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Brian Mulligan, Deutsche Bank's Hollywood Exec, Says LAPD Beat Him Senseless

Categories: Police

brian mulligan.jpeg
USC Marshall School of Business
Was 1-percenter Brian Mulligan the latest victim of LAPD brutality?
Deutsche Bank's head of media and entertainment investing here in Los Angeles doesn't have too much in common with the 99 percent. But his recent allegations against the LAPD make him out to be an average Occupite:

According to TMZ, bank executive Brian Mulligan claims he was forced into a Highland Park motel room by LAPD officers, who then beat him to a pulp.

TMZ also says Mulligan plans to sue the police department and the city...

... for up to $100 million. Although we haven't been able to confirm that number, we do know that Mulligan, managing director and vice chairman of Deutsche Bank's Media and Telecommunications Investment Banking division, has retained the legal services of super-high-profile L.A. attorney J. Michael Flanagan, most (in)famous for representing Michael Jackson's doctor in his "involuntary manslaughter" trial.

(In fact, when we called Flanagan's offices today, his secretary sounded surprised to hear Mulligan's name. "I'm so used to the Conrad Murray case!" she said. Looks like there's a new celebrity client in town.)

We also spoke with LAPD Lieutenant Andy Neiman, who told us the officers' side of the story.

Neiman says that on the night of May 14, around 10:40 p.m., two LAPD officers responded to reports of a crazed man trying to break into cars at the Jack in the Box drive-thru on Eagle Rock Boulevard. And while the officers were en route, he says they "got another call of a man trying to get into vehicles on the street" -- a white male with the same description as the suspect in the drive-thru incident, later identified as Mulligan.

When the officers arrived at the scene, according to Neiman, Mulligan seemed completely "out of it."

So they called for an LAPD drug-recognition expert, who "could not make a determination [that Mulligan was on] anything we normally see or test for," says the lieutenant. At that point, though, the suspect appeared to be coming down.

"He said, 'Im exhausted. If you guys could just take me to a hotel, I'll be fine,'" Neiman tells LA Weekly.

The cops' story from there: They stopped at Mulligan's car to verify his identity, where they discovered a large amount of cash. A supervisor was called to the scene -- "to make sure there were no questions about the money issue" -- and determined that no crime had been committed.

However, at 1 a.m. the next morning, on May 15, the same two officers spotted somebody running through traffic in the same area of Highland Park, "trying to get into cars that were moving," says Neiman. "So they respond again, and recognize that it's Mulligan."

But the officers allege that when they called Mulligan over to them, he took a fighting stance in the street and began to charge straight toward them.

deutsche bank los angeles.jpeg
L.A. City Attorney's Office
As it happens, Deutsche Bank is also being sued by L.A. -- for alleged slumlord practices.
So they took him down. According to Lieutenant Neiman, they wrestled the Deutsche Bank executive to the ground without the use of any weapons -- but "during that use of force, he sustained some injuries that required him to be taken to the hospital."

Mulligan was later booked for "felony interference with the police," says Neiman. The Los Angeles County District Attorney, however, declined to file charges, and instead passed on them on in misdemeanor form to the L.A. City Attorney. (We've contacted the City Attorney's Office for an update.)

Because Mulligan required medical care, the LAPD launched a routine investigation into his attacking officers' use of force. They remain on duty.

UP NEXT: The victim (or suspect, depending on who you talk to) has a much different recollection of the night's events.

My Voice Nation Help
26 comments
commander1958
commander1958

Am I just old? For me as a 50-ish white lifer LA straight male who has never suffered at the hands of the cops without provocation, it is MUCH easier to believe the cops here. This guy was missing work possibly, or jeopardizing his job at Bank Deutsche somehow, and he is trying to capitalize on the current environment of cop-mistrust. Whadaya think? 

Johnny O's
Johnny O's

Funny, if he was an illegal alien holding a pregnant woman at gunpoint, and cops shot him, there would have been riots and he'd be called a victim of police brutality. Because he's well off and white, it's funny and he deserved it....

TimFromLA
TimFromLA

Typical 1% thinking his shit does not stink. Hell, the LAPD officers are the 99% and maybe it's time the good people at DHD start making arrests against the banksters. What, now they could start shit with the LAPD? The D.A. refused to file felony charges. Well maybe it's time that we show these pukes that we ain't gonna take this crap anymore.

JC_1
JC_1

Have a nasty suspicion Rampart-style corruption was going on here. It's a bad sign when the D.A.'s office and city attorney refuse to touch a case. Hopefully I'm wrong but it sounds like the guy was being set up to look like a drug deal gone bad/hotel murder and then that cash in his car gets pocketed. Running for it probably saved his life.

Vidalia
Vidalia

@MatthewKlekner In Highland Park of all places...

andreihp42
andreihp42 topcommenter

sounds like there is a lot more of this story that still has to come out... something smells fishy.

Katherine Huntoon
Katherine Huntoon

Already senseless if he was trying to break into cars at Jack in the Box.

Katherine Huntoon
Katherine Huntoon

Already senseless if he was trying to break into cars at Jack in the Box.

ScholaGreen
ScholaGreen

@LAWeekly Now Being from L.A. and Living in the ALLEGED HOOD. the police do this "ALL" the time! Worst the LAWYERS MAY NOT DEFEND HIM!

FelipeHemming
FelipeHemming

@LAWeekly sounds right, Fullerton beats homeless and LAPD beats bankers, street justice he was probably jacking his jaw and got a tune up :(

wiseandswift
wiseandswift

@LAWeekly that tweet alone is hilarious. LMAO.

Kenneth Whyayearebeeareoh
Kenneth Whyayearebeeareoh

Dingle Dangle stop being "Of The World " esp when there are Real People Around you that you IGNORE !

Alexandria Luz Ramirez
Alexandria Luz Ramirez

Shame on the DA's office for not throwing the book at him like they do to people who are much poorer than he is. If they are to serve justice, it must be consistent across the board. At least the occupiers are causing a ruckus for a cause, this guy was high and trying to break in to people's cars! I almost want to go and protest Deutsche Bank over this. They should be called Douche Bank

Pehn Marques
Pehn Marques

I wonder if the "stance" he made was the Executive Stance?

eridani99
eridani99

@sblackmoore That article is a great example of slanted language. I love it. It's factual, but obvious in it's sympathies.

sblackmoore
sblackmoore

@eridani99 Yeah. Pretty common for the LA Weekly. They have a very op ed view of fact based reporting. Subtlety isn't their forte.

eridani99
eridani99

@sblackmoore It makes me happy. They aren't trying to pretend they are anything but totally opinionated. That's refreshing, actually.

Janet Razo
Janet Razo

Is this only news when it's a rich white guy that's getting beaten down?

Janet Razo
Janet Razo

Is this only news when it's a rich white guy that's getting beaten down?

Brett Hampton
Brett Hampton

A VERY misleading headline. It sounds like Mullingan was already senseless before the LAPD arrived.

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