins allegedly wrote: “If I was divorced right now and asked you to marry me tomorrow, you would?”
Internet searches recovered from the phone of Kouri Richins, a Utah mother accused of fatally poisoning her husband, are displayed on a screen during her murder trial at the Summit County Courthouse in Park City, Utah, Monday, Feb. 23, 2026. (Spenser Heaps/AP Photo, Pool)
Weeks earlier, prosecutors said she sent another message: “If he could just go away, and you could just be there, life would be so perfect.”
Jurors also heard that 16 days after Eric’s death, Richins allegedly sent her boyfriend a link to a Caribbean resort and wrote, “Are we there yet?” About a month after the death, prosecutors said she texted him, “I think I want you to be my husband one day.”
Bloodworth argued the messages reveal Richins’ desire to start over and pointed to what he described as mounting financial pressure.
According to prosecutors, Richins was facing substantial debt and believed she would inherit millions from Eric’s estate if he died. Bloodworth told jurors a prenuptial agreement would have limited what she received in the event of a divorce.
CHILDREN’S BOOK AUTHOR KOURI RICHINS SAYS SCANDAL AND NOTORIETY POISONED HER MURDER TRIAL
Body camera video is displayed on a screen during the murder trial of Kouri Richins at the Summit County Courthouse, in Park City, Utah, Monday, Feb. 23, 2026. (Spenser Heaps/AP Photo, Pool)
“Kouri Richins murdered Eric for his money and to get a fresh start at life,” Bloodworth said in court.
Prosecutors also highlighted phone activity from the early morning hours of March 4, 2022.
Bloodworth told jurors Richins first accessed her phone at 3:06 a.m. but did not call 911 until 3:21 a.m.
The state further referenced internet searches conducted after Eric’s death, including: “Can cops uncover deleted messages iPhone?”
Jurors were also told that three money-themed memes — including one that read “I’m rich!” — were accessed on Richins’ phone the morning Eric died.
Prosecutors allege the killing was tied to life insurance proceeds.
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Defense attorney Kathy Nester shows the jury an image of a pill bottle while delivering her opening statement in Kouri Richins’ murder trial, Monday, Feb. 23, 2026. (Spenser Heaps/AP Photo, Pool)
Court documents state Richins purchased multiple life insurance policies totaling nearly $2 million and later changed the beneficiary designation to herself without Eric Richins’ authorization. Authorities say Eric discovered the change and switched the beneficiary back to his business partner.
Investigators also allege Richins intended to use insurance money to complete and flip a roughly $2 million Wasatch County mansion, an investment Eric’s family has said he did not approve of.
Defense attorney Kathryn Nester told jurors Eric struggled with chronic pain and substance use and died from an accidental overdose. In pretrial filings, Richins’ legal team has argued that a key prosecution witness changed their story and that the evidence against her is largely circumstantial.
“No family ever wants to believe that behind closed doors someone you loved is using drugs,” Nester said during opening statements.
The defense played Richins’ 911 call in court, in which she can be heard crying and telling a dispatcher her husband was not breathing.
“Those are the sounds of a wife becoming a widow,” Nester told jurors.
The third day of testimony ended unexpectedly after roughly an hour on the stand from the state’s lead crime scene technician.
Kouri Richins looks on during her murder trial at the Summit County Courthouse, Monday, Feb. 23, 2026. (Spenser Heaps/AP Photo, Pool)
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Chelsea Gipson, the CSI technician who processed the Richins home, faced cross-examination focused on the evidence she collected, including prescription medications removed from the scene and whether she observed alcohol or THC gummies inside the residence. Gipson acknowledged the hydrocodone bottle recovered from the home was not tested for fentanyl and testified that no drug paraphernalia was found.
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Defense attorneys also questioned how certain areas were documented, noting that no photographs were taken of the kitchen, sink or closet during the initial processing of the scene.
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Kathy Nester walks back to her seat during the trial at the Summit County Courthouse, Monday, Feb. 23, 2026. (Spenser Heaps/AP Photo, Pool)
Judge Richard Mrazik called a recess around 9:30 a.m., citing a scheduling conflict. When court resumed shortly after 10:30 a.m., he dismissed jurors for the day, referencing “unforeseen emergency circumstances unrelated to the case.”
On Thursday, Kouri Richins’ housekeeper testified that she bought pain pills for her after repeated requests in early 2022. Carmen Lauber said Richins asked in early February 2022 for pain meds for an “investor,” took the pills and deleted their texts, and later left $1,000 at her Midway home for Lauber to pick up for another purchase.
Lauber also said she helped Kouri Richins obtain increasingly stronger drugs. She said she first sought out strong painkillers through a friend after Kouri Richins allegedly said her “investor” wanted something stronger, calling it the “Michael Jackson stuff.”
Lauber’s testimony followed a state toxicologist’s testimony acknowledging that Eric Richins could have taken fentanyl before having a drink, potentially undercutting prosecutors’ claim that Kouri Richins laced his Moscow mule.
Richins was arrested in May 2023. The case later drew national attention after she published a children’s book about grief following her husband’s death.
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The trial is expected to continue for several more weeks.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Stepheny Price covers crime, including missing persons, homicides and migrant crime. Send story tips to stepheny.price@fox.com.
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San Francisco, CA
Iran conflict disrupts flights out of SFO
Denver, CO
Denver rally shows divided feelings over U.S.-Israel action against Iran
DENVER — More than 24 hours after the United States and Israel attacked Iran, Coloradans are continuing to express their feelings about what the attack means not only for the world, but here in our state.
For the second straight day, Coloradans expressed their opinions on the steps of the state Capitol about the attack by the US and Israel on Iran.
But instead of anger, as was the case on Saturday, the tone on Sunday was more cheerful.
“Today it’s a celebration about like getting our freedom back, and we would love to have people to be happy with us,” said Forzun Yalme, who helped organize the event with Free Iran Colorado.
For some Iranian-Americans, the news of the attack brings a new sense of hope that freedom is near.
“For me to be Iranian-American, in 47 years here, I learned about democracy and human rights and what I like,” detailed Amir Tosh, another member of Free Iran Colorado. “I want to transfer what your values are for democracy, human rights, freedom to my country, my motherland.”
Denver rally shows divided feelings over U.S.-Israel action against Iran
“My uncle and grandma, grandparents, they were all so happy about what happened, because we can, like, now feel the freedom,” explained Yalme.
But some Iranian-Americans are more cautious.
Colorado’s only Iranian-American state representative, Yara Zokaie, doubts the operation will have a significant impact to Iran’s leadership.
“I’m sympathetic to people who want regime change by any means necessary, but I think we also need to stop and realize what this actually means,” said Zokaie. “Regime change is not something that can happen in one airstrike.”
Zokaie admits she herself was elated to hear Iran’s supreme leader and other top officials were killed in the attack.
But she hopes Coloradans remember the innocent people who have already been killed and those who are more likely to come.
“I ask that we remember the humanity of people in the Middle East as this news unfolds. I ask that we call for a peaceful resolution that we empower Iranian people who will bring change from within, and that we call for no war with Iran,” said Zokaie.
Several people at today’s event at the Capitol approached our Denver7 team. They shared their gratitude for President Donald Trump, the US military, and the Israelis for their action in helping bring freedom to Iran.
They hope others will see that as well. They plan on being here for the next hour and a half or so.
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