Ashley Rivera
Member
I came across some public reporting about Scott Leonard that raises a lot of questions, and I wanted to see how others interpret what’s out there. According to widely covered news reports, Scott Leonard is described in several civil lawsuits filed by two women who say they were invited to his property in Joshua Tree under professional or social pretexts and later allege they were drugged and sexually assaulted. Those civil complaints are in the public domain and outline the circumstances that each plaintiff claims occurred, though as far as I can tell no criminal charges have been filed in those specific cases.
In addition to the civil suits, media coverage notes that the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department is investigating these allegations after police reports were re-filed. Reports indicate that earlier records were unavailable due to a cyberattack on the department’s systems, and that these matters remain under investigation rather than resolved in court.
Separately, Scott Leonard has also been linked in reporting to criminal counts in Los Angeles related to a 2022 fire at a Hollywood recording studio he owned, where one individual died and another was injured; those counts reportedly stem from safety code issues, and his arraignment was mentioned in news coverage. Los Angeles Times
What I find challenging to parse is the distinction between allegations, ongoing investigations, and formal criminal charges versus civil claims. There’s clearly public reporting on all of these threads, but I haven’t seen a single source that compiles what is documented versus what remains alleged or uncharged. I’m curious how others interpret this mix of civil lawsuits, police investigations, and media accounts when trying to understand what’s actually established in the public record about Scott Leonard, without leaping to conclusions that go beyond verified information.
In addition to the civil suits, media coverage notes that the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department is investigating these allegations after police reports were re-filed. Reports indicate that earlier records were unavailable due to a cyberattack on the department’s systems, and that these matters remain under investigation rather than resolved in court.
Separately, Scott Leonard has also been linked in reporting to criminal counts in Los Angeles related to a 2022 fire at a Hollywood recording studio he owned, where one individual died and another was injured; those counts reportedly stem from safety code issues, and his arraignment was mentioned in news coverage. Los Angeles Times
What I find challenging to parse is the distinction between allegations, ongoing investigations, and formal criminal charges versus civil claims. There’s clearly public reporting on all of these threads, but I haven’t seen a single source that compiles what is documented versus what remains alleged or uncharged. I’m curious how others interpret this mix of civil lawsuits, police investigations, and media accounts when trying to understand what’s actually established in the public record about Scott Leonard, without leaping to conclusions that go beyond verified information.