Local

Fresno mayor responds to Bredefeld’s allegations of corruption against council president

Fresno City Council President Nelson Esparza, left, and Mayor Jerry Dyer, right, are shown.
Fresno City Council President Nelson Esparza, left, and Mayor Jerry Dyer, right, are shown.

Fresno Mayor Jerry Dyer on Friday said a law enforcement agency needs to investigate allegations that Fresno City Council President Nelson Esparza extorted City Attorney Doug Sloan.

Councilmember Garry Bredefeld made the allegations Friday morning in a news conference. Bredefeld said Sloan told him firsthand what happened.

“If in fact that is absolutely true, then it needs to be investigated for one or two reasons,” Dyer said.

“Either to demonstrate that there was criminal activity or there was not criminal activity. But the only way that can happen is through a criminal investigation.”

Esparza earlier Friday said Bredefeld’s allegations are false, unsubstantiated, and lacking evidence.

“This latest tantrum comes with the irony that Bredefeld is the only councilmember who has knowingly weaponized city staff and resources, including the city attorney’s office, for political gain and media attention,” Esparza said.

Dyer said Sloan expressed frustration to him about the work environment with the City Council. Sloan on April 28 asked Dyer to be a reference when applying to job in Santa Monica, Dyer said.

“I am confident that is a result of all of that. He made that decision that he was going to to look elsewhere,” Dyer said.

Dyer said he heard rumors of the allegations prior to Bredefeld’s news conference, but was unaware of any law enforcement investigation.

Dyer said Sloan did not directly tell him about the alleged conversation in which Esparza allegedly extorted him.

It remains unclear which, if any, law enforcement agency is investigating the allegations.

Fresno police are not investigating them, department officials told The Bee.

Fresno County District Attorney Lisa Smittcamp’s office did not confirm whether her office is actively investigating. Sloan has not responded to multiple requests for comment.

The allegations are the latest of Bredefeld’s attacks against four council members he dubs “the corrupt gang of four.”

The four council members — Miguel Arias, Nelson Esparza, Tyler Maxwell, and Esmeralda Soria — are Democrats and often form the council majority.

Bredefeld is the lone Republican on the City Council and frequently casts the only “no” vote on agenda items.

Allegations of wrongdoing by councilmembers in the past sparked investigations by Smittcamp’s office. However, so far, none of the council members have been charged with any crimes.

Smittcamp once found council members may have violated the city’s municipal code but said the city attorney declined to enforce any consequences.

The four councilmembers have accused both Bredefeld and Smittcamp of misusing their positions for political gain.

Bredefeld’s news conference Friday comes the same week ballots for the June primary are arriving in Fresno County voter mailboxes.

Sloan, in late April, submitted his resignation to the Fresno City Council. Since then, city officials announced he is taking a new job in southern California.

Extortion allegations

Bredefeld alleged the day following an April 21 closed session in which the city attorney’s job performance was evaluated, Esparza met with Sloan alone in his office.

During the meeting, according to Bredefeld, Esparza told Sloan to no longer complete work for Councilmembers Bredefeld, Luis Chavez, or Mike Karbassi.

Esparza told Sloan he could only complete work for him, Arias, Maxwell, and Soria, Bredefeld said.

Esparza allegedly told Sloan that if Bredefeld, Chavez, or Karbassi requested him to do work for them, Sloan must decline and report back to Esparza. He also allegedly told Sloan that he was the only one preventing Sloan from being fired, Bredefeld said.

Bredefeld said Sloan directly told him about the meeting, and he’s met several times with Sloan since then. Bredefeld said other city officials, including Mayor Jerry Dyer, were aware of the alleged meeting between Sloan and Esparza and what occurred.

“This was the straw that broke the camel’s back,” Bredefeld said. “This is why he left the city and sought another job.”

Bredefeld said he worries the alleged extortion will negatively affect the city’s effort to hire a new city attorney and the functions of the city attorney’s office. The city attorney is one of two departments for which the City Council has authority.

“I’m tremendously concerned about the impact this will have on keeping and retaining those high-quality attorneys in the department, as well as recruiting other potentially high-quality attorneys,” Bredefeld said.

“Likewise, I’m concerned for all our city employees as they find out about the level of this corruption and, frankly, criminality, coming from the council president as well as other corruption from his gang of four.”

Esparza response

Esparza issued his statement shortly after Bredefeld’s news conference, and he flatly denying the allegations.

Esparza said Bredefeld’s “latest charade” would adversely influence the hiring of the next city attorney “by muddying the waters with politics.”

“These ongoing tantrums by Councilmember Bredefeld especially during an election season, will likely continue because he remains upset that different versions of the Fresno City Council have bypassed him for leadership positions,” Esparza said.

“He has only served to further isolate himself and cast doubt upon the good work being done at City Hall by so many of us that spend our time in productive ways.”

This story was originally published May 13, 2022 at 3:01 PM.

Brianna Vaccari
The Fresno Bee
Brianna Vaccari covers Fresno City Hall for The Bee, where she works to hold public officials accountable and shine a light on issues that deeply affect residents’ lives. She previously worked for The Bee’s sister paper, the Merced Sun-Star, and earned her bachelor’s degree from Fresno State.
Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER