Tony Cardenas ID'd as Target of Sex Abuse Lawsuit

A woman claims that a public official sexually assaulted her.

LOS ANGELES (CNS) - An attorney for Rep. Tony Cardenas confirmed today that the Panorama City Democrat is the elected official targeted in a lawsuit accusing an unnamed politician of drugging and fondling a teenage girl during a 2007 golf outing.

Attorney Patricia Glaser said in the statement that Cardenas ``is sickened and distraught by these horrific allegations, which are 100 percent, categorically untrue.''

The lawsuit, filed last week by attorney Lisa Bloom on behalf of an unnamed woman, did not name the defendant because it was alleging child sexual abuse. Bloom said state law did not allow her to publicly name the defendant without court permission ``under the extended statute of limitations for child sexual abuse.''

Bloom identified the defendant only as a Los Angeles elected official. In the statement sent to media outlets Thursday, Glaser blasted the lawsuit's allegations as patently untrue.

``We respect victims who have found the strength to come forward and call out misconduct when it has actually occurred, but the type of baseless and reckless allegations that are contained in the complaint against my client can ruin the lives and careers of innocent people,'' Glaser said.

The lawsuit contends the plaintiff met the official in 2005 when she was a 14-year-old star teenage athlete. The suit contends that the official became close with her and her whole family, and he invited her to play golf at Hillcrest Country Club in January 2007, when the plaintiff was 16. During the game, he handed her a cup of ice water that ``tasted distinctly different from both tap and filtered water,'' according to the suit.

The lawsuit contends that the girl collapsed, but remained conscious, prompting the official to drive her to a hospital. Along the way, however, the man reached under her shirt and shorts, fondling her breast and genitals, the lawsuit alleges.

According to the lawsuit, the girl never confronted the man or reported him to police out of fear of retaliation against her and her family, but she was inspired to file the lawsuit in response to the #MeToo movement.


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