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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
National
Alene Tchekmedyian

Charge dropped against former Glendale police sergeant accused of soliciting prostitute

Feb. 02--A charge against a former Glendale police sergeant accused of soliciting a prostitute at a Las Vegas casino was dismissed Tuesday after he "stayed out of trouble," paid a fine and completed an AIDS awareness class, officials said.

Vahak Mardikian, 50, was charged in August 2014 with offering an undercover detective posing as a prostitute $250, plus $25 in gas money, for sex, records show.

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According to a Las Vegas police report, Mardikian was gambling around 2 a.m. one Friday at the Flamingo Las Vegas Casino, where he was vacationing with friends, when he approached the woman and spoke with her for almost an hour before making an offer she accepted. During the conversation, Mardikian asked the woman if she was a cop and denied being one himself.

The incident occurred three months after Mardikian settled his discrimination lawsuit against the city of Glendale in an agreement that gave him his full salary -- $10,579 a month -- in paid leave until he retired on Dec. 29, 2015.

The soliciting prostitution charge was dismissed after Mardikian paid a $1,000 fine, completed an eight-hour AIDS awareness class and stayed out of trouble, according to Angela Holland, a Las Vegas Justice Court judicial executive assistant.

"Everything was done," Holland said.

Mardikian's attorney Phillip Brown could not immediately be reached for comment.

Mardikian, who joined the Glendale force in 1990 and was promoted to sergeant in 2002, was one of five current and former officers who sued Glendale in 2010, claiming they were discriminated against and harassed because they are Armenian.

Two years after filing the federal lawsuit, Mardikian was demoted to the rank of officer following allegations that he was divisive and that he pressured other officers to join his lawsuit. He successfully appealed and was reinstated as sergeant the following year.

Under the settlement agreement, the city also agreed to pay Mardikian $24,792 over a year long period, while the city's insurance company, AIG, would pay $250,000 to his attorneys.

According to CalPERS, Mardikian currently receives a monthly retirement check of $7,522.

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