Advertisement

Costa Mesa hires firm to re-examine city worker’s suicide [UPDATED]

Share

COSTA MESA — The city attorney has hired an outside investigator to conduct a second investigation into the suicide of a city worker, officials confirmed Thursday.

Officials want an outside firm to examine the evidence in case there is litigation related to the death.

The city will work with former Secret Service agent Ron Williams’ Costa Mesa-based company, Talon Executive Services, to limit the city’s exposure to possible lawsuits related to the suicide of Huy Pham, 29, who jumped from the roof of City Hall to his death March 17.

Advertisement

Talon Executive Services lists litigation support and corporate investigations as among its services. [Update: The city is paying $175 an hour for Talon’s services, but city officials did not provide an overall total for the contract.]

City officials would not say how much the company is charging and a copy of the contract between it and Jones & Mayer was not made available.

The city’s decision to retain the firm was first reported Thursday by theOrange County Register.

City spokesman Bill Lobdell would not say why investigators were retained but issued a statement confirming that Talon was hired by the city’s outside counsel. The statement also called “litigation support in anticipation of litigation — a common practice.”

Pham’s family, who live in Fountain Valley, has not yet filed any claims or lawsuits against Costa Mesa, but a small number of city officials have privately questioned the thoroughness of the police’s investigation.

According to the police report, officers viewed about an hour of security camera video from inside City Hall leading up to Pham’s death and didn’t see him enter the building. They also searched his car but didn’t find anything.

A toxicology report from the Orange County coroner’s office later showed Pham had cocaine in his system at the time of his death, but experts couldn’t say how it affected him at the time.

The report did note that “detectives’ found no notes, documentation or further evidence indicating Pham had intentions of taking his life by committing suicide.”

Pham, a city maintenance worker, had been on leave for months after injuring his ankle while hiking. His supervisor, Doug Lovell, speculated that Pham may have gone to City Hall to pick up paperwork related to applying for a contractor’s license.

Pham was one of more than 200 employees slated to receive a notice that day that their jobs would be outsourced in six months as part of citywide austerity measures.

Police reports didn’t show any indication that officers looked at Pham’s phone records, talked to the person Pham last spoke with, or interviewed friends or family about why he would want to commit suicide.

Pham’s family declined to be interviewed for this story.

“They just want Huy to rest in peace and hope that everyone respects that,” Orange County Employees Assn. spokeswoman Jennifer Muir said on the family’s behalf.

All deaths in the city are initially treated as homicides, police said. However, evidence from there dictates how deep police will dig.

In this case, police had a witness who reported seeing Pham walk on the roof minutes before his death, and nothing suspicious to indicate it was anything other than a suicide.

The door to the roof was left open and was unlocked that day, according to the police report.

As a maintenance worker, Pham had access to that area.

There were no signs of a struggle, the police report noted. One witness saw Pham fall, another witness saw his body moments after, but no one saw him jump, police said.

Advertisement