Bethany K. Farber, sues LAPD after she was misidentified, wrongly arrested and spent TWO weeks in jail
LOS ANGELES - Bethany K. Farber, 30, of Agoura Hills, swears
the worst thing she’s ever done is getting a speeding ticket when she was 16.
She also adds she’s never even been to Texas. Yet, Farber
had an unexpected run-in with the law over a warrant issued out of Texas.
In April of last year, the aesthetician says she was
detained at LAX and later arrested after trying to board a flight to Mexico to
meet her family for a vacation.
Authorities were looking for a Bethany Farber out of Texas
wanted for property damage. Side-by-side photos showed the other Bethany Farber
had much darker hair, and bore no resemblance to the blonde Bethany K. Farber.
At a news conference Tuesday, in front of the LAPD, Farber
along with her legal team and family unraveled a complicated, terrifying tale
of mistaken identity turned into forced incarceration.
Farber told she tried time and time again to proclaim her
innocence. She told the airport police there must be a terrible mistake and
asked officers to check her passport. But she says she was handcuffed at LAX,
eventually moved to a local police station and later booked into the Lynwood
women’s jail.
At each juncture she protested, thinking the terrible
mistake would be discovered, and she would be set free. But Farber spent almost
two weeks behind bars.
She described frightening conditions in jail, instances of
inmates "trying to touch her person, her hair and asking for favors she
couldn’t fulfill."
Her family hired attorneys in Texas and LA and finally were
able to show through Farber’s cell phone GPS that Farber was in California on
the day prosecutors alleged the crime took place in Texas.
She was eventually released. But she described herself as
scarred by the 13-day ordeal.
"It could happen to anyone," Farber warned.
Her attorney Rodney Biggs says he believes his client was
viewed as a flight risk because she was leaving the country. He said just some
simple fact-checking would have cleared his client.
Attorney Biggs seemed incredulous.
"The fact no one checked her middle name, her birth
date. No information representing her person… they didn’t even check basic
information that Bethany was not the other Bethany Farber. "
The suit seeks $2.5 million for emotional distress and for
every day Farber was incarcerated. Among those named, the City of Los Angeles,
LAPD and LAX police. None of them would comment on pending litigation.
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